The following information has been gathered from various media including but not limited to books, magazines and the internet. The purpose of the following information is to provide you with general information about inventing, patenting, marketing and prototyping. Information and opinion contained below are provided for informational purposes only and do not constitute and should not be construed as legal definition or law and shall not be regarded as the opinion or responsibility of Protomine. Protomine does not give any express or implied warranty or representation of any kind as to the accuracy, precision, currency, adequacy, completeness or exhaustiveness of any and all information below. For more information please read the "Terms of Use" statement.
Advertising Your Invention
Advertising is a type of communication that commonly attempts to persuade potential customers to purchase more of a particular brands product or service. Many advertisements are designed to generate increased consumption of those products and services by creating and reinforcing of brand image and brand loyalty. Advertising sometimes has a persuasive message combined with factual information. Major mediums used to deliver these messages include television, radio, cinema, magazines, newspapers, video games, the Internet and billboards. Invented advertising is often placed by advertising agencies on behalf of a companies or other organizations.
Advertising is seen on the seats of shopping carts, on the walls of an airport walkway, on the sides of buses, in telephone messages and in-store public address systems. Advertising is often placed where audiences can easily and frequently access visual, audio and printed information. Some organizations spend large sums of money on advertising that sells what is not, strictly speaking, a product or service include political parties, interest groups, religious organizations, and military recruiters. Provisional Patent
Advice - Have an Invention Idea
Need Help or Advice? Need invention help and advice? Inventors love to fantasize about the overnight success of their inventions, and reality TV, invention contests, and invention submission companies play right into those fantasies. But most of us don’t get discovered overnight; we have to work pretty hard until we make it. After marketing almost a dozen new products, on my own and through licensees, I wrote a series of invention advice blogs from idea to sale. In them, I share with you a practical approach to the invention process and help you recognize some of the inventor “traps” out there before they ensnare you.
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Great idea? What next? Are you looking for trustworthy help to get your invention developed, patented and on the market? We know how you feel; we have been right there! Now, as successful inventors, we help you to find success without beingscammed by invention promoters.Developing, protecting and marketing can be confusing, but we are here with answers What will you find at Ask the Inventors!®? Answers to the most popular invention questions we are asked here and in public. Everyday we get hundreds of emails from people who want to get started inventing. We provide our answers on this website. Inventing Resources to help you get started. We have tried to provide our recommendations for inventing books, andinvention services we believe will help you. Don't miss our book page! We list books and help that could make the difference between getting your product to market or not. Click on the link to the left to see our book list. Solid inventing advice on how to bring your invention to market. There are dozens of different ways to bring your invention from idea to reality. We are here to help you accomplish that goal. Inventing News and Information in the Invention Industry. We travel to inventing conventions and meetings year round and talk with some of the biggest inventors in the industry. We will pass this information along to you here.
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Assembly Evaluation
Assembly Evaluation takes place by the utilization of Finite Element Analysis. Finite Element Analysis (FEA) is a computer simulation process used in engineering analysis. Using numerical techniques called the finite element method (FEM), complicated process simulation is achieved allowing designers and engineers to recognize stress and strain during assembly interactions.
Although commonly used in the determination of stresses and displacements in mechanical objects, FEA is also used to analyze other types of problems. Dynamic issues including heat transfer, solid state diffusion and reactions with moving boundaries, fluid dynamics, and electromagnetism are all studied through FEA.
Finite Element Analysis is carried out on complicated 3D CAD software's such as Solid works and Pro Engineer Developer. Patent Lawyer
Assistance for your Invention
Protomine has created a platform designed to give inventors assistance in the development process. With our 3 step process new idea inventors can easily bring their concepts to life without braking the bank. We know what it is like to be offered assistance by large corporations only to be left unsatisfied with the results. At Protomine you guide the process so you get a product you're happy with. Provisional Patent
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Camp Invention
June 25, 2010
Camp Invention inspires students
MANKATO — Notice to the United States Patent and Trademark Office: Get your pens ready.
After five days of problem-solving, creating, engineering and imagining during Camp Invention held at Mankato East High School, more than 90 elementary-age students are ready to share their creative vision with the world.
Wyatt Block, age 7, used a broken stereo to create a “Brother-inator,” which he wants to use to help locate his older brother at all times. Wyant Fowlds used empty pop bottles and an old digital camera to create a machine that self-cleans his bedroom.
Errin Brudwick said she’s going to invent a contraption to get her dog to stop whining while Brianna Hoppe said she’s going to end financial hardship worldwide with a money machine.
Jenni Schwartz, who said she lost her grandfather recently to cancer, said she’s going to create a machine to keep people from getting sick. And Lizzy Reed wants to invent a machine for those, like herself, who live with diabetes.
“I want to help make people’s lives easier,” she said.
Camp Invention is coordinated by Mankato Area Community Education and Recreation. The weeklong day camp wrapped up Friday with more than 90 participants in grades 1-6.
Melanie Schmidt, a coordinator of community education activities, said this year’s turnout was the highest since the camp’s inception six years ago. Founded by the National Inventors Hall of Fame, the camp is focused on building interest in science, technology and engineering at elementary ages.
According to recent numbers from the National Center for Education Statistics, the proportion of U.S. students earning medical and engineering-related college degrees is more than five percentage points below the international average. Camp Invention, Schmidt said, is among a number of initiatives undertaken by Community Education and Recreation (also Lego camps and an assortment of science camps) to boost those figures, at least locally.
During the camp, students built motorized, moving pets — using a small battery and Styrofoam — and then constructed playgrounds and houses for them to roam. They built environmentally friendly products for the inhabitants of a mythical planet and used a lemon to turn on a light bulb.
Students even attempted to build the world’s longest straw without using tape. At 44 feet, it obliterated the current record of 33, but the Guinness Book of World Records application fee costs too much to gain formal recognition. Camp counselor Aaron Frederick, who will be in 10th grade this fall, tested the straw successfully with a bottle of water and said he sent Guinness an e-mail anyway.
Joe Peterson, who was completing his third consecutive year of attending the camp, said he’s discovered something new each summer.
“It teaches you to keep your imagination,” he said. “If you can’t figure something out, you need to never stop trying.”
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Consultant Advice for Invention
A consultant is usually an expert or a professional in a specific field and has a wide knowledge and thus advice of the subject matter. Thus, clients have access to deeper levels of expertise than would be feasible for them to retain in-house, and to purchase only as much service from the outside consultant as desired. A consultant usually works for a consultancy firm or is self-employed, and engages with multiple and changing clients. It is generally accepted good corporate governance to hire consulting agents. A consultant is a professional who provides advice in a particular area of expertise such as accountancy, human resources, marketing, medicine, finance, the environment, technology, law, economics, public affairs, communication, engineering, sound system design, graphic design, or waste management.Patent Lawyer
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