The Register®

Biting the hand that feeds IT

US Patent Office rains on Dell's 'cloud computing' trademark

Claim on the term was a topical storm

Dell's grip on a "cloud computing" trademark may not be as solid as it first seemed.

The US Patent Office has canceled its "notice of allowance" on the Round Rock computer vendor's attempt to master the popular IT buzzword. Passing the "allowance" step in the trademark process had meant that opponents could no longer object to Dell's claims. But Dell's trademark application was updated yesterday to show the case has now "returned to examination."

It would seem someone working for the USPTO was stuck by thunderbolt of rationality.

"Cloud computing" is a vogue, albeit nebulous term used to describe services ranging from web-hosted applications to networks of computers sharing resources and workloads.

Dell was admittedly an early adopter of the term, but the phrase has been beaten into generic use by a storm of subsequent product names, descriptions, and of course, countless Power Point presentations spewed from the heart of Silicon Valley. Some at El Reg even briefly resented using "cloud computing." But in the end, resistance was futile.

Dell's filing described the term as "Custom manufacture of computer hardware for use in data centers and mega-scale computing environments for others." Dell also owns the URL cloudcomputing.com.

But hey, maybe Dell could trademark "mega-scale." That sounds like a fresh one. ®

Free report. "Comparing Data Center Batteries, Flywheels, and Ultracapacitors: What is the best energy storage for you?"

Don’t Miss

Warning GoEnterprises throw caution to the wind in 802.11n rush

Standards bodies far behind the WLAN adoption curve

Warning: two wayCan CDP render backup redundant?

Comment My brain is mush

Chip DieCray, Intel, and Microsoft birth baby supercomputer

Gigaflops for mom and pop shops

Recycle signScrap PCs smuggled, dumped in Africa, China

Charity calls on UK.gov to WEEEd out rogue traders