your_man_in_Hamburg wrote:Hm,
it suddenly struck me that if the Synchronar was the first digital electronic watch, then how come
* Roger did not market it as such? All the ads I have only say it is the first truly automatic or solar powered watch.
* Ragen/Riehl Time/whatever never sued Pulsar about their false claims?
You raise some good questions. I doubt we can ever know the answers for certain, but can only speculate.
You say that Pulsar made "false claims" - but did Pulsar ever actually claim to be the first digital watch, or only "one of" the first digital watches? If neither side made the claim of being the first, perhaps they were each avoiding the issue because they knew how muddy it was.
Or perhaps neither Roger nor Pulsar sued the other party because neither considered the issue of "who was first" to be that important. At the time, they were looking to the future, not to the past.
Another possibility is that Roger didn't claim to be the first because, whether he was or not, he would still have faced a lawsuit from Pulsar. And whether one is in the right or in the wrong, it's still an expensive battle against a big company with a large legal department and probably just not worth the hassle.
As far as Riehl suing Pulsar, probably the same thing - not worth the hassle and expense going up against a big company and perhaps he wanted to spend his time and money on getting his watch gig going instead.
Or most likely a combination of the two reasons: It made no sense to waste time and money on a big legal battle that had no clear answer either way. Maybe each side was afraid of forcing a definitive answer, because then they could each have risked losing what claim they had to the other side. ie, as things stood, both Synchronar and Pulsar could claim to be "one of the first," but if they went to court, they each risked losing that claim in a 50/50 flip of the coin.