Inventorhaus, Inc. acquires Indian Open Innovation Site Ideawicket.com

While the inpama blog keeps you up to date about latest inventions from all over the world and spreads news about InventorHaus, Inc., the website, inpama.com, serves as a marketplace for ideas.

After IdeaTango the Miami based company has accomplished jet another take over. InventorHaus, Inc. acquired the Indian Open Innovation Site Ideawicket.com!

Ideawicket originally was established to connect science and technology innovators with innovation seeking businesses and non-profits. It was an Open Innovation intermediary based in New Delhi, India and sought to bring together innovators and innovation seekers on a common problem solving platform. The Ideawicket innovator community hails from top engineering and science programs in India and abroad.

In order to give all users instantly and further on the possibility to present their invention to a huge network and inventing community, at the moment the site is forwarded to inpama.com. Check it out it´s free of charge!

Never lose your cookie again!

Do you like Oreos? Or any other kind of sandwich cookie? Then you will also like the dipr.

But what exactly is it? The dipr is a spoon that holds your sandwich cookie while you dip it in milk, coffee, or any other liquid. It cradles the cookie by the cream and prevents the cookie from crumbling in the liquid when dunked, Bobby and Julie Haleluk, the creators of the dipr say.

Here you can listen to their hole inventing story:


A magic remote control

Are you that kind of person who´s always looking for the remote control? Or does your partner have the exclusive right on it? Either way, here might be the magic solution: The Kymera Magic Wand.

Yes, you have read right and it´s no left over from a Harry Potter movie. It´s a real substitute for your common remote control!

It uses gestures instead of buttons and can convert up to 13 different hand gestures into infrared signals. To turn the volume up or down for example you simply have to make a clockwise or counter-clockwise gesture.

Want to learn more about the magic remote control? Then read the operator´s guide or watch the video below.


Inventorhaus, Inc. acquires Ideatango.com!

Each day the huge network of InventorHaus, Inc. is getting bigger and bigger! The most recent examples is ideatango.com, which now also belongs to the Miami based company.


IdeaTango originally operated a website for inventors. It also offered education and resource libraries, contests, and bulletin boards for inventors; and invention listings, support business directories, discussion forums, and advertising platforms for inventor-support service providers, such as patent attorneys, designers, prototypers, and consultants. It also provided directories of products and inventions, as well as a platform to solicit inventions that meet business models for businesses looking to acquire new inventions.


In order to give all users instantly and further on the possibility to present their invention to a huge network and inventing community, the site was forwarded to inpama.com. Check it out it´s free of charge!


It´s just like Marijan Jordan and Gerhard Muthenthaler, the founders and owners of InventorHaus, Inc. say: „As long as there are people who have ideas, our success story can only continue“.

Come and join InventorHaus, Inc.!

Do you want to work for an innovative company with an interesting job opportunity? Here´s your chance!

InventorHaus, Inc. is a privately held company based in Miami, Florida, which offers inventors services such as research, prototype creation or marketing materials. Established in 2011, InventorHaus, Inc., is part of the Erfinderhaus Patentvermarktungs GmbH group, based in Berlin, Germany. Erfinderhaus is a dedicated invention marketing and consulting company which also owns Erfinderladen retail shops in Berlin and Salzburg, Austria.

Currently InventorHaus, Inc. is looking for

Juniorconsultants


for its english speaking customers

You should

  • either live in Germany or Austria
  • be a native speaker
  • have enthusiasm for innovative ideas and products
  • enjoy dealing with customers
  • be used to work on your own

InventorHaus, Inc. offers

  • a diversified job within a dynamic team
  • a comprehensive start-up training with seniorconsultants
  • the opportunity to work at home

Interested? Then please send your application to office@inventorhaus.com

For further information contact:
Bettina Lurz
Erfinderhaus Patentvermarktungs GmbH
Innsbrucker Bundesstraße 54
A-5020 Salzburg
Tel: +43 (0) 662 24 33 01 0

May is National Inventors Month!

Don´t you think that May is a wonderful month? It´s getting warmer, nature is in full blossom and love is in the air.

But there are some other interesting things worth knowing. Did you know that no other month begins or ends on the same day of the week as May in any year? Or that May is National Inventors Month? Yes it is!

As you can read on inventors.about.com it was started in 1998 by the United Inventors Association of the USA, the Academy of Applied Science, and Inventors‘ Digest magazine to honor inventors and creativity.

The United Inventors Association of America suggests to celebrate National Inventors Month this May by doing a few things that help make the experience better:

  • Join a local UIA sponsored inventor club.
  • Clarify your inventing goals by creating a timeline for your efforts
  • Encourage your family and friends to take action on their ideas.
  • Visit a local school and share your inventing journey with them.
  • Help a child understand the wonderment of inventing.

These simple, yet important efforts not only lead us to become better inventors, but show society we are good stewards of the trust they bestow upon us.

See the patents of Steve Jobs

Are you an Apple fan? Yes? Then here is something you might be interested in! Did you know that throughout his career Apple co-founder Steve Jobs acquired 317 patents? Soon you can see them in Washington D.C.

From May 11th until July 8th, 2012 the Smithsonian’s S. Dillon Ripley Center is showing an exhibition called „The Patents and Trademarks of Steve Jobs: Art and Technology that Changed the World“.

As you can read in the details by visiting the exhibition you also learn about the far-reaching impact of Steve Jobs’ entrepreneurship and innovation on our daily lives,and how his patents and trademarks reveal the importance intellectual property plays in the global marketplace.

The exhibit is a series of 30 4-by-8-foot panels designed to look like iPhones. On view are an Apple Macintosh computer, mouse, and keyboard; a NeXT monitor, keyboard, mouse, sound box, and microcomputer plus an Apple iPod.

It is about time..

Remember the Berlin Standard Time we already told you about? We bet you do because it´s a clock you don´t see every day.

Isn´t it amazing to watch the workers rebuild the real time? The idea was born in Berlin, Germany and is part of our exclusive product line.

Redferret.net recently referred to it as „the most awesome online clock ever“. And guess what: You can also buy it on DVD. Where? In the InventorHaus, Inc. online shop! Time to go for it!

World IP Day message from WIPO Director General Francis Gurry

Today is World Intellectual Property Day!  WIPO Director General Francis Gurry took the opportunity to call on young people to talk about IP. Here is his message:


World Intellectual Property Day is an opportunity to celebrate the contribution that intellectual property makes to innovation and cultural creation – and the immense good that these two social phenomena bring to the world.


It is an opportunity to create greater understanding about the role of intellectual property as a balancing mechanism between the competing interests which surround innovation and cultural creation: the interests of the individual creator and those of society; the interests of the producer and those of the consumer; the interest in encouraging innovation and creation, and the interest in sharing the benefits that derive from them.

This year the theme of World IP Day is visionary innovators – people whose innovations transform our lives. Their impact is enormous. They can, at times, change the way society operates.

Take the Chinese innovator, Cai Lun. He laid the foundations for the manufacturing of paper – a technology that transformed everything, because it enabled the recording of knowledge. Then there was the invention of moveable type. This was taken up in Europe by Johannes Gutenberg with his invention of the printing press, which in turn enabled the dissemination and democratization of knowledge. In our own lifetimes we have witnessed the migration of content to digital format, and the great distributional power for creative works that has been brought about by the Internet and the development of the World Wide Web – for whom we have to thank, among others, Tim Berners Lee.

Behind many extraordinary innovations there are extraordinary human stories. At a time when there were few female scientists, Marie Curie Sklodowska had to struggle to establish herself as a scientist in her own right as opposed to the wife of a scientist. She also struggled as an immigrant working in another community. Her desire to understand led to the fundamental discoveries for which she was awarded two Nobel prizes in two separate disciplines – in physics and in chemistry – the only person ever to have achieved this.

In the arts, innovation revolves around new ways of seeing things. A visionary artist or a composer or a writer is able to show us a different way, a new way of looking at the world. Bob Dylan, for example: he captured what was in the air and transformed several genres of music, essentially bending the genres of folk and rock music. Or consider architects – like Zaha Hadid or Norman Foster – who are transforming urban landscapes, and beautifying our existence in new ways, while at the same time taking into account the need to preserve the environment.

We are dependent upon innovation to move forward. Without innovation we would remain in the same condition as a human species that we are in now. Yet inventions or innovations – in the health field for example – are of relatively little value to society unless they can be used and shared. This is the great policy dilemma. On the one hand, the cost of innovation in modern medicine is enormous. On the other hand, the need for compassion, and the need for sharing useful innovations, is also enormous.

I believe we should look upon intellectual property as an empowering mechanism to address these challenges.

But we have to get the balances right, and that is why it is so important to talk about intellectual property. On this World Intellectual Property Day I would encourage young people in particular to join in the discussion, because intellectual property is, by definition, about change, about the new. It is about achieving the transformations that we want to achieve in society.