I think I shared this once before when part one of the invention came out, but
it was fun to see this again. I basically made all the drawings for my own
invention.
http://pdfpiw.uspto.gov/.piw?docid=09564379&SectionNum=1&IDKey=7BF368A6B858&HomeUrl=http://patft.uspto.gov/netahtml/PTO
/patimg.htm
From: Mike Horvath
Subject: Re: Another povray rendering makes it into patent drawing
Date: 15 Apr 2017 23:21:35
Message: <58f2e33f$1@news.povray.org>
On 4/15/2017 2:12 PM, gregjohn wrote:
> I think I shared this once before when part one of the invention came out, but> it was fun to see this again. I basically made all the drawings for my own> invention.>>>>
http://pdfpiw.uspto.gov/.piw?docid=09564379&SectionNum=1&IDKey=7BF368A6B858&HomeUrl=http://patft.uspto.gov/netahtml/PTO> /patimg.htm>
It looks like a complicated game of hurdles. I don't think the game will
be added to the Olympics any time soon, though.
Mike
An interesting use of POV-ray!
From looking at your patent pages in Firefox's built-in PDF viewer, it seems
that the images have been down-sized to a *low* greyscale resolution--i.e.,
compressing them into something like 4-bits of greyscale tones or less-- or else
the images were scanned(?) for printing, with a coarse-dot 'screen' during the
scan. (Sorry if I'm not explaining that well.) In other words, the POV images
look like a coarse newpaper rendition (which eliminates much of their detail and
tonal differences.) I'm curious if that's a normal result when submitting
higher-resolution/contiuous tone artwork to the patent office.