Ex Parte LudwigDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardOct 16, 201210683915 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 16, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ Ex parte LESTER F. LUDWIG ____________ Appeal 2010-006457 Application 10/683,915 Technology Center 2800 ____________ Before JOHN A. JEFFERY, BARBARA A. BENOIT, and TRENTON A. WARD, Administrative Patent Judges. JEFFERY, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appellant appeals under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner’s rejection of claims 25-62. Claims 1-24 and 63-118 have been withdrawn from consideration. App. Br. 6. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We reverse. Appeal 2010-006457 Application 10/683,915 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellant’s invention integrates video and electronic music by capturing video images during live performances to produce musical instrument digital interface (MIDI) signals. See generally Abstract. Claim 25 is illustrative with key disputed limitations emphasized: 25. A system for extracting and generating control signals from at least one video signal said system comprising: a first image processing element for receiving a first incoming video signal, wherein said first image processing element detects at least one image-related component within an image represented by said first incoming video signal; and a processor for processing said at least one image-related component to generate at least one outgoing control signal comprising a [sic] at least one of a MIDI continuous controller message and a MIDI note message, the outgoing control signal being generated responsive to content in the image represented by said first incoming video signal. RELATED APPEALS This appeal is said to be related to ten other appeals. App. Br. 4; Ans. 2.1 Seven of these appeals (09/812,400, 10/676,926, 10/702,415, 10/680,591, 10/703,023, 10/702,262, and 11/040,163) have been decided. See Ex parte Ludwig, No. 2009-002201, 2009 WL 3793386 (BPAI 2009), (non-precedential) (reversing Examiner’s anticipation and obviousness rejections); Ex parte Ludwig, No. 2009-006844, 2010 WL 4917799 (BPAI 2010) (non-precedential) (same); Ex parte Ludwig, No. 2009-008141, 2011 WL 486163 (BPAI 2011) (non-precedential) (reversing Examiner’s obviousness rejections); Ex parte Ludwig, No. 2009-008916, 2011 WL 1 One of these listed applications is the present application. See App. Br. 4 (including Application 10/683,915). Appeal 2010-006457 Application 10/683,915 3 794287 (BPAI 2011) (non-precedential) (affirming Examiner’s obviousness rejection in part); Ex parte Ludwig, No. 2009-009356, 2011 WL 1211179 (BPAI 2011) (non-precedential) (affirming Examiner’s anticipation and obviousness rejections in part); Ex parte Ludwig, No. 2009-010281, 2011 WL 1806460 (BPAI 2011) (non-precedential) (reversing Examiner’s anticipation rejection); Ex parte Ludwig, No. 2010-009424, 2011 WL 5325639 (BPAI 2011) (non-precedential) (affirming Examiner’s obviousness rejections). THE REJECTIONS 1. The Examiner rejected claims 25-27, 29-35, 37, 39-46, 48-54, and 62 under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b) as anticipated by Kimpara (US 5,310,962; May 10, 1994). Ans. 3-6.2 2. The Examiner rejected claims 28, 36, 38, 47, and 55-61 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Kimpara and Toriumi (US 6,062,868; May 16, 2000 (filed Oct. 18, 1996)). Ans. 6-8. THE ANTICIPATION REJECTION The Examiner finds that Kimpara discloses every recited feature of independent claim 25 including a processor that generates at least one outgoing control signal comprising MIDI continuous controller and/or note 2 Throughout this opinion, we refer to (1) the Appeal Brief filed June 11, 2009; (2) the Examiner’s Answer mailed October 1, 2009; and (3) the Reply Brief filed December 1, 2009. Appeal 2010-006457 Application 10/683,915 4 messages which are said to read on Kimpara’s tempo control signal. Ans. 3- 4, 8-9. Appellant argues that since Kimpara’s tempo control signal is distinct from the recited continuous controller and note messages under the MIDI standard message format in the Brief’s Evidence Appendix, Kimpara does not generate the recited outgoing control signal. App. Br. 14-19; Reply Br. 3-7. ISSUE Under § 102, has the Examiner erred in rejecting claim 25 by finding that Kimpara discloses a processor for processing an image-related component to generate at least one outgoing control signal comprising at least one MIDI continuous controller message and/or MIDI note message? ANALYSIS We begin by noting that it is undisputed that Kimpara’s CPU 4 generates MIDI tempo control signals or data responsive to detected image content. See Kimpara, col. 3, l. 30–col. 4, l. 47; Figs. 1-3(c). This appeal, then, turns on one question: Is this tempo control signal a MIDI continuous controller or MIDI note message? According to Appellant, Kimpara’s tempo control signal is not a MIDI note message since it provides no information about specific notes as is the case with the MIDI “Note On” and “Note Off” messages defined in the MIDI specification in the Brief’s Evidence Appendix. App. Br. 14-15, 38-41 (Ev. App’x); Reply Br. 4-6. Rather, Kimpara’s tempo control signal is said to be a “Timing Clock” message that is sent 24 times for each quarter Appeal 2010-006457 Application 10/683,915 5 note per the MIDI standard. App. Br. 14-15; Reply Br. 4-5. Appellant adds that Kimpara’s tempo control signal is not a MIDI continuous controller message since it does not provide a value relating to the current position of a user control as defined by the “Control Change” message in the MIDI specification. App. Br. 15-17; Reply Br. 5-7. The Examiner, however, contends that Kimpara’s tempo control signal directly relates to note distribution, and therefore directly affects note output by controlling the rate at which notes are produced. Ans. 8. To the extent that the Examiner contends that Kimpara’s tempo control signal is a MIDI note message, we disagree. First, as noted above, Kimpara’s tempo control signal is a MIDI signal that is referenced to a fixed temporal standard to establish tempo and therefore comports with the MIDI “Timing Clock” message—not the particular MIDI “Note On” and “Note Off” messages noted above. But even if Kimpara’s tempo control signal was not so limited, tempo does not necessarily affect note output to control note rates as the Examiner contends. Rather, a particular MIDI note pattern can be performed at the same rate regardless of the tempo: the notes and their respective durations could remain constant even if they were no longer synchronized with the beat at a different tempo—a musically unorthodox scenario to be sure. But this possibility nonetheless undermines the Examiner’s inherency position that requires that Kimpara’s tempo control signal necessarily affects note output—which it does not. To be sure, it is possible to perform or generate musical tones “by the satisfactory tempo” with Kimpara’s system. Kimpara, col. 5, ll. 12-15 (emphasis added). But to say that this limited teaching means that Kimpara’s tempo control signal is necessarily a MIDI note signal as claimed Appeal 2010-006457 Application 10/683,915 6 is untenable on this record. Although this passage arguably suggests using tempo control signals to generate a MIDI note message in accordance with the corresponding tempo either manually or automatically, we cannot say that the tempo control signal itself is a MIDI note message under the Examiner’s position. To the extent that this feature would have been obvious over Kimpara, however, is a question that is not before us: nor will we speculate in that regard here in the first instance on appeal. The Examiner’s contention (Ans. 8-9) that Kimpara’s tempo control signal is a MIDI continuous controller message is likewise unavailing. Although a user control can be used to control tempo—a possibility that Appellant acknowledges (Reply Br. 5)—we cannot say, nor has the Examiner shown, that this necessarily corresponds to the “Control Change” message under the MIDI specification which defines a MIDI continuous controller message.3,4 In any event, that associated controllers, such as pedals and levers, can be used to control tempo as the Examiner contends 3 Although Appellant cites Wikipedia in connection with MIDI continuous controller messages (App. Br. 15 n.1)—a non-peer-reviewed source of dubious reliability (see, e.g., Ex parte Three-Dimensional Media Group, Ltd., No. 2009-004087, 2010 WL 3017280 (BPAI 2010) (non-precedential), at *17 see also Bing Shun Li v. Holder, 2010 WL 4368469 (5th Cir. 2010) (unpublished), at *2 (noting Wikipedia’s unreliability and citing Badasa v. Mukasey, 540 F.3d 909, 910-11 (8th Cir. 2008))—the content and authenticity of the cited MIDI specification in the Evidence Appendix are undisputed. 4 We note in passing that while the Evidence Appendix includes a summary of MIDI messages in Table 1, it does not include the “Summary of Control Change Messages” in Table 3. See App. Br. 38 (Ev. App’x) (referring to Tables 2-4 for other aspects of the MIDI specification). Appeal 2010-006457 Application 10/683,915 7 (Ans. 8) is unavailing here given the Examiner’s permissive language in this regard,5 for anticipation requires that Kimpara’s tempo control signal is necessarily a MIDI continuous controller message—which it is not. Again, to the extent that this feature would have been obvious over Kimpara is a question not before us: nor will we speculate in that regard here in the first instance on appeal. We are therefore persuaded that the Examiner erred in rejecting (1) independent claim 25; (2) independent claim 44 which recites commensurate limitations; and (3) dependent claims 26, 27, 29-35, 37, 39- 43, 45, 46, 48-54, and 62 for similar reasons. THE OBVIOUSNESS REJECTION Since the Examiner has not shown that Toriumi cures the deficiencies noted above regarding the independent claims, we will not sustain the obviousness rejection of claims 28, 36, 38, 47, and 55-61 (Ans. 6-8) for similar reasons. 5 See also Ans. 8 (“Both [pedals and levers] can be used to control tempo, wherein this is normally how tempo is controlled.”); Ans. 9 (“[T]empo would clearly fall under the defined MIDI Controllers which usually relates to a knob control.”); Id. (“[T]empo is normally controlled by some type of knob which . . . categorizes the tempo as a continuous controller element.”) (emphases added). Appeal 2010-006457 Application 10/683,915 8 CONCLUSION The Examiner erred in rejecting (1) claims 25-27, 29-35, 37, 39-46, 48-54, and 62 under § 102, and (2) claims 28, 36, 38, 47, and 55-61 under § 103. ORDER The Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 25-62 is reversed. REVERSED gvw Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation