Ok, so you do have a dual degree. It seems to me that the guy who wrote the article for Gnolls:
By J. Stanton | October 26th, 2010 | Category:
Essays
Tags:
annoyances,
patents,
skiing
has done a little more research on the subject and his points sound more valid. Feel free to read the article. Link is posted earlier in thread. PS - I'm done arguing with you.
"Armada vs. The World
The Armada patent appears to be the broadest, because it covers any
rocker/camber/rocker ski—but with two versions of a limiting clause
which requires the transition between rocker and camber to happen either
exactly at, or very close to (“substantially all”) the transition
between sidecut and tapered tip/tail.
Unfortunately for Armada, and as I mentioned before, the first patent
claim is written in such a way that it is impossible for any ski with
significant sidecut to fall under it: the only ski I can think of that
might fall under it is the DPS Lotus 138. (Which came out before the
ARG, Armada’s direct copy of its shape.) Tough luck for Armada. But
let’s move forward and assume that neither judges, nor juries, nor
lawyers understand basic geometry.
Even if you give Armada’s fundamental mistake a free pass, skis like
the Hellbent appear to not infringe, because their rocker transition is a
long way away from the sidecut transition. Neither do K2’s other
rockered tip skis like the Obsethed, because the widest point of a K2
tip is generally at the very end, well off the snow and putting the
sidecut transition outboard of the camber/rocker transition. The
Surface Live Life, One Life, and any other traditionally-shaped ski with
tip and tail rocker added are also in the clear.
The BD Megawatt is off the hook due to having flat camber (also
called “zero camber”), as is any other flat camber ski.
I can think of several skis that might infringe if you ignore the
fundamental impossibility of Armada’s claims, but I’m not going to list
them, as Armada started this whole slap fight and I don’t want to give
their lawyers any ideas."