Microsoft: 'Page up' patent goes beyond the obvious

September 10, 2008, 04:07 PM —  IDG News Service — 

In recent days, some tech bloggers and news sites created a bit of an uproar when they reported that Microsoft had applied for and received a patent for "page up" and "page down" functionality.

"Put this in the category of 'you gotta be kidding me,'" the GigaOm blog said.

"Yup, it's theirs now," said Gizmodo.com. "They called it. You can't touch it. And if anyone takes issue with the clear fact that Microsoft invented hitting a button to skip to the next page of text, you'll have to take it up with the principal and/or Microsoft's parents."

Some sites pointed out that page up and page down buttons have been part of computer keyboards since the early 1980s.

Microsoft's patent isn't quite that simple, however. It's not for page up/down functionality on a computer keyboard -- it's more specific.

Some critics will still debate whether Microsoft's invention is truly useful or worthy of a patent, but the Microsoft claim focuses on functionality intended to allow easier navigation when using page up and page down. Microsoft's patent allows people using page up and page down keys to go to the same exact place on the next page as they were on the last page, no matter how much the page has been zoomed in or out.

Try this: Take a typical PDF or a Word document and zoom in by 200 percent. Then hit page down. Does the document go to the next page? Do you care if it doesn't?

"Contemporary computer systems and programs provide great flexibility in viewing a document, including jumping to hyperlinked locations in the document, zooming in and out of the content, allowing a user to jump to a desired page by indicating a desired page number ..." the Microsoft patent document says. "However, pressing the Page Down or Page Up keyboard buttons to navigate content provides sometimes unexpected results for many viewers."

The patent allows readers to scroll through a document and hit the same spot on the page, useful for when readers want to examine headers or footers on every page of a document, the patent description says.

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