Ex Parte King et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardSep 29, 201712355734 (P.T.A.B. Sep. 29, 2017) Copy Citation United States Patent and Trademark Office 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 APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE FIRST NAMED INVENTOR ATTORNEY DOCKET NO. CONFIRMATION NO. 12/355,734 01/16/2009 David William King 42178-709.501 7325 21971 7590 10/03/2017 WILSON, SONSINI, GOODRICH & ROSATI 650 PAGE MILL ROAD PALO ALTO, CA 94304-1050 EXAMINER ALLEN, AKIBA KANELLE ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3628 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 10/03/2017 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): patentdocket @ wsgr.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte DAVID WILLIAM KING, ALEXANDER SCHWARZ, and STEPHEN JOHN HUNTER Appeal 2016-002592 Application 12/355,734 Technology Center 3600 Before CARLA M. KRIVAK, CAROLYN D. THOMAS, and JEFFREY S. SMITH, Administrative Patent Judges. KRIVAK, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appellants appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from a final rejection of claims 29—51 and 58—60. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We affirm. Appeal 2016-002592 Application 12/355,734 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellants’ invention is directed to “to location-specific operation of a removable meter unit for vehicle parking” (Spec. 13). Independent claim 29, reproduced below, is exemplary of the subject matter on appeal. 29. A method of operating a parking meter, the method comprising: a. establishing a network communication session with a parking meter, the meter having an electronic display, the meter being uniquely associated with a physical location; b. transmitting configuration information toward the meter over the network during the established network communication session, the configuration information associated with operation of the meter and uniquely associated with the physical location of the meter, the configuration information comprising one or more of: coin validation criteria updates, firmware updates, and operating software updates; c. receiving meter operating data from the meter, the meter operating data comprising an acknowledgement of receipt of the configuration information; d. providing a web-based administrative user interface comprising a meter revenue summary, wherein the meter revenue summary comprises cash amounts, credit amounts, and total revenue collected by the meter; and e. providing a web-based administrative user interface comprising a tool for remotely configuring the meter display message on the display of the meter. 2 Appeal 2016-002592 Application 12/355,734 REFERENCES and REJECTION The Examiner rejected claims 29—51 and 58—60 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) based upon the teachings of McMillin (US 7,027,773 Bl; Apr. 11, 2006), Ratnakar (US 2006/0152349 Al; July 13, 2006), Manion (US 6,037,880; Mar. 14, 2000), and Walker (US 2013/0005445 Al; Jan. 3, 2013). ANALYSIS The Examiner finds McMillin discloses the step of “establishing a network communication session with a parking meter” (step a.) (Final Act. 3), “transmitting configuration information toward the meter over the network . . .” (step b.) {id.), and “receiving meter operating data from the meter, . . . comprising an acknowledgement of receipt of the configuration information” (step c.) {id.). The Examiner finds Ratnakar discloses “the meter having an electronic display” and “being uniquely associated with a physical location” (step a.) (Final Act. 4). The Examiner then finds Manion discloses “a meter revenue summary, . . . comprises cash amounts, credit amounts and total revenue collected by the meter” (step d.) (Final Act. 6) and “providing a web-based administrative user interface comprising a tool for remotely configuring the meter display message on the display of the meter” (step e.) (Final Act. 7). Finally, the Examiner finds Walker also discloses “a meter revenue summary, . . . comprises cash amounts, credit amounts and total revenue collected by the meter” (step d.) (Final Act. 8). Appellants main contentions are: 1) Walker and McMillin are not analogous art (App. Br. 9, 13); 2) Walker does not teach or suggest a “meter revenue summary comprises cash amounts, credit amounts, and total 3 Appeal 2016-002592 Application 12/355,734 revenue” (App. Br. 10-11); and 3) Manion does not disclose a web-based interface “comprising a tool for remotely configuring the meter display message on the display of the meter” {id. at 11—12). We do not agree. We agree with and adopt the Examiner’s findings as our own (Final Act. 3—10; Ans. 2—5). Particularly, we find Walker and McMillin are analogous art. Appellants’ invention is directed “to location-specific operation of a removable meter unit for vehicle parking” (Spec. 13) and “more efficient and reliable automated reporting and monitoring of meter operations and transactions” (Spec. 19). As the Examiner finds, Walker’s gaming devices have meters that interact with a remote server computer to communicate usage information (Final Act. 8; Walker 1489). We also note Walker is directed to the same problem addressed by Appellants—keeping track of revenue (Spec. Tflf 8, 11), and was cited as disclosing a meter revenue summary including cash amounts, credit amounts, and total revenue collected (see Walker || 490—501), as claimed. Thus, we agree, Walker is pertinent to the problem which Appellants’ invention is directed (Ans. 2). McMillin is also analogous art because, as the Examiner finds, “McMillan describes the use of parking meters where minion devices are installed for the communication of messages from and to the Internet, which Examiner interprets as the network communication session of the present invention” (Ans. 4—5). Appellants’ arguments in the Reply Brief do not persuade us of Examiner error because McMillin does disclose parking meters (Final Act. 2-4; McMillin, col. 40,11. 7-24). We also do not agree with Appellants that Walker does not disclose a meter revenue summary. We note Manion was cited as disclosing the meter revenue summary (Final Act. 6; Manion col. 5,1. 32—the report generation 4 Appeal 2016-002592 Application 12/355,734 module sorts according to revenue statistics) and Walker was cited for commutatively disclosing the meter revenue summary can include cash amounts, credit amounts and total revenue collected by a device/meter (Final Act. 8; Ans. 3^4; Walker || 495, 501,1234 (displaying payouts and credit meter balances), Fig. 11 (payout amounts are displayed)). Thus, we agree Walker teaches or suggests the meter revenue summary, also taught by Manion, could include cash credit amounts and total revenue collected. Appellants’ argument that “Manion merely discloses ‘the capability to remotely change the rate structure of any of [sic] all electronic parking meters’” and does not disclose “changing, updating, or configuring the meter display message” (App. Br. 11—12); Manion, col. 2,11. 1—5) is in error. Manion’s Figure 11 shows a parking meter having an interface with a port to accept rate changes, at least suggesting a display (Manion col. 8,11. 44—62). Also, as the Examiner finds, Manion’s Abstract teaches a display (“[t]he meter may also set the time remaining on the meter to zero . . .”), illustrating that the meter has a display. We further agree with the Examiner that “[i]t is old and well known to use a display for the output of information” (Ans. 4). Changing the rate of Manion’s electronic parking meter, and showing the changed rate on the meter’s display, is the combination of familiar elements according to known methods that does no more than yield the predictable result of changing the meter’s display message. See KSR Int’l Co. v. Teleflex, Inc., 550 U.S. 398, 416 (2007). Appellants’ response in the Reply Brief that “[njowhere in Manion can one find the disclosure that the meter operator reads messages of meter diagnostic features from a parking meter, or any meter,” (Reply. Br. 9) is not persuasive as the claim does not recite a meter operator reads messages of meter diagnostic features; rather claim 29 5 Appeal 2016-002592 Application 12/355,734 recites “remotely configuring the meter display message on the display of the meter,” as Manion’s Abstract teaches. Thus, Appellants have not persuaded us the Examiner erred in rejecting independent claim 29 as obvious over the collective teachings of the cited references, and claims 30-51 and 58—60, not separately argued (App. Br. 9). DECISION The Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 29—51 and 58—60 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)(iv). AFFIRMED 6 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation