Greg Mills is formerly Vice President for R&D of Spraytex. He's been issues 8 US Patents and is former Product Manager for Homax Products. He's a former California General Contractor, former owner of Acoustiman Service in Orange County, and consulted for Behr Process. His education is from John Brown, Calvary Bible College and Orange Coast College. His interests include Macintosh Computer, Chess, Bible Teaching and Author.
You can email your thoughts to Greg at gregmils@netins.net. Your input is welcome!

Articles Appearing in ipFrontline™
Discontinuous Thinking, published: 3/31/2004
Radical Solutions and Killing Sacred Cows, published: 4/3/2002
When Does the Bright Idea Become an Invention?, published: 3/13/2002
When the PTO Allows Junk Patents, published: 2/20/2002
The Eureka Moment, the Seed of Invention, published: 2/7/2002
When Your Invention Can Be Hijacked by Uncle Sam, published: 1/16/2002
Innovations that Destroy Existing Markets, published: 1/9/2002
Why Prototypes are Important, published: 1/3/2002
The Essence of Inventing, published: 12/12/2001
Invent something useful if you want to get paid for it!, published: 12/5/2001
It's a Bird, It's a Plane, it's ... Ginger?, published: 12/5/2001
Inventing as a Way of Life, published: 11/14/2001
Stumped? Consider Prior Art!, published: 10/31/2001
Stumped on a problem... Sleep On It!, published: 10/3/2001
Anti-Hijacking Technology, published: 9/26/2001
The Process of Vacuum-forming Plastic Parts, published: 8/27/2001
The Many Advantages of 3D Virtual Prototypes, published: 8/14/2001
When Inventions are Buried to Protect a Market, published: 7/30/2001
An Invention That Enforces a Marketing Plan, published: 7/23/2001
Plastic Parts on a Shoestring, published: 7/16/2001
Finding the Right Company to License your Patent, published: 6/25/2001
Lazy Inventors Are Doomed To Fail, published: 5/7/2001
The Future of Capitalism on the Internet, published: 2/20/2001
When an Idea Becomes an Invention, published: 11/20/2000
BountyQuest.com, Squeaky Clean Patents?, published: 11/9/2000
Dealing With Business Politics in Invention Submission, published: 10/23/2000
Trade Secrets, IPR, and Public Crucifixion, published: 9/15/2000
The Late Great National Hardware Show?, published: 9/7/2000
Some Solutions for Poor Inventors Working on a Shoestring, published: 9/6/2000
Evaluating Your Inventions Realistically, published: 7/26/2000
The new case for a Mac OS X for Intel chips?, published: 5/17/2000
Discontinuous Invention, published: 4/14/2000
Submitting Your Invention to the Industry, published: 4/14/2000
Developing a Corporate Culture of Innovation, published: 4/10/2000
The Process of Invention, published: 1/15/2000