[citation][nom]ericburnby[/nom]You can always tell a great patent if it meets three criteria:- It must be simple. You don't need a contraption with a million parts and a thousand page description to explain what it does. A better hammer or nail with a half page description is enough.- It should be a better way of doing something. Hammers and nails have been around forever, but if your hammer & nail are improvements on the existing versions than you've got a great invention.- When people see the idea they should respond with "well that's obvious" or "why didn't I think of that". Hindsight is 20:20, people can always say an idea is obvious, but until someone does it, it's not obvious.Apple made a better hammer/nail. That makes this a brilliant patent. Too bad haters are too blind to see this fits the description of a great idea to a "T".[/citation]
Apple didn't make a better hammer and nail, they found a hammer and nail on the floor, picked it up and started running around saying they created both first.