LOL, yes they do. But here in Brooklyn we have many bagel places. They all make them differently and have distinct tastes. I wonder if one of them is buying on the sly from one of the others and is trying to make them the same as the guy who makes the best? They protect their recipes, and I personally think that Bagel Boy's are so superior that they are a benefit to society, so I am heading to Bagel Boy in the morning for a dozen, and their recipe. Hey, they have to give it to me right? I mean, it DOES benefit society to produce the best bagels from a number of competing stores, and it will save me all that time, flour, and gas for the ovens to not have to figure out a good recipe myself. ROTFLMBO!!!!!!!!!

Happy New Year all.

Doug

At 19:50 31-12-07, you wrote:
On Dec 31, 2007, at 6:34 PM, Doug Fuerst wrote:

How do you figure that reverse engineering is an acceptable method
of R&D or design? Reverse engineering is an easy way to replicate a
design. Since the company creating the product, in this case IBM,
spent millions developing the machine, they would be entitled to
some exclusivity. How fair is it for every competitor to reverse
engineer their machines to mimic the IBM box, and not compensate
IBM for that? At least MOBO manufacturers use different chipsets
and moderately different designs. I don't believe they are reverse
engineering Intel boards, nor is AMD reverse engineering Core Duo's.

Doug

Doug,

An interesting issue and I am sure there is no straightforward
answer. Take for instance Blueberry muffins according  to your theory
only one person is allowed to produce them, yet MANY stores through
out the US (and maybe Canada) sell them every day. Do they all have
the same ingredients, no but they are probably close. I know you say
that the person inventing them isn't getting paid his/her fair share.
But hey they do taste good:)

Ed



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Doug Fuerst
Consultant
BK Associates
Brooklyn, NY
(718) 921-2620 (Office)
(718) 921-0952 (Fax)
(917) 572-7364 (Cell)
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