Ex Parte ConlonDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardMar 14, 201612636274 (P.T.A.B. Mar. 14, 2016) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 12/636,274 12/11/2009 75931 7590 Basch & Nickerson LLP 1751 Penfield Road Penfield, NY 14526 03/16/2016 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Paul Roberts Conlon UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE United States Patent and Trademark Office Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS P.O. Box 1450 Alexandria, Virginia 22313-1450 www .uspto.gov ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 2008 l 762Q-US-CIP 1011 EXAMINER PRINGLE-PARKER, JASON A ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 2618 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 03/16/2016 ELECTRONIC Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding. The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication. Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above-indicated "Notification Date" to the following e-mail address( es): usptomail@bnpatentlaw.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte PAUL ROBERTS CONLON Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 1 Technology Center 2600 Before THU A. DANG, NATHAN A. ENGELS, and CARLL. SILVERMAN, Administrative Patent Judges. SILVERMAN, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appellant appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner's Final Rejection of claims 1-20. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b ). We REVERSE. STATEMENT OF THE CASE The invention relates to processing rasterized or non-rasterized data for rendering by a printer. Abstract. Claim 1 is exemplary of the matter on appeal: 1 According to Appellant, the real party in interest is Xerox Corporation. App. Br. 2. Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 A method of controlling operations of a printing device, compnsmg: receiving a non-rasterized page description language data and a source transformation matrix representing source transformation operations, the source transformation operations being a source rotation transformation operation, a source scaling transformation operation, and a source translation transformation operation; rasterizing the non-rasterized page description language data; generating, from the source transformation matrix, a rotation dependent scaling transformation matrix and a rotation dependent translation transformation matrix; determining an order of transformation operations to be performed upon the rasterized data; creating a target transformation matrix by matrix multiplying the rotation dependent scaling transformation matrix, the rotation dependent translation transformation matrix, and the source rotation transformation operation in a matrix order corresponding to the determined order of transformation operations to be performed upon the rasterized data; decomposing the corresponding transformation matrix into a rotation transformation operation matrix, a first scaling transformation operation matrix, and a translation transformation operation matrix; decomposing the first scaling transformation operation matrix into a shear transformation operation matrix and a second scaling transformation operation matrix; generating a discrete rotation transformation operation value from the rotation transformation operation matrix; generating a discrete scaling transformation operation value from the second scaling transformation operation matrix; generating a discrete translation transformation operation value from the translation transformation operation matrix; generating a discrete shear transformation operation value from the shear transformation operation matrix; and 2 Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 controlling operations of the printing device based upon the generated discrete transformation operation values. App. Br. 239--240 (Claims Appendix). THE REJECTIONS Claims 1-20 of the subject application on appeal 12/636, 274 ("J") stand provisionally rejected for obviousness-type double patenting over copending patent application numbers: 12/338,300 ("A," now abandoned); 12/338 318 ("B")· 12/338 260 ("C")· 12/339 148 ("D "now issued as Patent ' ' ' ' ' ' No. 8,754,909); 12/636,361 ("E"); 12/636,348 ("F"); 12/636,331 ("G"); 12/636,297 ("H"); 12/636,287 ("I"); 12/636,266 ("K"); and 12/636,311 ("L"). Final Act. 2--4; App. Br. 10. Claims 1-20 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Warmus et al. (hereinafter "Warmus") (US 2001 /0051964 Al, published Dec. 13, 2001) in view of Hemingway (US 6,166,741, issued Dec. 26, 2000). Final Act. 12-32. ANALYSIS The double patenting rejection Appellant argues the Examiner does not present a prima facie case of obviousness double patenting and provides inadequate findings of fact to support the rejection as required under Graham v. John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1 (1966), and MPEP § 804. App. Br. 10-166; Reply Br. 13-27. As discussed below, we are persuaded by Appellant's arguments. According to Appellant: MPEP §804 states that the analysis employed in an obviousness-type double patenting determination parallels the guidelines for a 35 U.S.C. § 103 rejection. Moreover, MPEP §804 states that the factual inquiries set forth in Graham v. John 3 Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1, 148 USPQ 459 (1966), for determining obviousness under 35 U.S.C. § 103, are employed when making an obvious-type double patenting analysis. MPEP §804 states that the factual inqmnes are (A) determine the scope and content of a patent claim relative to a claim in the application at issue; (B) determine the differences between the scope and content of the patent claim as determined in (A) and the claim in the application at issue; (C) determine the level of ordinary skill in the pertinent art; and (D) evaluate any objective indicia of non-obviousness. Lastly, MPEP § 804 states that any obviousness-type double patenting rejection should make clear (A) the differences between the inventions defined by the conflicting claims; and (B) the reasons why a person of ordinary skill in the art would conclude that the invention defined in the claim at issue would have been an obvious variation of the invention defined in a claim in the patent. App. Br. 10. The record before us includes the following: 1. Final Action. The Examiner provides a chart ("chart") setting forth relationships among claim 1 of the identified copending applications (designated A-L, with J being the current application on appeal). Final Act. 2--4. According to the Examiner, the chart shows "claim 1 of all applications relate[ s] to the use of non-rasterized page description language data and a transformation matrix which is decomposed into at least rotation, scaling and translation and generating from that discrete transformation operation values." Id. at 3. 4 Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 2. i\ .. ppeal Brief. Appellant argues the chart (Final Act. 2--4) is inadequate basis for obvious double patenting and provides claim charts showing independent claims of the current application on appeal (J) as compared to the eleven copending applications (A-I, K, and L) identified as the basis for the double patenting rejection, along with commentary. App. Br. 11-166. The provided claim charts constitute: 12/338,300 (A) (App. Br. 11-23); 12/338,260 (C) (App. Br. 24--44); 12/338,311 (L) (App. Br. 44--56); 12/339,148 (D) (App. Br. 56-74); 12/338,318 (B) (App. Br. 74--90); 12/636,266 (K) (App. Br. 90-104); 12/636,287 (I) (App. Br. 104--115); 12/636,297 (H) (App. Br.115-129); 12/636,331 (G) (App. Br. 129-142); 12/636,348 (F) (App. Br. 143-152); and 12/636,361 (E) (App. Br. 152-165). 3. Answer. The Examiner provides "a more detailed mapping [("mapping")] of all the limitations for claim 1 for each of the [eight ]2 applications" along with commentary on the mapping for seven copending applications. Ans. 24--29. Specifically, the Examiner provides Table 1 which maps claim 1 along with Table 2 which identifies the claim language of the eight copending applications. 3 Id. 27-29. The Examiner provides commentary for seven identified copending applications and identifies differences from the 2 Seven copending applications E, F, G, H, I, K, and Lare discussed in the commentary; four copending applications A, B, C, and D are not discussed in the commentary. Ans. 26-29. 3 Table 1 and 2 are attached as Exhibit 1. 5 Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 application on appeal 12/636,274 (J). Id. 24--26. The commentary includes a finding that "the variations are obvious since even with the minor variations in matrix manipulation, it results in the same outcome with the same decomposition and generation of values." Id. at 26. 4. Reply Brief. Appellant argues the Examiner's mapping and commentary are inadequate basis for the double patenting rejection, and the Examiner does not address copending application numbers: 12/338,300 (A); 12/338,318 (B); 12/338,260 (C); and 12/339,148 (D). Reply Br. 2-13. We are persuaded the Examiner's chart (Final Act. 2--4) is inadequate basis for obviousness, because, while it may show a relationship among the copending applications, it provides no discussion of the required inquiry for obviousness and no discussion of claims for any of the identified copending applications. See App. Br. 10-11; Graham v. John Deere Co., 383 U.S. 1, 17 (1966); MPEP § 804; see also KSR Int 'l. Co. v. Teleflex, Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 418 (2007). Regarding the mapping and commentary provided in the Answer, because we agree with Appellant that the Final Action chart (Final Act. 2--4) is inadequate basis for obviousness for any of the identified copending applications, and the Examiner presents no additional basis in the Answer for the four copending applications A-D4, we do not sustain the rejection of copending applications B-D. Reply Br. 4. 4 A is now abandoned. Accordingly, the rejection over A is moot. 6 Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 \Ve no\v address the double patenting rejections of current application J ('274) over copending applications E, F, G, H, I, K, and L. Ans. 24--29; Reply Br. 2-13. We are persuaded by Appellant's argument that the mapping and commentary does not address claims 2-20 and, therefore, we do not sustain the double patenting rejection for these claims. Reply Br. 4, 7. We follow the order set forth by the Examiner and Appellant: K ('266); F ('348); I ('287); L ('311 ); H ('297); G ('331 ); and E ('361 ). Regarding copending application K ('266), the Examiner finds it includes all the limitations of the current application J ('274) and it would have been obvious to exclude four limitations (Bl, D, El, and HI) from copending application K, because limitation A includes a transformation matrix representing the transformation operations which are later described in other limitations (I-N), order (D) is an inherent property of the system, and two other limitations (E 1 and H 1) are only manipulations of the operations already performed and both applications perform the same decomposition and generation, so there is the same end result. Ans. 24--25. Appellant argues the claim 1 limitations of current application J to be excluded are directed to "generating transformation matrices from the source matrix and then creating a new matrix" and the Examiner provides inadequate basis for why application K's source transformation matrix renders obvious the creation of the new matrix. Reply Br. 7. Regarding "performing the same decomposition," Appellant argues and demonstrates the same decomposition process can provide a different result. Id. at 8. We are persuaded by Appellant's arguments and, therefore, we do not sustain the rejection over copending application K ('266). 7 Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 Regarding copending application F ('348), the Examiner finds the difference is "controlling operations of the printing device [OJ" and "performing transformation operations upon the rasterized data [O']," where both are the final step in the method and involve operations. Ans. 25. According to the Examiner, in the preamble of both applications, the method is for "controlling operations of a printing device" and "[b ]ased upon the language, it being the final step, and the preamble, it is clear that 'performing transformation operations with the rasterized data' relates to transformation for printing like the 12/636,274 [J] application does." Ans. 25. Appellant argues, and we agree, the Examiner errs in finding "controlling operations of a printing device is the same as performing transformation operations upon rasterized data." Reply Br. 8-9 (citing Spec. i-fi-1272, 196). According to Appellant: These are two distinct operations - one is directed to controlling the mechanics of a printing device and the other is the electronic manipulation of electronic data. The Examiner has failed to demonstrate how these two distinct operations are obvious variants of each other. Thus, contrary to the Examiner's assertion, controlling operations of a printing device is NOT the same as performing transformation operations upon rasterized data. Reply Br. 9. Regarding copending application I ('287), the Examiner finds it "differs in only that E 1 vs E2 + F, where E 1 generates a rotation matrix and a translation matrix, and E2 + F generates a rotation matrix and translation matrix,just with an extra step." Ans. 25 (emphasis added). 8 Appeal2014-001979 Application I2/636,274 1A:\.ppellant argues the Examiner errs in finding "generating, from the source transformation matrix, a rotation dependent scaling transformation matrix and a rotation dependent translation transformation matrix" is the obvious equivalent to "generating, from the source transformation matrix, a rotation transformation matrix and a scaling transformation matrix based upon a rotation scaling order of the determined order of transformation operations and generating a translation transformation matrix from the generated rotation and scaling transformation matrices." Reply Br. 9. According to Appellant, "[i]n one instance, the decomposition is based solely upon a rotation value, and in the other instance the decomposition is based solely upon a rotation matrix and a scaling matrix generated based upon a rotation scaling order of the determined order of transformation operations" and "one decomposition process is based upon a single value and the other is based upon matrices and an order." Id. at IO. We are not persuaded by Appellant's characterization of "solely" as the claim does not recite this term, however, we are persuaded by Appellant's argument that the Examiner presents insufficient basis why 'just with an extra step" is obvious. Id. at IO. Therefore, we do not sustain the rejection over I ('287). Regarding copending application L ('3 I I), the Examiner finds it differs in the same manner as I ('287) discussed above and in addition to HI vs H2, where both HI and H2 create a target transformation matrix by matrix multiplying scaling and translation and rotation matrices. Ans. 25. The Examiner also finds it also differs in 0 vs O' described above regarding F ('348). Id. 9 Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 i\~ppellant presents similar argument as those discussed above for I ('287) and F ('348) and for the same reasons we do not sustain the rejection over L ('311). Reply Br. 10-12. Regarding copending application H ('297), the Examiner finds it differs in B2 vs B 1 where B 1 and B2 both merely define the source transformation matrix of A. Ans. 26. The Examiner further finds it differs in El vs E3, and G. Id. According to the Examiner, "Both El and E3 generate from the source transformation matrix, a rotation matrix and translation matrix to be decomposed. G merely provides more intermediate manipulation of the matrix." The Examiner concludes, "It is obvious since despite the variations in matrix manipulation, it results in the same outcome with the same decomposition and generation of values." Id. Appellant presents arguments similar to those presented regarding I ('287) and, therefore, for the same reasons, we do not sustain the rejection over H ('297). Regarding copending application G ('331 ), the Examiner finds it differs in "B2 vs B 1, 0 vs O' and G as described above." Ans. 26. Appellant presents arguments similar to those presented regarding F ('348) and, therefore, for the same reasons, we do not sustain the rejection over G ('331). ReplyBr. 12-13. Regarding copending application E ('361), the Examiner finds it differs in the same manner as H ('266), where the only difference is 0 vs O', described above. Ans. 26. We are persuaded by Appellant's arguments regarding H ('266) and F ('348) discussed above and therefore, for the same reasons, we do not sustain the rejection over E ('361 ). 10 Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 In vie\'l/ of the above, 'l.fe do not sustain the provisional double patenting rejection over copending applications B-I, K, and L. The 35 USC§ 103(a) rejection Appellant argues Warmus and Hemingway do not teach limitations recited in independent claims 1, 5, 9, 13, and 17. App. Br. 166-237. For example, Appellant argues Warmus does not teach the claim 1 limitation "determining an order of transformation operations to be performed upon the rasterized data." App. Br. 167. According to Appellant, while the Examiner relies on Warmus for this limitation (Final Act. 13-14), the cited portions of Warmus disclose changing the orientation (portrait to landscape or landscape to portrait). App. Br. 167 (citing Warmus i-fi-1383, 389, 405). Therefore, Appellant argues Warmus fails to disclose or suggest "the determination of an order of transformation operations to be performed upon the rasterized data because the determination is of the orientation of the output device, not the order of the transformation operations to be performed upon the rasterized data." App. Br. 167; see also Reply Br. 13-15. The Examiner finds Warmus teaches the disputed limitation. Final Act. 13-14 (citing Warmus i-fi-1383, 389, 405). The Examiner addresses the claim terms "determining" and "order" and finds Warmus teaches both terms. Ans. 30-32. Regarding the term "order" the Examiner finds "order" is taught by Warmus, and if not taught, it is inherent and even if not taught and not inherent, no specific order is specifically claimed. Ans. 30-32 (citing Warmus Fig 27, 26A, 26B, i1402). Appellant argues the Examiner's Answer is not relevant to Appellant's arguments. Reply Br. 13-15. According to Appellant: 11 Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 \X/armus et al. is void of any teaching or suggestion of such an active process which determines the order of the transformation operations to be performed upon the rasterized data. It is further noted that the transformation operations performed by Warmus et al. are performed, during the rasterization process, on non-rasterized data. For example, Warmus et al., in paragraphs [0244] through [0248], teaches that the Current Transformation Matrix is used in converting the PostScript® file to rasterized data. In other words, Warmus et al. does not teach a need to determine the order of transformation operations to be performed upon the rasterized data because the transformation operations are performed upon non-rasterized data to create rasterized data. With respect to paragraphs [0383] through [0389], W armus et al. teaches that the translating and rotating operations are performed on a PostScript® file (nonrasterized data), not on rasterized data. Again, W armus et al. does not teach a need to determine the order of transformation operations to be performed upon the rasterized data because the transformation operations are performed upon non-rasterized data to create rasterized data. Reply Br. 15. We are persuaded by Appellant's arguments because the disputed limitation recites "determining an order of transformation operations to be peiformed upon the rasterized data" (emphasis added) and the Examiner does not show where Warmus teaches or suggests "to be performed upon the rasterized data." In view of the above, we do not sustain the rejection of claim 1. Independent claims 5, 9, 13, and 17 recite substantially the same limitation, and, therefore, we do not sustain the rejection of these claims. Claims 2--4, 12 Appeal2014-001979 Application 12/636,274 6-8, 10-12, 14--16, and 18-20 are dependent claims and, therefore, \Ve also do not sustain the rejection of these claims. Cf In re Fritch, 972 F.2d 1260, 1266 (Fed. Cir. 1992) ("[D]ependent claims are nonobvious if the independent claims from which they depend are nonobvious."). DECISION We reverse the Examiner's decision provisionally rejecting claims 1- 20 for obviousness-type double patenting. We reverse the Examiner's decision rejecting claims 1-20 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a). 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