Monday, January 18, 2010

Test for PRS

  1. Write one page essay on "Has the ease of cooking improved life?"
  2. Read carefully the below extract, which is taken from a book written sixty years ago by a British scientist in which he considers the relationship between science and society.

The pioneers of the teaching of science imagined that its
    introduction into education would remove the conventionality,
    artificiality, and backward-lookingness which were characteristic;
    of classical studies, but they were gravely disappointed. So, too, in
5   their time had the humanists thought that the study of the classical
    authors in the original would banish at once the dull pedantry and
    superstition of mediaeval scholasticism. The professional
    schoolmaster was a match for both of them, and has almost
    managed to make the understanding of chemical reactions as dull
10  and as dogmatic an affair as the reading of Virgil's Aeneid.

    The chief claim for the use of science in education is that it
    teaches a child something about the actual universe in which he is
    living, in making him acquainted with the results of scientific
15  discovery, and at the same time teaches him how to think logically
    and inductively by studying scientific method. A certain limited
    success has been reached in the first of these aims, but practically
    none at all in the second. Those privileged members of the
    community who have been through a secondary or public school
20  education may be expected to know something about the
    elementary physics and chemistry of a hundred years ago, but they
    probably know hardly more than any bright boy can pick up from
    an interest in wireless or scientific hobbies out of school hours.
    As to the learning of scientific method, the whole thing is palpably
25  a farce. Actually, for the convenience of teachers and the
    requirements of the examination system, it is necessary that the
    pupils not only do not learn scientific method but learn precisely
    the reverse, that is, to believe exactly what they are told and to
    reproduce it when asked, whether it seems nonsense to them or
30  not. The way in which educated people respond to such quackeries
    as spiritualism or astrology, not to say more dangerous ones such
    as racial theories or currency myths, shows that fifty years of
    education in the method of science in Britain or Germany has
    produced no visible effect whatever. The only way of learning the
35  method of science is the long and bitter way of personal
    experience, and, until the educational or social systems are altered
    to make this possible, the best we can expect is the production of a
    minority of people who are able to acquire some of the techniques
    of science and a still smaller minority who are able to use and
40  develop them.

Choose the best answer and justify it with your explanation

1. The author implies that the 'professional schoolmaster' (line 7) has

  1. no interest in teaching science
  2. thwarted attempts to enliven education
  3. aided true learning
  4. supported the humanists
  5. been a pioneer in both science and humanities.


     

2. The author's attitude to secondary and public school education in the sciences is

  1. ambivalent
  2. neutral
  3. supportive
  4. satirical
  5. contemptuous


     

3. The word 'palpably' (line 24) most nearly means

  1. empirically
  2. obviously
  3. tentatively
  4. markedly
  5. ridiculously


     

4. The author blames all of the following for the failure to impart scientific method through the education system except

  1. poor teaching
  2. examination methods
  3. lack of direct experience
  4. the social and education systems
  5. lack of interest on the part of students


     

5. If the author were to study current education in science to see how things have changed since he wrote the piece, he would probably be most interested in the answer to which of the following questions?

  1. Do students know more about the world about them?
  2. Do students spend more time in laboratories?
  3. Can students apply their knowledge logically?
  4. Have textbooks improved?
  5. Do they respect their teachers?


     

6. Astrology (line 31) is mentioned as an example of

  1. a science that needs to be better understood
  2. a belief which no educated people hold
  3. something unsupportable to those who have absorbed the methods of science
  4. the gravest danger to society
  5. an acknowledged failure of science


 

7. All of the following can be inferred from the text except

  1. at the time of writing, not all children received a secondary school education
  2. the author finds chemical reactions interesting
  3. science teaching has imparted some knowledge of facts to some children
  4. the author believes that many teachers are authoritarian
  5. it is relatively easy to learn scientific method.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Free Online Access to First Indian Patent Searchable Database

Ekaswa A

Patent applications filed in India as published in the issues of the Gazette of India (Part III, Section 2) from January 1995 onwards.

Search for Ekaswa A Database

Ekaswa B

Patent applications notified for opposition in the Gazette of lndia (Part III, Section 2) published from January 1995 onwards.)

Search for Ekaswa B Database

Free Books!!!

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Sunday, October 7, 2007

Patent Tools

The tools on the given link is to save your time when performing analysis of patents.

Claim Chart Generator (for issued patents and patent applications)
This tool automatically creates a claim chart template for your use. The Claim Chart Generator includes multiple options for formatting the claim chart including the number of columns in the chart and page orientation. The Claim Chart Generator can also generate charts for specific patent claims, all claims, or all independent claims.

Patent Navigator
This tool automatically creates a web page containing a patent and provides options to view the entire patent or to view only portions of a patent. Options include viewing only high-level information regarding a patent (such as the only the title, abstract, and other information commonly found on the front page) and/or only the independent claims. Great for quickly reviewing patents at a very high level.

Independent Claim Comparison Chart Generator
This tool automatically creates a claim chart with all of the independent claims side-by-side for your use. Very useful for comparing independent claims and identifying similarities (or differences) between independent claims.

Claim Tree Generator
This tool automatically creates a tree of all claims for your convenience. The tree provides the user with a quick view of the dependencies for all claims in a patent.

Patent Information Table Generator
This tool creates a table of various information fields for multiple patents. Some examples of supported information fields include title, filing date, and inventors. This may be one of the most useful tools when creating reports.

Patent-to-PDF Generator (NEW!)
This tool automatically creates a PDF of a US patent. Unlike other online tools which may cost money, image-only PDFs of US patents are free! For a nominal fee, you can also have the patent OCR'd so that it is text searchable!

USPTO Patent Link Generator
This tool automatically creates hyperlinks to any patent numbers you provide. Useful for inserting into documents and spreadsheets where you want your patent numbers to hyperlink to the USPTO website.

Search Assignment Tool (NEW!)
This tool creates a report of all assignment information retrieved from the Assignment Database search on the USPTO website. Huge timesaver when there are a lot of results.

Quick View (formerly Patent Summary)
This tool automatically creates a web page containing high-level patent information for any number of supplied patents. The high-level information includes abstract, inventorship and priority information, and the claims. Great for quickly reviewing a large number of patents at a very high level.

Patent Maintenance Fee
This online tool automatically calculates the USPTO patent maintenance fee due for the given patent.Maintenance fees are due three times during the life of a patent, and may be paid without surcharge anytime during the following time periods:

First payment: 3 to 3 ½ years after the date of issue

Second payment: 7 to 7 ½ years after the date of issue and

Third and final payment: 11 to 11 ½ years after the date of issue.

Maintenance fees may be paid with a surcharge during the following "grace periods:"

First payment: 3 ½ years and through the day of the 4th anniversary of the grant of the patent;

Second payment: 7 ½ years and through the day of the 8th anniversary of the grant of the patent; and

Third and final payment: 11 ½ years and through the day of the 12th anniversary of the grant of the patent.

If the last day for paying a maintenance fee or any applicable surcharge falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or federal holiday, the fee may be paid on the succeeding day which is not a Saturday, Sunday, or federal holiday.

Claim Chart Generator
This online tool automatically creates a claim chart template for the requested patent number. The claim chart can be generated in different formats like Word, Excel or HTML. The tool can generate charts either for all claims or for independent claims only (check the box provided).

Patent Term Calculator
In the United States, under current patent law, the term of a patent is either 20 years from the earliest claimed filing date or 17 years from the issue date, depending on the filing date and the issue date (provided that the maintenance fees are paid in due time):
For applications that were pending on and for patents that were still in force on June 8, 1995, the patent term is either 17 years from the issue date or 20 years from the earliest claimed filing date, the longer term applying.
For applications filed on or after June 8, 1995, the patent term is 20 years from the earliest claimed filing date.

Reference Picker
Reference Picker 1.0 is a downloadable software tool that enables you to easily extract the US references, foreign references and other references from any patent specification (.rtf, .doc). The extracted references are displayed in MSExcel Format with links to the respective pages and are also concurrently highlighted in the given patent document.

(Thanks to http://www.pattools.com/ and https://maxval-ip.com/)

How to Perform a Patent Search?

U.S. Patent Searching:

STEP 1: List of Search Terms - Develop a list of keywords, including synonyms, that describe the invention including each component of the invention. ...more

STEP 2: Index to the Classification of Patents - Find initial class/subclass for the invention. ...more

STEP 3: Manual of Classification - Review the full classification schedule. ...more

STEP 4: Classification Definitions - Review definitions to confirm classification. ...more

STEP 5: Search issued patents and patent applications for each classification searched. You can navigate directly from the Manual or Definitions or use one of the databases listed below. ...more
USPTO Patent Databases: search for patents from 1790 to the present by classification or patent number. Keyword searching is available from 1976-present.

PubWEST: PubWEST is the public version of a collection of databases created for the USPTO patent examiners and can ONLY be accessed in a Patent and Trademark Depository Library (PTDL) (at Rice the PTDL is in the basement of Fondren Library) or in the Public Search Facility at the USPTO.
CASSIS DVD-ROM: database for patent searching is available in Fondren Library.

STEP 6: Review patents and applications in the same subject area. A Tagged Image File Format (TIFF) viewer is needed to view patent images. For instructions please see our TIFF downloading guide. ...more

STEP 7: Check references and field of search. Check the references cited and forward references for closely related patents and applications. Search applicable classes/subclasses found in those documents. ...morePatent Searching Tutorials:
Patent Searching Tutorial through University of Texas at Austin
Patent Search Tutorial through Penn State University

Additional Searching Resources:

PubWEST web-based searching database - library use only

USPTO Patent Search Templates - The USPTO is developing search templates that define the field of search, search tools and search methodologies for many classification areas.

Google Patents
Search U.S. patents from 1790 to within the last few months. Does not include published applications or international patents.

Scopus
Includes PatentCites which enables users to view citations from patent sources that cite Scopus articles on the Abstract and References page. Scopus Indexes over 15,000 journals, as well as several million web pages and U.S. and international patents. Database include article citations from 1996, and permits citation tracking, and (both) saving searches and email or RSS alerts of new material. The system will export records into major citation managers and prepare a bibliography according to major formats. (1966)

19th Century Masterfile
Subject matter index of U.S. patents issued 1790-1873. International Patent Searching:
PubWEST Patent Abstracts of the EPO (European Patent Office) and JPO (Japan Patent Office) - library use only
PubWEST Foreign Patent Image access - library use only

http://ep.espacenet.com/-- Search the European Patent Office database for European and Japanese patents; includes U.S. patents; uses http://www.wipo.int/classifications/ipc/ipc8/

World Intellectual Property PCT Database -- search international patent application data back to January 1, 1997.

Concordance, U.S. Patent Classification (USPC) to International Patent Classification (IPC)
CAMBIA Patent LensFree full-text patent search database containing over 5,500,000 patents and patent applications from the PCT, US, and EPO databases with patents from additional jurisdictions to be added in the next two years.

Canadian Patents DatabaseContains Text (Abstract and Claims) Databases begining with Aug. 15, 1978, Image Databases beginning with Jan. 1, 1920, and Bibliographic (Titles, Names, Dates, and Classification) Databases beginning with Jan. 1, 1869.

Trilateral Web SiteJoint web site of the European Patent Office, the Japanese Patent Office, and the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.

British Library Patent ResourcesCollection of patent searching resources and links to intellectual property websites worldwide.

USPTO List of Other Intellectual Property Offices

Saturday, September 1, 2007

Patent Glossary (A-D)

Abandonment:
A patent application becomes abandoned for failure to file a complete and proper reply as the condition of the application may require within the time period provided under 37 CFR § 1.134 and § 1.136 unless an Office action indicates otherwise.

Abstract of the disclosure
A concise statement of the technical disclosure including that which is new in the art to which the invention pertains

Administrative Instructions
Set out the provisions and requirements in relation to the filing and processing of the international (patent) application under the PCT and are established by the Director General of WIPO

ADS
Application Data Sheet

Agent (patent)
(May be referred to as a practitioner or representative) - one who is not an attorney but is authorized to act for or in place of the applicant(s) before the Office, that is, an individual who is registered to practice before the Office.

will continue...

Regards
PP
AIPA
American Inventors Protection Act of 1999

Application number (patent)

The unique number assigned to a patent application when it is filed. The application number includes a two digit series code and a six digit serial number

Applicant
Inventor or joint inventors who are applying for a patent on their own invention, or the person mentioned in 37 CFR 1.42, 1.43 or 1.47 who is applying for a patent in place of the inventor.

Application (patent)
An application for patent filed under 35 U.S.C. 111(a) that includes all types of patent applications (i.e., utility, design, plant, and reissue) except provisional applications. The nonprovisional application establishes the filing date and initiates the examination process. A nonprovisional utility patent application must include a specification, including a claim or claims; drawings, when necessary; an oath or declaration; and the prescribed filing fee.

Assignment
A transfer of ownership of a patent application or patent from one entity to another. Record all assignments with the USPTO Assignment Services Division to maintain clear title to pending patent applications and patents.

Attorney
(May be referred to as a practitioner or representative) - an individual who is a member in good standing of the bar of any United States court or the highest court of any State and who is registered to practice before the Office.

Benefit claim
The claiming by an applicant in a nonprovisional application of a benefit of an invention disclosed in a prior-filed copending (under examination at the same time) provisional or nonprovisional application, or international application designating the U.S. for the purposes of securing an earlier-effective filing date for the nonprovisional application.

Bio-sequence listings
A document that must be included only if a nucleotide or amino acid sequence is part of the invention. With EFS, paper documents are not required for bio-sequence or subsequent bio-sequence submissions.

BPAI
Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences

BPAIIS
Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences Information System

Canceled claim
A claim that is canceled or deleted. "Canceled" is the status identifier that should be used when a claim is canceled in an application

Certificate of mailing
A certificate for each piece of correspondence mailed, prior to the expiration of the set period of time for response, stating the date of deposit with the U.S. Postal Service and including a signature

Chapter I
The first, mandatory phase under the Patent Cooperation Treaty that includes performance of an international-type search, issuance of an International Search Report, and publication of the application and Search Report by the International Bureau of WIPO

Chapter II
The second, optional phase under the Patent Cooperation Treaty that includes examination of the international application and issuance of an International Preliminary Examination Report.

CIP
Continuation-in-Part

Claims
Define the invention and are what aspects are legally enforceable. The specification must conclude with a claim particularly pointing out and distinctly claiming the subject matter which the applicant regards as his invention or discovery. The claim or claims must conform to the invention as set forth in the remainder of the specification and the terms and phrases used in the claims must find clear support or antecedent basis in the description so that the meaning of the terms in the claims may be ascertainable (clearly understood ) by reference to the description. (See 37 CFR § 1.58(a)).

Classification
Patents are classified (organized) in the U.S. by a system using a 3 digit class and a 3 digit subclass to describe every similar grouping of patent art. A single invention may be described by multiple classification codes.

Coinventor
An inventor who is named with at least one other inventor in a patent application, wherein each inventor contributes to the conception (creation) of the invention set forth in at least one claim in a patent application.

Combination patent
A patent granted for an invention that unites existing components in a novel way

Common inventor
An inventor whose name is listed on multiple patent applications or granted patents, making the inventions at least partially the work of the same person.

Confirmation number
A four-digit number that is assigned to each newly filed patent application. The confirmation number, in combination with the application number, is used to verify the accuracy of the application number placed on correspondence filed with the Office to avoid misidentification of an application due to a transposition error (misplaced digits) in the application number. The Office recommends that applicants include the application's confirmation number (in addition to the application number) on all correspondence submitted to the Office concerning the application.

Contracting State
A national Office or an intergovernmental organization which is party to the Patent Cooperation Treaty.

Continuation
A second application for the same invention claimed in a prior nonprovisional application and filed before the first application becomes abandoned or patented

Continuing application
A continuation, divisional, or continuation-in-part patent application

Control No.
Unique number assigned to a patent reexamination request when it is filed, having a 2-digit series code (90 for ex parte reexamination requests; 95 for inter partes reexamination requests), and a 6-digit control number.

Counterpart
An application filed in a foreign patent office that is substantially similar to (like) the patent application filed with the USPTO and is based upon some or all of the same invention. The two applications would generally have the same applicant.

CRU
Central Reexamination Unit

Customer number
(Previously referred to as "payor number") - a number assigned by the Office that is used to simplify the submission of an address change, to appoint a practitioner, or to designate the fee address for a patent. Customer numbers are primarily used by attorneys and law firms, and must be requested using the "Request for Customer Number" form (PTO/SB/125).

Deceased inventor
A named inventor who has died prior to the filing of a patent application or during the prosecution of a patent application.

Declaration
a document in which an applicant for patent declares, under penalty of fine or imprisonment, or both (18 USC 1001), that (1) he or she is the original or sole inventor, (2) shall state of what country he or she is a citizen, (3) that he or she has reviewed and understands the contents of the specification and claims which the declaration refers to, and (4) acknowledges the duty to disclose information that is material to patentability as defined by 37 CFR § 1.56. An oath or declaration must be filed in each nonprovisional patent application.

Demand
Form PCT/IPEA/401, filed with an International Preliminary Examining Authority, demanding that an international application shall be the subject of an international preliminary examination.

Dependent claim
A claim that refers back to (depends on) and further limits a preceding dependent or independent claim. A dependent claim shall include every limitation of the claim from which it depends.

Design patent application
An application for a patent to protect against the unauthorized use of new, original, and ornamental designs for articles of manufacture

Design patent
May be granted to anyone who invents a new, original, and ornamental design for an article of manufacture

Designation
An indication made by applicant, in the Request for an International Application filed under the Patent Cooperation Treaty, as to the Contracting States in which protection for an invention is desired.

Disclaimer
A patentee, whether of the whole or any sectional interest therein, may, on payment of the fee required by law, make disclaimer (give up all or part of the owner's rights to enforce claims) of any complete claim , stating therein the extent of their interest in such patent. Such disclaimers are required to be in writing and recorded in the USPTO, and are considered as part of the original patent to the extent of the interest actually possessed by the disclaimant and by those claiming under him. Any patentee or applicant may disclaim or dedicate to the public the entire term, or any terminal part of the term (from a certain point in time through the projected end of the entire term), of the patent granted or to be granted. There are two types of disclaimers: a statutory disclaimer and a terminal disclaimer.

Disclosure
In return for a patent, the inventor gives as consideration a complete revelation (describes it) or disclosure of the invention for which protection is sought.

Disclosure document
The USPTO eliminated its Disclosure Document Program on February 1, 2007. For more information, see the Federal Register notice: http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/com/sol/notices/71fr64636.pdf [PDF].

Divisional application
A later application for an independent or distinct invention disclosing and claiming (only a portion of and) only subject matter disclosed in the earlier or parent application.

Doctrine of equivalents
A judicially created theory for finding patent infringement when the accused process or product falls outside the literal scope of the patent claims. The essential objective inquiry is: “Does the accused product or process contain elements identical or equivalent to each claimed element of the patented invention?”

Drawing
Patent drawings must show every feature of the invention as specified in the claims. Omission of drawings may cause an application to be considered incomplete but are only required if drawings are necessary for the understanding of the subject matter sought to be patented.

Patent FAQ

1. Is my invention patentable?
Your invention may be patentable if it meets certain requirements. First, the invention must fall within a category of invention that can be protected at all. Secondly it must be new, and sufficiently different from what others have done before. Thirdly, it must not have entered the public domain due to your own efforts to commercialize it.

2. What types of inventions can be patented?
You may patent a machine, an electronic circuit, a computer program, a process, a chemical composition, and many other useful articles or systems. You may patent a combination of known components, provided that the combination itself was not known before, and is not an obvious modification of what was known.

3. Are there inventions that can never be patented?
Yes. Certain kinds of ideas do not qualify. For example, the discoverer of a mathematical theorem is not entitled to a patent for the theorem. A pure mathematical algorithm, unconnected with a real-world problem, is not considered patentable.

However, sometimes an invention that might seem inherently unpatentable might turn out to be patentable anyway, if it is properly characterized in a patent application. Thus, a theorem of mathematics, while not patentable in itself, may still be protected when claimed as part of an automated method for solving a practical problem. Part of the job of the patent attorney is to characterize an invention so as to maximize the chance of securing a meaningful patent.

For many years, it was believed that methods of doing business were not patentable. But recent court decisions have held that a method of doing business may be patentable, provided that the method satisfies the requirements for patentability that apply to all other inventions. As a result of such court decisions, many patent applications relating to business methods have been filed.

4. How special does my invention have to be to deserve a patent?
First, to be patentable, the invention must be "new". This means that the invention must not have been described in a prior patent, or in any prior printed publication. The invention also must not have been generally known by others in the US.

Secondly, the invention must not be "obvious". In very general terms, an invention is "obvious" if the difference between the invention and the prior art would have been apparent to a person of ordinary skill in the relevant field. The question of "obviousness" is often a difficult and subjective one.

5. Do I need a design patent?
The patents described above are "utility" patents. A utility patent is what most people think of when they think of patents. A utility patent covers the way an object works. A design patent covers the way an object looks. A design patent protects only the appearance of a product, not its internal structure or its function.

Sometimes, the same idea can yield both a utility and a design patent application. But the two patents cover very different things.

Because a design patent covers only the appearance of a product, a design patent is usually a very limited form of protection. But it is also usually much less expensive and relatively easy to obtain. Also, if a design patent is infringed, it can sometimes be easier to collect damages than in the case of a utility patent.

Some inventors file both utility and design applications when the likelihood of obtaining a utility patent seems small.

Unless otherwise indicated in these materials, the word "patent" is meant to refer to a utility patent.

6. May I disclose the invention before it is patented?
It is best to keep your invention strictly confidential, at least until you file a patent application. If your invention is placed on sale, or advertised for sale, or sold, in the U.S., and more than one year passes, the invention is no longer patentable.

Thus, U.S. law gives you a one-year grace period. You may sell or advertise the invention, and still obtain a patent, provided that you file the patent application within one year of the first sale, advertisement, or offer.

If you disclose the invention before filing a patent application, a question may later arise concerning whether and when the invention was "on sale", and you may wish you hadn't made the disclosure.

Many times, an invention has been held to be "on sale" even when the inventor did not think it was "on sale". In fact, many major patent infringement suits have been won or lost just on this point. Be very careful in what you do with the invention before a patent application is filed. An "on sale" situation arises even if an offer is made in confidence. The best practice is to make no disclosure whatever until the application has been filed.

There are some exceptions to the one-year "on sale" rule. For example, the rule does not apply when the invention was sold only for experimental purposes. But you cannot count on the exception applying in your case.

If you are interested in foreign patents, be aware that the rules in most foreign countries are more strict. Your invention is not patentable in foreign countries if there has been any public disclosure, or any outright sale, before a patent application is filed. That is, in foreign countries, there is no one-year grace period. This is known as the rule of "absolute novelty". There are some exceptions to this rule, and you should not simply conclude that your foreign patent is barred, without first consulting a patent attorney. Also, most countries allow you to avoid the problem by filing an application in the U.S. before your first disclosure or sale, provided that you file in the foreign country within one year of your filing date in the U.S. In short, if you want foreign patent protection, be sure to file your U.S. application before you make any sale or public disclosure of the invention.

7. What about provisional patent applications?
A provisional patent application is a document that discloses the invention, and which stops the "clock" for purposes of the "on sale" rule. It can usually be filed for slightly less money than a regular patent application. However, a provisional application must be supplemented by a regular patent application within one year of filing. Thus, the cost advantage may be more imagined than real. Also, if you want foreign patents, the foreign patent applications must be filed within one year of the filing date of the provisional application, which is the same time within which you must supplement the provisional with a regular application.

8. Isn't there some kind of paper I can file inexpensively, in the Patent Office, to preserve my rights?
The U.S. Patent & Trademark Office allows inventors to file a "Disclosure Document" describing their inventions. But a Disclosure Document is not a patent application, and does not stop the clock for purposes of the "on sale" rule described above. It simply provides a means of establishing a date of invention, in the event of a dispute with another inventor who claims to have made the same invention at about the same time. In this sense, it analogous to sending yourself a certified letter containing your invention disclosure. A Disclosure Document is not examined by the Patent & Trademark Office, and does not create any patent rights.

9. What should be my first step in obtaining a patent?
Many inventors prefer to begin with a patentability search. As explained above, if the invention was patented or described in a prior publication, it is not patentable. The purpose of a search is to determine whether such patents or publications exist. Since the cost of a search usually is far less than the cost of a patent application, a search enables an inventor to spend a relatively small amount of money before deciding whether to spend a larger amount on a patent application.

A search is not mandatory. If you prefer, you may skip the search and file a patent application immediately. Some inventors have no time to do a search, because they need to file quickly, due to an approaching deadline. Others have confidence in their knowledge of their field, especially where they have recently obtained patents in the same area.

A search also has disadvantages. The search itself costs money, and if your invention is patentable, the total cost of obtaining the patent will be slightly greater with the search than without it. Also, no search is exhaustive; most patent searches are limited to U.S. patents only. A search covering all the literature ever published in the world would cost far more than the cost of a patent application. Thus, the results of a search cannot be taken as a guarantee that the invention is patentable. A search simply enables you to increase your level of confidence in the patentability of your invention.

10. What does a search cost?
A search costs about $875, including an opinion on patentability. The search is done at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office, or on a computer database. Since most computer databases do not include the full texts of patents issued before the 1970s, a "key word" search will not reveal older patents. In some cases, it will be necessary to search for older patents in a different way, such as by using the Manual of Classification, maintained by the Patent & Trademark Office. The nature of the search depends, in part, on the nature of the invention. If the invention does not involve high technology, and if it could have been known before the 1970s, it may be appropriate to search the older records.

11. How do I apply for a patent?
Assuming you have done a search, and found nothing to bar the patent, or you have decided not to do a search and file an application, the next step is for me to write the patent application itself.

A patent application is a legal document which, if approved, is printed as a patent. In the case of utility patents, the application must include a detailed and complete written description of the invention, and a set of drawings (if the invention can be illustrated by drawings). The application also includes a set of claims, which are carefully written, single-sentence paragraphs which precisely define what the proposed patent will and will not cover.

The claims of the patent application are the most important part, but they are usually the most difficult to understand. Perhaps the most important reason to hire a patent attorney is to be sure that the claims are written correctly. If the claims are too narrow, a worthless patent may issue.

I prepare a draft patent application based on information I receive from the inventor(s), by phone, in writing, or in person. The draft may undergo multiple revisions, as the inventor makes corrections or has new ideas. When the inventor is finally satisfied with the application, I prepare the necessary papers to be signed, and the signed application is sent to the Patent & Trademark Office for filing.

Because it is not permissible to add new material to an application that has already been filed, and because the patent law requires that the application contain a complete disclosure, sufficient to teach someone skilled in the relevant art how to practice the invention, it is important that the application be complete. That is why a patent application may require several drafts.

12. How much does it cost to prepare the application?
There is no definite answer to this question because the time spent in writing an application can vary considerably, depending on the complexity of the invention, and on the number of drafts required. However, in the average case, in which the application is about 15-25 pages long, the project may take about 15-20 hours of my time. Since my hourly rate is $175, the cost of preparing and filing the application could be about $3500, possibly more and possibly less, plus government filing fees, plus the cost of drawings.

13. How much are the government fees?
Currently, the basic application fee for a "small entity", i.e. an independent inventor or a company having 500 or fewer employees, is $500, and can be higher, depending on the number of claims in the application. For a "large entity", the rates are doubled. Note that, though you may be a "small entity", your application may not qualify for small entity status if you have licensed the invention to a large company, or if a large company has any ownership interest, however small or indirect, in your invention.

14. How much do drawings cost?
The drawings, if prepared by my patent drafter, usually cost about $75-100 per sheet, but the per-sheet cost can be greater if the drawings are complex.

15. Is there a way to save on drawing costs?
Yes. Although the Patent & Trademark Office rules set strict standards for patent drawings, it is not necessary to file perfect drawings initially. It is permissible to file with informal drawings, as long as they are understandable to the Examiner. When the application is allowed, it then becomes necessary to submit formal drawings to replace the informal ones.

However, be aware that the formal drawings must not contain any "new matter" that was not in the original drawings. When the new drawings are submitted, the Patent & Trademark Office will check to be sure this requirement is met. In deciding whether or not to submit formal drawings at the time of first filing, one should consider whether the drawings themselves have significant informational content (i.e. do they illustrate a unique structure?), or whether they are more in the nature of flow charts and block diagrams, where the quality of the drawings is unrelated to the information they contain.

Also, because pending patent applications are now published, the requirements for drawings, even informal drawings, have become somewhat more strict in recent years. The drawings filed with the application must not be so informal that they cannot be properly reproduced in a published version of the application.

16. What happens after the application is filed?
The application is sent to a Patent Examiner. In mechanical cases, it often takes 8-12 months, or more, before an Examiner reviews the application. In some fields, such as electronics, computer software, information technology, or biotechnology, it may be as long as two years. A recent change to the patent law gives inventors a chance to recoup some of the patent term that would be otherwise lost due to excessive delays by the Patent & Trademark Office.

The Examiner does his own search, in an attempt to locate prior patents, or non-patent references, which anticipate or suggest what is recited in the claims of the application. If the Examiner finds such prior art, he issues an Official Action rejecting the claims.

A rejection occurs in probably 95% of all cases. Some patent applications are rejected repeatedly before a patent issues. The reason is that a patent is a government-granted monopoly, and public policy dictates that no monopoly be granted unless it is truly warranted by the inventor's creativity. The Examiner's job is to narrow the scope of the patent granted; the patent attorney's job is to obtain the broadest possible patent for the client.

Indeed, if the patent application is allowed on the first action, it may mean that the inventor did not ask for enough when filing the application. An initial allowance, though gratifying, should be reason to check to be sure that the claims are broad enough to protect the invention properly.

The process by which the attorney negotiates with the Examiner concerning the breadth of the patent is called "prosecution". (The latter term has nothing to do with litigation in court.)

17. What happens if my patent application is rejected?
First, keep in mind that a rejection is normal. The Examiner fully expects that you will respond and rebut the rejection.

The Official Action sets a deadline for response, usually three months, though this deadline may be extended by up to three more months, by payment of a government fee.

If the Examiner rejects the application because of prior art, it may be possible to amend the claims to overcome the rejection. Sometimes, the Examiner makes an error in interpreting a prior patent, or misunderstands the invention. In these cases, it may be enough simply to explain the error to the Examiner in writing.

The patent attorney prepares a response, usually called an "Amendment" to the application, and makes written arguments explaining why the invention is patentable.

The business of the Patent & Trademark Office is primarily conducted in writing, but the attorney may speak to the Examiner by telephone or in person, when circumstances so require.

Sometimes, the Examiner's only objections deal with formal matters, such as the attorney's choice of language in the claims. If so, a simple Amendment is usually all that is necessary to secure allowance. Often, the Examiner combines formal rejections with substantive ones, in the same action.

Sometimes, the Examiner's rejection appears nonsensical to the inventor. The Patent & Trademark Office employs thousands of examiners, who vary considerably in ability. Also, keep in mind that the Examiner is trained to analyze the words of the claims, because it is the claims that determine the scope of the patent. If the claims are reasonably broad (as they will be if the patent attorney is doing a good job), the Examiner is more likely to find prior art which contains the features recited in the claims.

18. What does it cost to prepare an Amendment?
There is no definite answer, because it depends on the amount of time taken to do the work. The time depends on how many references the Examiner has applied, and how many reasons for rejection he or she has given.

In most cases, an Amendment can be prepared in 5-10 hours, but there are some cases in which the amount is less than five hours, and there are many cases which require more than 10 hours. Thus, an Amendment may cost $850-1,750, or more.

19. What happens if the Examiner refuses to grant a patent?
It does happen that an Examiner cannot be persuaded, by written or oral arguments. Then, the only option may be an appeal.

An appeal is made to a board within the Patent & Trademark Office. The appeal may be conducted entirely in writing, but an oral hearing may be requested. Although the appeal board is part of the Patent & Trademark Office, it is sufficiently separated from the Examiner that it can be expected to render a reasonably impartial decision. Recent statistics show that the appeal board reverses the Examiner's decision in about one-third of the cases heard.

If the appeal board does not reverse the Examiner's decision, you can exercise further rights of appeal, in the courts. You may choose between two different kinds of court proceedings, one of which is a streamlined appeal to a higher court, and the other including a full trial on the issue of patentability. Naturally, the latter option is more expensive.

20. What happens when my patent application is allowed?
The Patent & Trademark Office issues a Notice of Allowance, which sets a three-month deadline for payment of the issue fee and publication fee. For small entities these fees total $1000. If the application was filed with informal drawings, it will also be necessary to supply formal drawings at this time. A patent usually issues about two or three months after payment of the issue fee.

21. How long is the patent in force?
For patent applications filed after June 7, 1995, the patent term begins on the date the patent issues, and ends on a date which is twenty years from the filing date.

There are some exceptions. For example, if the application claims the priority of an earlier application, its term is measured from the filing date of the earlier application. Also, utility patents are subject to payment of maintenance fees.

22. What are maintenance fees?
To keep a U.S. patent in force, a maintenance fee is due three times during the life of the patent. Such fees are due 3 1/2, 7 1/2, and 11 1/2 years after the issue date. If the maintenance fee is not paid, the patent expires. The fees become higher as the patent ages. For a limited time after a patent has lapsed for failure to pay a maintenance fee, it is possible to revive the patent, by paying a special surcharge to the government.

Maintenance fees are a relatively new phenomenon in the U.S., having been instituted in 1982. But most foreign countries have long required payment of annual maintenance fees, which are often called "annuities".

Regards
PP