Saturday, April 26, 2025

Oh, patents! Withings thermo design

 Copyright © Françoise Herrmann

Withings’ connected thermometer was also awarded the US design patent, USD793255S1, titled Thermometer. The patent was granted to two French designers, Elise Berthier and Pierre Garnier, on August 1st, 2017. The patent was then assigned to Withings, in Issy-les-Moulineaux, France. 

As a reminder, a US design patent covers the ornamental aspects of an invention, or how the invention looks. By contrast a US utility patent covers how an invention works, or is manufactured (USPTO).

Below the patent Figure 1, shows a perspective view of the invention design. The surface shading represents contour, rather than any claimed ornamentation. Likewise, the broken lines depict unclaimed parts of the design. An image of the marketed Withings Thermo is also included.


References

Withings Thermometer

https://www.withings.com/us/en/thermo 

USPTO MPEP – Chapt. 1502-01 – Distinction between design and utility patent.
https://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/mpep/s1502.html

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Oh, patents! Withings’ Thermo

 Copyright © Françoise Herrmann

Need a new thermometer? Withings’ connected Thermo takes 2000 measurements per second, using 16 infrared sensors, with clinically-tested accuracy.  Temperature is taken on the forehead, more precisely using the proprietary Hot Spot Sensor to measure peak temperature of core blood running through the temporal artery. 


Just sweep Thermo across the forehead temporal area. A color-coded core body temperature will be displayed in just two seconds on the handle, and on the Withings Thermo app. An app where additional information might be entered, such as reminders, symptoms and medications taken, once Thermo has been paired to a smartphone. Up to eight family members can use a connected Withings Thermo. 


The Withings connected core body temperature thermometer is a patented invention. The European patent EP3397930B1, titled Compact forehead thermometer, was awarded on January 27th, 2021 to several inventors:  Thomas Bedetti, Roger Yu,  Edouard Wauttier, Nadine Buard, Cédric Hutchings and Capucine Bodin. The patent was assigned to Withings SAS. 


Below, the patent Figure 1, showing the invention thermometer in use, together with an image of the marketed Withings connected Thermo and app. Specifically, the patent Figure 1 depicts an individual using the thermometer device 10. The user is applying the thermometer to the temporal area TA of the forehead FH. The position of the thermometer 10 defines a sensing region SR corresponding to the path of the temporal artery. The device is activated using the switch 8. Two seconds, and 4000 computed measurements later, the body core temperature BCT appears on the display 9, and on the app (not shown). 


.             

Body core temperature (BCT) is calculated, according to a formula that infers the maximum value of the captured measurements. The processor performs corrections taking into account room temperature and the temperature of the device 10. The formula also takes into account vascularization (the amount of blood diffusion) in the region sensed, using the measurements' standard deviation (SD). In cases of high vascularization, measurements capture many warm areas, thus resulting in a low SD. Conversely, in cases of low vascularization, the SD is high.


The Youtube video below is a Withings advertisement for Thermo the hottest thermometer with the coolest technology.



The abstract of the invention is also included below.

A thermometer device (10) for temporal artery area measurement, configured to be used in a skin-touching stationary position, comprising an elongated body (1) and a front portion (4) having an end border (6) arranged on a sensing plane (P), an array of N infra-red sensors (2), with N greater than 8, a sensing region (SR) extending in the sensing plane over an area denoted SRA, at a distance denoted LF from a plane P2 containing the infra-red sensors, the sensing region being encompassed within the border of the front end, an optical lens (3), interposed between the infra-red sensors and the sensing region, to deviate light rays, wherein LF2 < K x SRA, with K =3. [Abstract EP3397930B1]

Reference 

Withings Thermometer

https://www.withings.com/us/en/thermo

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Earth Day 2025 - Journée de la Terre 2025

 Copyright © Françoise Herrmann



This year's Earth Day theme is  Our power, our planet, calling on everyone to triple their use of clean energy by 2030. Clean energy refers to solar, wind and hydro power. This type of energy contrasts with what is refered to as dirty energy. Dirty energy is derived from fossil fuels, deemed responsible for greenhouse gasses (GHG) causing global warming. Global warming, which in turn, is assumed to promote catastrophic weather events on earth, such as increased floods, tsunamis, tornados, earthquakes etc. (IICAT).   

References
EarthDay.org (website)
https://www.earthday.org/earth-day-2025/
The International Institute of Climate Action and Theory (IICAT)

Wednesday, April 9, 2025

Oh, patents - Withings connected hairbrush

 Copyright © Françoise Herrmann

Why an IoT* connected hairbrush?  Because hair has plenty to do with health. Indeed, this is precisely the reason why Withings, a French consumer electronics company specialized in health devices, has designed a connected hairbrush, in collaboration with Kérastase, a French company specialized in hair care products. 


Hair factors such as dryness, lackluster, brittleness, dry scalp, thinning, excess shedding, and premature graying are all indicators of health that may send you promptly to see a physician. Such factors, especially hair loss, are also tightly bound to self-image, confidence and mood (Dhami, 2021). As a result, thanks to a variety of advanced sensors, the award-winning** Withings connected hairbrush was designed to provide users a host of insights on hair quality, manageability and brushing technique. Personalized information on how to improve and optimize hair care that the user then receives on a Withings app. 


The Withings connected hairbrush invention is recited in a family of European (EP2945509B1), World (WO2014111646A1), French (FR3000877B1) and US patents. The US utility patent member, US10426397B2, titled Informative system using and instrumented and connected hairbrush, was granted on October 1st 2019. The patent was awarded to Cedric Hutchings and Eric Careel, and assigned to Withings, in Issy-les-Moulineaux, France.


The patent discloses a hairstyling tool, equipped with a variety of sensors (movement, gyroscope, optical, tilt, force, electric field, humidity and temperature), a camera, LED lights, and a microphone, together able to collect data on styling gestures, vibration and friction data, magnified scalp and hair data. The hairstyling tool has further means to transmit the collected data via Bluetooth or Wifi, to a smartphone or directly to a server, where the raw, or pre-processed data collected is analyzed, relative to a database of hair/scalp data and the user’s own history. In turn, the hairbrush will provide analysis and feedback to the user via smartphone app.


Specifically, the patent Figure 1, included below, depicts a hairstyling tool 10, comprising a handle or “grip” 11, a body 12, bristles 17, and a transition region 13, between the handle 11, and the body 12. The handle 11 comprises a battery 8 for powering the electronic and electric components of the hairstyling tool 10. The body 12 comprises an electronic control unit 4. The electronic control unit comprises a controller for processing the input/output sensor data, the camera and microphone data. The electronic control unit also comprises a clock to time-stamp data, and a memory for recording raw or pre-processed data collected during hairstyling, prior to sending data to a smartphone or server.


The accelerator and force sensors enable to measure the speed and regularity of hairstyling gestures, as well as the rotation of the brush during gestures, the length of the curve followed from top to bottom of scalp, and the time taken to travel the curve. Thus, the hairbrush measures the variable resistances encountered during hairstyling gestures, assumed to indicate health and/or deficiencies of the hair. The patent Figure 1 further depicts the three dimensional axes X (longitudinal), Y (transverse) and Z (radial) used by the accelerometer and gyroscopes to respectively measure linear accelerations on each of the orthogonal planes, and rotational movement on and about the three orthogonal directions X, Y and Z.





Below, the abstract of the invention is also included, together with an above image of the elegant connected hairbrush and smartphone app. 

Hairstyling tool of the comb or hairbrush type, comprising a handle and a body, an electric battery a force sensor, an electronic unit configured to capture and format signals provided by the sensors, a wireless communication means for transmitting data to a remote entity, by means of which information about the movements executed by the tool and the forces it undergoes can be transmitted to the remote entity, the remote entity being able to send information back to the user of the tool about the hair being styled. (Abstract US10426397B2)
----------
* IoT = Internet of Things. (Marc Weiser in Goetzman, 2023)
** Upon release, the Withings connected hairbrush won the 2017 If Design Award, among many subsequent accolades.  

References
Dhami, L. (2021). Psychology of hair loss patients and importance of counseling. Indian Journal of Plastic  Surgery. Dec 31;54(4):411-415.
doi: 10.1055/s-0041-1741037. PMID: 34984078; PMCID: PMC8719979.
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8719979/  
Goetzman, A. (Sept. 12, 2023). Mark Weiser and the Origins of the Internet of Things. Connector Supplier™.
If Design Award 2017 -  Withings smart hair brush. If Design.
https://ifdesign.com/en/winner-ranking/project/withings-smart-hairbrush/203749  
Kérastase (website)
https://www.kerastase-usa.com/  
Withings (website)
https://www.withings.com/us/en/

https://connectorsupplier.com/mark-weiser-and-the-origins-of-the-internet-of-things/

Saturday, April 5, 2025

Oh, patents! Lifebloom's Oxilio wheelchair-exoskeleton

 Copyright © Françoise Herrmann

For stroke victims, and other types of patients with various degrees of impaired mobility due to illness, accidents, or age, Lifebloom’s Oxilio is a combination wheelchair and exoskeleton. A combination wheelchair-exoskeleton that offers increased opportunities to safely stand and walk, with or without a physical therapist present. Indeed, patients using Oxilio are reported to spend six times more time standing and walking, compared to those who train only in therapy sessions at a specialized physical therapy facility. For this purpose, Oxilio has included an onboard app that guides patients through self-training exercises, while their movements are being monitored and recorded with sensors, for therapist review.   


The Lifebloom Oxilio combination wheelchair-exoskeleton was researched, designed, and produced at the Institut Pasteur in Lille, France, and tested at the Hôpital Pitié-Salpérière in Paris, France, with the participation of hundreds of wheelchair-bound patients. Thus, Oxilio's design responds to the patients’ greatest concerns for safety and the fear of falling by offering safe verticality and mobility. As a result, patients who might lose their balance just fall back into the Oxilio wheelchair. In turn, the designed safety greatly enhances user confidence and use at home, which greatly increases the positive outcomes for improved verticality, mobility and well-being (McCulloch, 2024). 


According to Damien Roche, Lifebloom Founder, CEO and co-inventor, an estimated 132 million people are wheelchair-bound in the world, with deteriorating health, aggravated by their inability to stand and walk, while many still retain some leg function. Oxilio’s mission is to assist screened patients in recovering their verticality, beyond just a few steps.


The award-winning Oxilio invention, is recited in the US utility patent US11471361B2, titled Wheelchair for assisting walking. The patent was granted on October 18, 2022, and awarded to Marc Bardgett and Damien Roche. The patent recites the wheelchair-exoskeleton's mechanical properties. Succinctly, the invention comprises linear actuators, mechanically connected to the wheelchair-exoskeleton chassis, and to a base plate that moves from a low sitting position to a high walking position, using a position-changing device. 


The patent Figure 24, included below, depicts an embodiment of the invention in an intermediate position, between the low sitting position, and the high walking position, including a user U performing an upward forward motion to switch to the high walking position. The still pictures, beneath the patent Figure 24, depict a user self-training, practicing sitting and standing without using hands. 


The patent Figure 24 further depicts the various parts of the wheelchair-exoskeleton. Specifically, the Figure 24 depicts: the backrest 20, preventing the user U from falling rearward, and one of the retaining members 7D (on the right), preventing the user U from falling forward. The (right) armrest 660, comprising the arm support 662 and cushioned fitting 661. The small central rear wheel 5RC, used to better maneuver the wheelchair-exoskeleton. The right 5FD and left 5FG front wheels, smaller than the conventionally large right 5RD and left 5RG rear wheels, which might be used to steer the wheelchair more swiftly. The right 10D and left 10G footrests, pivotally connected to the chassis 3, raised in the high walking position so as not to impede walking, and lowered in the low sitting position, for the user to rest their feet. The patent Figure 24 also depicts the locking member 200 and locking pin 206, designed to lock the base plate in the low sitting position and to unlock the base plate in the high walking position. 





For those skilled in the art, the abstract of the invention, included below, will provide additional mechanical details. 

The invention concerns a wheelchair for assisting walking. The wheelchair comprises a chassis, a movable base that can move relative to the chassis between a low seating position and a high walking position, and a device for changing the position of the base. The device for changing the linear actuator is configured to bias the movable base towards the high position by means of the arm. (Abstract US11471361B2)

The reference section includes a YouTube video (in French), with footage showing the Oxilio wheelchair-exoskeleton in use.


References

Lifebloom (website)
https://www.lifebloom.eu/
French Tech: Lifebloom, une solution pour remarcher. YouTube (video in French)
https://youtu.be/j_BzYjm7dyE 
Hôpital Pitié-Salpétriere de Paris (website)
Institut Pasteur de Lille (website)
McCulloch, B. (Nov. 10, 2024). French hospitals’ revolutionary exoskeleton enables wheelchair-bound patients to walk. Connexion France.
https://www.connexionfrance.com/practical/french-hospitals-revolutionary-exoskeleton-enables

Saturday, March 22, 2025

Oh, patents - Lululemon criss-cross back tank top

Copyright © Françoise Herrmann

This strappy, Lululemon, criss-cross back tank top, with a built-in bra, is a patented design. The US design patent, USD791438S, titled Tank top, was granted on July 11th 2017. The patent was awarded to Brenda Marie Holmes, and assigned to Lululemon Athletica Canada, Inc. The design was launched in February 2012 as a flattering women’s workout piece, which is now out of stock.

The patent Figure 2 below depicts a rear view of the design, with the strappy criss-cross back and built-in bra. An image of a model wearing the marketed strappy, criss-cross tank top is shown below the patent figure.



Friday, March 21, 2025

Oh, patents! Lululemon Define jacket

Copyright © Françoise Herrmann

The timeless Lululemon Define jacket, is a super formfitting, hip-length, casual jacket with thumbhole cuffs to keep your hands warm. The zipper is also equipped with a “garage” to prevent neck chaffing. Accordingly, such special design features of the Lulumenon Define jacket are patented. 


The US design patent, USD639023S, titled Jacket, was granted on June 7th 2011, to Antonia Amartino and  Natalie Martz. The patent was assigned to Lululemon Athletica Canada, Inc., in Vancouver, British Columbia. 


The patent Figure1 depicts a front view of the Lululemon Define jacket, with zipper garage, folded thumbcuffs, and form-fitting seams across the garment and lengthwise. Below the patent Figure 1, an image of the marketed Define jacket in the color demim blue.




References

Lululemon – Corporate.

https://corporate.lululemon.com/our-business

Lululemon

https://shop.lululemon.com