Interference No. 103,587 Levien’s Case for Priority The Evidence: The inventor, Raphael Levien, testified to the following effect. In 1987, Raphael Levien lived at home with his parents. At that residence, he had lab equipment which consisted of a digital camera to capture digital images, a 286 computer to screen an image from the camera, and a laser printer for printout of the screened image. This equipment allowed him to make a printout of a captured image on the printer. Dot 1 was a technique developed by Levien for printing out images to create halftones by computing an initial random halftone, then iteratively refining it by computing an error image, filtering the error image with a simple FIR filter, then adding the filtered error image to threshold values for computing the next iteration of the halftone. Eventually, after about 16 hours of iterations, the process would converge. By adjusting the parameters of the filter, it was possible to create a wide variety of effects, including variable size dots. However, graininess from the initial random halftone was a problem. Dot 1 also took an unacceptably long time to screen an image, that is, to process input signals from a digital camera to reproduce an image. Nevertheless, Dot 1 was an improvement in error diffusion screening and despite its problems, Dot 1 was incorporated into a complete commercial working system, which was actively marketed. On November 8, 1987, Levien told his father, Jack Levien, that he could form halftone dots using prior outputs to create hysteresis in a recursive process and control the coarseness of the halftone dots. He told his father that hysteresis would increase the size of groups of dots by increasing the tendency of smaller dots to form a larger variable size dot. Raphael showed his 14Page: Previous 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 NextLast modified: November 3, 2007