Ex Parte Hamalainen et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardJun 29, 201814434489 (P.T.A.B. Jun. 29, 2018) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 14/434,489 04/09/2015 11051 7590 07/03/2018 Squire Patton Boggs (US) LLP Nokia Technologies Oy 8000 Towers Crescent Drive, 14th Floor Vienna, VA 22182 UNITED ST A TES OF AMERICA FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Seppo Olavi Hamalainen 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. 089229.01015 6413 EXAMINER GELIN, JEAN ALLAND ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 2643 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 07 /03/2018 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): sonia.whitney@squirepb.com ipgeneraltyc@squirepb.com nokia.ipr@nokia.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte SEPPO OLA VI HAMALAINEN, VELI-MATTI TEITTINEN, HAIT AO TANG, KAISA V ARONEN, P ASI KARI SEITTENRANTA, and RAULI WHANI P ARKKALI Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 Technology Center 2600 Before CARL W. WHITEHEAD JR, BRADLEY W. BAUMEISTER and IRVINE. BRANCH, Administrative Patent Judges. WHITEHEAD JR., Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellant is appealing the final rejection of claims 1-6 and 8-20 under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a). Appeal Brief 7. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b) (2012). We affirm. Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 Introduction The invention is directed to a: method in a communications network comprising: receiving at least one of a) usage condition information relating to one or more usage conditions of a user equipment and b) network performance information; and using said received information to cause a change in one or more parameters which individually controls a or said user equipment, said parameters being radio resource management parameters. The radio resource management parameter may be used directly or indirectly to control radio resource management of a UE [user equipment]. For example the radio resource management parameter may be used in order to determine information used to control the radio resource management in the UE. Specification 2. Illustrative Claim 1. A method in a communication network comprising: receiving at least one of a) usage condition information relating to one or more usage conditions of a user equipment, and b) network performance information; and using said received information to cause a change in one or more subscription profile parameters which control radio resource management for said user equipment. Rejection on Appeal Claims 1---6 and 8-20 stand rejected under pre-AIA 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over Thakolsri (European Patent Application EP 2 434 826 Al; published March 28, 2012) and Lim (US Patent Application Publication 2013/0028172 Al; published January 31, 2013). Final Action 2-7. 2 Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 ANALYSIS Rather than reiterate Appellants' arguments and the Examiner's positions, we refer to the Appeal Brief (filed March 24, 2017), the Reply Brief (filed September 13, 2017), the Answer (mailed July 13, 2017), and the Final Action (mailed August 9, 2016) for the respective details. The Examiner finds that Thakolsri discloses claim 1 's invention with the exception that "Thakolsri does not specifically teach change in one or more subscription profile parameters which control radio resource management for said user equipment." Final Action 3. Appellants agree with the Examiner that Thakolsri is silent regarding changing any subscription profile parameters." Appeal Brief 9. The Examiner relies upon Lim to address Thakolsri' s deficiency and finds "Lim teaches the AAA[authentication, authorization and accounting]/HSS[home subscriber server] changes the subscription profile of the user of the UE 0100 stored in the HSS to set a SIPTO [selected IP traffic offload] permission field in the subscription profile of the UE 0100 to Refuse to indicate that the user prefers IFOM [IP Flow Mobility] to SIPTO." Final Action 3 (citing Lim, paragraph 167). Appellants argue that Lim fails to cure Thakolsri' s deficiency because Lim recites, "it is assumed that the UE notifies the network of the preference between IFOM and SIPTO. However, the preference to IFOM over SIPTO can also be stored in a subscription profile of the network." Appeal Brief 9 (citing Lim, paragraph 167) (emphasis not in original). Appellants conclude "a user preference of IFOM to SIPTO stored in a subscription profile as provided in Lim does not equate to 'one or more subscription profile parameters which control radio resource management for said user equipment,' as recited in the independent claims." Appeal Brief 9-10. 3 Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 Claim 1 requires a method in a communication network comprising receiving at least one of a usage condition and a network performance information. The claim limitation does not specify where the information originates. Accordingly, Lim discloses within a communication network, receiving from a UE, usage condition information relating to usage conditions of a UE. See Lim, paragraph 167. Lim discloses that the UE' s preference can also be stored in the subscription profile of the network, but does not make the storage a requirement. See Lim paragraph 167. Claim 1 additionally requires using the received information to cause a change in the subscription profile parameters that controls the radio resource management for the UE. The limitation does not specify which element of the method uses the received information to change the subscription profile parameters. Also, Appellants disclose in the Specification on page 8, lines 18-20 that, "[i]t should be appreciated that radio resource management may comprise one or more of traffic steering, load balancing, admission control, load control, packet scheduling and the like." Lim discloses: [W]hen the UE 0100 informs the PDN-GW 0104 that it wants to use IFOM, the PDN-GW 0104 notifies the AAA/HSS of the intention of the UE 0100. The AAA/HSS changes the subscription profile of the user of the UE 0100 stored in the HSS to set a SIPTO permission field in the subscription profile of the UE 0100 to Refuse to indicate that the user prefers IFOM to SIPTO. Lim, paragraph 167; see Final Action 3--4, Answer 3, Appeal Brief 9. Subsequently, Lim discloses using the received information and changing the subscription profile of the UE via the PDN-GW and AAA/HSS, as required in claim 1. Lim, paragraph 167. Accordingly, we 4 Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 agree with the Examiner in finding that the claimed invention would have been obvious to one of ordinary skill in the art in view of the Thakolsri/Lim combination. See Final Action 4. Appellants also argue that the Examiner's findings are incorrect because, "as described in paragraph [0008] of Lim, SIPTO merely enables user equipment to offload to another PDN-GW based upon the location of the user equipment, rather than being based upon 'usage condition information' or 'network performance information."' Reply Brief 4--5. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive because Lim discloses the 31st embodiment of the invention in paragraph 167 and Appellants have not made it clear how paragraph 8 relates to this embodiment. We sustain the Examiner's obviousness rejection of claim 1. Appellants argue claim 2 is patentable over the Thakolsri/Lim combination because "the quality utility function of Thakolsri discloses that this function indicates the quality perceived by the user, not the user equipment." Appeal Brief 10-11. We do not find Appellants' argument persuasive. There is no patentable distinction between the quality perceived by the user and the quality perceived or experienced by the equipment because the user's perception is entwined with the user equipment operation. We also do not find persuasive Appellants' argument that "a condition related to the channel has no relation to one or more traffic related conditions" because Appellants provided no explanation why the two are not related. See, e.g., In re Geisler, 116 F.3d 1465, 1470 (Fed. Cir. 1997) (attorney arguments or conclusory statements are insufficient to rebut a prima facie case). Appellants argue that claim 3 is patentable over the Thakolsri/Lim combination because "[t]he discussion of 'a perceived quality changes with 5 Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 respect to the network/application performance metric' in Thakolsri is not related to the invention of Thakolsri." Appeal Brief 11. The Examiner finds, "Thakolsri teaches when the channel quality condition is changing over time drastically, the user will experience a drastic change of video quality and may be annoyed while watching the video. This is because when the channel quality condition is getting poor, the optimizer will not give any network resources to the user ([0034])." Answer 4. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue that claim 4 is patentable over the Thakolsri/Lim combination because "the Office Action argued that Thakolsri discloses this limitation by reciting 'perceived quality changes with respect to the network/application performance metric (e.g. data rate, packet loss, PSNR).' However, the Office Action did not address these parameters in terms of one or more usage conditions." Appeal Brief 12. The Examiner finds, "Thakolsri further teaches when the channel quality is very good, the optimizer will give a higher priority for network resource allocation to this user, and hence the service quality perceived by this user would be good or even very good ([0034])." Answer 5. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue that "Claim 5 further recites 'wherein the radio resource management comprises at least one of: traffic steering, load balancing, admission control, load control, and packet scheduling for said user equipment."' Appeal Brief 12. Appellants contend, "[r]egarding claim 4, the Office Action argued that Thakolsri discloses this limitation by 6 Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 reciting 'perceived quality changes with respect to the network/application performance metric (e.g. data rate, packet loss, PSNR).' However, the Office Action did not address these parameters in terms of one or more usage conditions." Appeal Brief 12-13. The Examiner finds: Lim teaches the MME 0102 can recognize the location of the UE 0100 necessary to decide on the best timing of triggering the offload. When detecting that the UE 0100 can be offloaded, the MME 0102 sends a signal of such an intention to the eNB 0107 through a signaling path 80109. The reason for the MME 0102 to trigger such offload is that the cellular communications operator detects that the consumption of the radio resources reaches a constraining point and thinks of allocating part of the resources of the UE to a PDN-GW capable of transmitting data packets from the UE to the global communication network 013 without going through many networks of the cellular communications operator to release the resources, but it is not limited thereto ([001 OJ). Answer 5---6. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue "[ c ]laim 6 further recites 'wherein the traffic steering comprises at least one of: selection of radio access technology for idle mode camping and steering said user equipment from one radio access technology to another.' However, the Office Action did not directly address these features. For example, the Office Action did not mention traffic steering, idle mode camping, or steering user equipment." Appeal Brief 13. The Examiner finds, "Thakolsri teaches a set of possible parameters abstracted from the protocol layers representing the set of candidate operation modes ([0054])." Answer 6. Appellants did not address the 7 Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue, "[ c ]laim 8 further recites 'further comprising said change in said one or more subscription profile parameters in a subscription profile parameters database." Appeal Brief 14. Appellants contend, "the Office Action did not directly address these features. For example, the Office Action did not mention subscription profile parameters database. Moreover, the cited prior art does not mention subscription profile parameters database." Appeal Brief 14. The Examiner finds, "Lim teaches the subscription profile of the user of the UE 0100 is stored in the HSS (i.e., the HSS inherently includes a database [0167])." Answer 6. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue, "[ c ]laim 9 further recites 'wherein said using comprises using said usage condition information and said network performance information.' However, the Office Action did not directly address these features." Appeal Brief 14. The Examiner finds, "Thakolsri teaches optimizing the usage of the limited network resources by taking the change of temporal video quality into account [0038], [0059])." Answer 7. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue, "[ c ]laim 10 further recites 'wherein said using comprises determining if said usage condition information and/ or said network performance information satisfies a requirement and if said information satisfies said requirement causing said change.' However, the 8 Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 Office Action did not directly address these features. For example, the Office Action did not mention a requirement." Appeal Brief 15. The Examiner finds, "Thakolsri teaches optimizing the usage of the limited network resources and parameters required to distribute data to the user terminal [0059], [0062]-[0063])." Answer 7. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue, "[ c ]laim 11 further recites 'wherein said requirement comprises one or more of falling within a range, falling outside a range, exceeding a threshold, meeting a threshold and falling below a threshold.' However, the Office Action did not directly address these features." Appeal Brief 15. Appellants contend, "Moreover, the cited prior art does not mention one or more of falling within a range, falling outside a range, exceeding a threshold, meeting a threshold and falling below a threshold." Appeal Brief 16. The Examiner finds, "Thakolsri teaches an optimization to find the resource allocation which gives the maximum quality while at the same time ensuring that the temporal quality change does not exceed a certain threshold ([0062]-[0063])." Answer 7-8. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue, "[c]laim 12 further recites 'comprising receiving a plurality of said usage condition information and/or said network performance information, said plurality of information being of different types, and determining for said information of said different types if said respective type of information satisfies a respective requirement.' However, the Office Action did not directly address these features" Appeal Brief 16. 9 Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 The Examiner finds: Thakolsri teaches checking whether the available resources are sufficient to serve all sessions ... , in a next step, there are obtained all necessary information to perform the optimization, such as the number of users (or terminals), the app. Layer info (i.e. the quality utility function), and possibly also the abstracted PHY /MAC layers information, which may be used to take into account also the channel condition into the optimization. In the embodiments so far it has only been mentioned that the quality measure is determined based on the quality utility function which has as an input the data rate, but there may further also be taken into account the channel condition, either as a separate parameter when calculating the quality measure, or as an input parameter of the quality utility function ([0061 ]-[0062]). Answer 8. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue, "[c]laim 13 further recites 'wherein said plurality of different types of information are provided with a priority and using said priority when using said information to cause said change.' However, the Office Action did not directly address these features." Appeal Brief 17. The Examiner finds, "Thakolsri teaches channel quality is changing over time drastically and the optimizer gives a higher priority for network resource allocation ([0034], [0036])." Answer 9. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue, "[ c ]laim 14 further recites 'comprising selecting a subset of said different types of information to use to cause said change.' However, the Office Action did not directly address these features." Appeal Brief 17-18. The Examiner finds, "Thakolsri teaches channel quality is 10 Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 changing over time drastically and the optimizer gives a higher priority for network resource allocation ([0034], [0036])." Answer 9. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue, "[c]laim 15 further recites 'usage condition information is determined using one or more of probing, tracing, charging, deep packet inspection, and performance management techniques.' However, the Office Action did not directly address these features." Appeal Brief 18. The Examiner finds, "Thakolsri teaches determining the resource allocation in such a way that the quality fluctuation perceived by a user is limited and the limit is taken into account when performing the resource allocation ([0033]-[0034])." Appeal 9-10. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue, "[ c ]laim 16 further recites 'receiving information to trigger a traffic steering action.' However, the Office Action did not directly address this feature." Appeal Brief 19. The Examiner finds, "Thakolsri teaches that change is trigger based on network performance metric ([0032]- [0033])." Answer 10. Appellants did not address the Examiner's additional findings in the Reply Brief. We do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants argue, "[c]laim 17 further recites that said program comprising computer executable instructions, which when run on a processor, cause the processor to perform the method of claim 1. For the reasons similar to those noted above for claim 1, the combination of 11 Appeal2017-011537 Application 14/434,489 Thakolsri in view of Lim also does not disclose or suggest claim 1 7." Appeal Brief 19. We did not find Appellants arguments for claim 1 persuasive of Examiner's error. Appellants present no additional reasoning for why the obviousness rejection of claim 17 is erroneous other than claim 17's dependence upon claim 1. Accordingly, we do not find Appellants' arguments persuasive and agree with the Examiner's findings. Appellants' arguments for independent claims 18-20 are the same as the arguments for independent claim 1. Appeal Brief 19-26, see Answer 10. Accordingly, we sustain the Examiner's obviousness rejection for claims 18-20 for the same reasons as claim 1. DECISION The Examiner's obviousness rejection of claims 1---6 and 8-20 is affirmed. No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(l). See 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(l )(v). AFFIRMED 12 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation