YES
what is zacharias janssen invention connection to the bell company
The starting salary for an inventor is always zero. In fact inventors consume money for years and usually require a sponsor to invest in the invention. If you want to invent things with a salary, you become an engineer, working for a company, and the company owns the inventions.
According to "Understanding Chemical Patents" the Patent Secretary is the Company Liaison between the researcher/inventor and the PTSO. An inventor in the company employ would go to the patent secretary in order to see if the invention was patentable and if so the patent secretary in some cases directly files on behalf of the inventor/company or submits it to the Board or committee for modification/review.
No they did not. The wire coat hanger was invented in 1903 by Albert J. Parkhouse. He unfortunately did not see any compensation for this invention. The company he worked for (Timberlake Wire and Novelty Company in Jackson, Michigan) filed the patent for the invention and the lawyer put his name on the line asking for the "name of inventor." The company made a fortune for Parkhouse's invention.
He was the co-inventor of the electric light bulb. In fact, the other inventor ( the Scotsman Joseph Swan) filed for his patent 6 days before Edison. Technically this makes Swan the inventor, but after a long and costly lawsuit they agreed to share the invention, and formed the Ediswan company.
a
Robert Metcalfe, David Boggs, Chuck Thacker and Butler Lampson are credited with the invention of Ethernet. They all worked for Xerox when the patent was applied for.
The company GANZ
Microsoft company.
Microsoft company.
Steve jobs
Percy Spencer, the inventor of the microwave oven, did not make significant personal profit from his invention, as he was an employee of Raytheon, where he developed the technology. His work resulted in the company's commercial success, but Spencer himself did not receive direct financial benefits from sales. Raytheon did have investors, as it was a publicly traded company, benefiting from the broader commercial success of the microwave oven. The invention ultimately contributed to the company's growth and profitability.