Ex Parte lmai et alDownload PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardFeb 28, 201914371289 - (D) (P.T.A.B. Feb. 28, 2019) Copy Citation UNITED STA TES p A TENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE APPLICATION NO. FILING DATE 14/371,289 07/09/2014 27538 7590 03/04/2019 Gibson & Dernier LLP 89 Headquarters Plaza North PMB 1469 Morristown, NJ 07960 FIRST NAMED INVENTOR Kenichi Imai 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. 545-478 7231 EXAMINER SOLTANZADEH, AMIR ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 2191 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 03/04/2019 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): info@gdiplaw.com cmburgos@gdiplaw.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte KENICHI LMAI, SHIGERU ENOMOTO, HIROSHI SAITO, TOSHIMASA AOKI, and SATOSHI HASIMOT0 1 Appeal 2018-007111 Application 14/371,289 Technology Center 2100 Before BRADLEY W. BAUMEISTER, SHARON PENICK, and RUSSELL E. CASS, Administrative Patent Judges. BAUMEISTER, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appellants appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner's Final Rejection of claims 1-11. App. Br. 6-10. 2 We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We reverse. 1 Appellants list Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. as the real party in interest. Appeal Brief filed December 27, 2017 ("App. Br.") 2. 2 Rather than repeat the Examiner's positions and Appellants' arguments in their entirety, we refer to the above-mentioned Appeal Brief, as well as the following documents, for their respective details: the Final Action mailed September 1, 2017 ("Final Act."); the Examiner's Answer mailed May 17, 2018 ("Ans."); and the Reply Brief filed July 5, 2018 ("Reply Br."). Appeal 2018-007111 Application 14/371,289 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellants describe the present invention as follows: When a content acquisition unit acquires a part of full-size application software, an installation processing unit installs the acquired part, and an execution unit sets the installed application software to be executable. While the execution unit is executing the application software, the content acquisition unit continues to download the application software. A display processing unit changes a display mode of an icon image differently when a part of the application software is installed and when the application software is installed in its entirety. Abstract. Independent claim 1, reproduced below with modified formatting, illustrates the claimed invention: 1. An information processing system provided with a server for storing application software and with an information processing apparatus for downloading application software from the server, wherein the information processing apparatus comprises: an acquisition unit configured to download application software; a display processing unit configured to display an icon image of the downloaded application software; an input unit configured to receive an operation of selecting an icon image; and an execution unit configured to execute the application software, wherein the display processing unit displays a first icon image that occurs when the application software is executable while the application software has been downloaded in its entirety and a second icon image that occurs when the application software is executable while a part of the application software has been downloaded, each in a different display mode, and 2 Appeal 2018-007111 Application 14/371,289 wherein, when the input unit receives an operation of selecting the second icon image, the execution unit executes the application software. Claims 1-11 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § I03(a) as unpatentable over Li (US 2003/0097400 Al; published May 22, 2003), Decker (US 2010/0313159 Al; published Dec. 9, 2010) and Zeller (US 2011/0185043 Al; published July 28, 2011). Final Act. 3-22. We review the appealed rejections for error based upon the issues identified by Appellants, and in light of the arguments and evidence produced thereon. Ex parte Frye, 94 USPQ2d 1072, 107 5 (BP AI 2010) (precedential). DETERMINATIONS DURING PROSECUTION AND CONTENTIONS The Examiner finds that Li discloses an information processing system including an information processing apparatus that comprises an acquisition unit configured to download application software, an input unit configured to receive an operation of selecting an icon image, and an execution unit configured to execute the application software. Final Act. 3- 4 ( citing Li ,ri1). The Examiner finds that Li does not teach or suggest a display processing unit configured to display an icon image of the downloaded application software or teach the final two limitations of claim 1 ("wherein the display processing unit ... " and "wherein, when the input unit receive an operation ... "). Id. at 4. The Examiner finds that Decker teaches a display processing unit configured to display an icon image of the downloaded application software ... , wherein the display processing unit displays a first icon image that occurs when the application software is executable while the application 3 Appeal 2018-007111 Application 14/371,289 software has been downloaded in its entirety. . . and a second icon image that occurs when the application software is executable while a part of the application software has been downloaded, each in a different display mode. Id. at 4--5 (citing Decker ,r,r 22, 23; FIGs. 1, 2). The Examiner concludes that it would have been obvious to have combined Li and Decker "so that the user is provided with [a] good experience within [a] web browser to show [an] accurate representation of the progress made on [a] particular download of web content." Id. at 5---6. The Examiner further finds that the combination of Li and Decker does not teach the claim limitation, "when the input unit receives an operation of selecting the second icon image, the execution unit executes the application software." Id. at 6. The Examiner finds that Zeller teaches this limitation. Id. (citing Zeller ,r,r 41, 92). The Examiner explains that Zeller. . . talks about translating user commands to client application 132 into requests for operations that the Sandbox Manager performs. It further mentions that user commands can be "button clicks". In the broadest reasonable interpretation, the button click can be on a selectable icon image. [Zeller also] talks about sending a[ n] "exec" command to Sandbox Manager and in return the Sandbox Manager executes the virtual application at least "partially implemented". As a result, Zeller discloses a selectable icon image that would invoke execution of a partially downloaded application program. Final Act. 23 (citing Zeller ,r,r 41, 92; FIG. 5). The Examiner further clarifies [From Figure 5 and paragraphs 30 and 128 of Zeller, w ]e can conclude that there are two parts in [Zeller's] virtual application, which are the virtual operating system and a single or more multiple virtualized application files. Further, there are two stages in executing the virtual application. The first stage involves launching the virtual operating system, and the second 4 Appeal 2018-007111 Application 14/371,289 stage involves executing the startup executables, which are the one or more virtual application files. And from paragraph [O 128] we can conclude that the execution can take place when the application is partially downloaded. As a result, Zeller teaches execution of a partially downloaded application program. Reply Br. 2-3. The Examiner determines that it would have been obvious to have combined further the teachings of Zeller with those of Li and Decker in order to enable preemptively transferring the portion of a particular virtualized application file to reduce the amount of time required to transfer the particular virtualized application file after a user enters the user command into the client application that requests the download and execution of the particular virtualized application file, so that downloading time is reduced. Final Act. 6-7. Appellants argue that none of the references, either alone or combined, teaches or suggests "a selectable icon image that would invoke execution of a partially downloaded application program." App. Br. 8. According to Appellants, "Decker ... merely provides the user with information as to how the downloading is proceeding." Id. They contend that Decker's download progress indicator changes appearance as the downloading progresses from beginning to end (Reply Br. 4--5 ( citing Decker FIG. 2, states 202, 204, 206)) and that each of the indicators include an "X" that merely permits a user to click to terminate a download (id. at 5 (citing Decker ,r 23)). Appellants argue in relation to Zeller, that it is unreasonable to interpret a virtual operating system program and a virtual application file together as a single application file or that downloading these two separate files reasonably can be interpreted as two stages of a single download. 5 Appeal 2018-007111 Application 14/371,289 Reply Br. 3--4. Appellants also argue the following regarding Zeller's downloading of the application file, itself: The user does not select an icon image to start execution of a partially downloaded virtual application. The only time the user provides a command is prior to the download of the virtual application -- such that a user provides a single user command to automatically download the virtual application from the sandbox manager 134 to the client application 132 ([see Zeller ,r 79]). The user does not provide any further commands (and certainly not to an icon) to begin execution of the virtual application because the execute command is automatically issued by the client application 132. Finally, the client application 132 does not issue the execute command until the entire virtual application is downloaded (decision box 470 = YES) as is made abundantly clear in paragraph [0092]. Reply Br. 3. ANALYSIS Decker teaches progress indicators ( or icons) that provide a visually distinguishable indication depending on the state of a requested operation. Decker ,r,r 22-23; FIG. 2. For example, a darker-background indicator may indicate a state 202 in which "the web browser is actively retrieving the requested web page content, but [wherein] none of the requested content is currently available for viewing on the web browser display." Id. ,r 22. In contrast, a lighter background indicator may indicate a state 204 in which "some portion of usable content is available for viewing on the web browser application." Id. The absence of a progress indicator may indicate a state 206 in which the loading of the web page is complete. Id. ,r 23. However, Decker does not teach or suggest that a partially downloaded application may be executed by clicking on the progress 6 Appeal 2018-007111 Application 14/371,289 indicator, itself. Decker only teaches that the progress indicator may include an "X" that a user can click to stop the downloading. Id. Nor does Zeller cure this deficiency of Decker. Even if the Examiner is correct that Zeller teaches an execution unit that executes application software when an input unit receives an operation of selecting a click button or icon image (Final Act. 6 ( citing Zeller ,r 41) ), the Examiner has not sufficiently established that such a selected icon image indicates the uncompleted progress of some previously initiated download, or that such a selected icon is different from an icon that occurs when the software has been downloaded in its entirety. Thus, the Examiner has not demonstrated that Zeller discloses "a second icon image that occurs when the application software is executable while a part of the application software has been downloaded" and executing the application software "when the input unit receives an operation of selecting the second icon image," as required by claim 1. The Examiner's combination of Zeller with Li and Decker to yield the disputed limitations appears to be a result of improper reliance on knowledge gleaned only from Appellants' claim 1. Any judgment on obviousness is in a sense necessarily a reconstruction based on hindsight reasoning, but so long as it takes into account only knowledge which was within the level of ordinary skill in the art at the time the claimed invention was made and does not include knowledge gleaned only from applicant's disclosure, such a reconstruction is proper. In re McLaughlin, 443 F.2d 1392, 1395, (CCPA 1971). For these reasons, Appellants have persuaded us of error in the Examiner's obviousness rejection of independent claim 1. Accordingly, we 7 Appeal 2018-007111 Application 14/371,289 do not sustain the Examiner's rejection of that claim, or of claims 2-11, which either depend from claim 1 or otherwise recite similar limitations. DECISION The Examiner's decision rejecting claims 1-11 is reversed. REVERSED 8 Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation