Ex Parte Chow et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardSep 19, 201311015152 (P.T.A.B. Sep. 19, 2013) 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. 11/015,152 12/17/2004 Hungkei Keith Chow 100.2543 6256 46266 7590 09/20/2013 PRIEST & GOLDSTEIN, PLLC 5015 SOUTHPARK DR SUITE 230 DURHAM, NC 27713 EXAMINER DOBSON, DANIEL G ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 2636 MAIL DATE DELIVERY MODE 09/20/2013 PAPER 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. PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ Ex parte HUNGKEI KEITH CHOW, MANYALIBO JOSEPH MATTHEWS, DUSAN SUVAKOVIC, and DOUTJE T. VAN VEEN ____________ Appeal 2011-004030 Application 11/015,152 Technology Center 2600 ____________ Before CARL W. WHITEHEAD, JR., ERIC S. FRAHM, and ANDREW J. DILLON, Administrative Patent Judges. DILLON, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appellants appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) from the Examiner’s rejection of claims 21-24. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We affirm. Appeal 2011-004030 Application 11/015,152 2 STATEMENT OF THE CASE Appellants describe the invention as follows: A passive optical network includes an optical line termination unit (OLT) connected to one or more optical network units (ONUs) by optical elements. The OLT is capable of performing downstream transmission to the ONUs at each of a variety of different bit rates, and each ONU performs upstream transmission at one or more bit rates. The OLT can sense a bit rate of a received transmission and change its operation so as to receive and process the transmission exhibiting the sensed bit rate. Each of the ONUs receives and processes downstream transmissions at one or more bit rates, but each ONU is capable of maintaining a phase and frequency lock to downstream transmissions at all bit rates supported by the OLT. Spec. 25, Abstract. Claim 21 is illustrative, which is reproduced below. 21. A method of data communication comprising: performing a downstream data transmission from an optical line termination unit (OLT) to a plurality of optical network units (ONUs); as each of the ONUs receives a downstream transmission, achieving a phase and frequency lock of the operation of the ONU to a bit rate of the downstream transmission; changing the bit rate of the downstream transmission while it is being received by the ONU; as the bit rate of the downstream transmission received at an ONU changes, detecting the bit rate with an ONU bit rate detection circuit and maintaining a phase and frequency lock at the ONU to the downstream transmission; Appeal 2011-004030 Application 11/015,152 3 performing upstream data transmission from the plurality of ONUs to the OLT at a plurality of bit rates; and detecting the bit rate of the upstream transmission utilizing an OLT bit rate detection circuit. The Examiner relies on the following references as evidence of unpatentability: Alb US 6,760,391 B1 July 6, 2004 Shoukei Kobayashi, et al., Multi-Bit Rate Passive Double Star System Using Time-Unit Packet, Journal of Lightwave Technology, Vol. 19, No. 2, pp. 150-158 (Feb. 2001) (hereinafter “Kobayashi”). REJECTIONS The Examiner rejected claims 21-23 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as unpatentable over Kobayashi. Ans., pp. 3-6.1 The Examiner rejected claim 24 under § 103(a) as unpatentable over Kobayashi and Alb. Id. at pp. 6-7. The Examiner has withdrawn the rejection of claims 10-16. Id. at p.3. ANALYSIS Appellants present each of claims 21-24 as standing or falling with claim 21 (App. Br., p. 10), which is rejected as obvious over Kobayashi. For 1 Throughout this opinion, we refer to the Examiner’s Supplemental Answer mailed November 11, 2010 (“Supp. Ans.”), Appeal Brief filed February 17, 2010 (“App. Br.”), Examiner’s Answer mailed May 25, 2010 (“Ans.”), and Reply Brief filed July 22, 2010 (“Reply Br.”). Appeal 2011-004030 Application 11/015,152 4 the reasons below, Appellants have not shown a reversible error in the rejection of claim 21. See In re Jung, 637 F.3d 1356, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2011) (“[T]he Board would not have erred in framing the issue as one of ‘reversible error.’”). Appellants correctly describe the claimed invention as follows: Claim 21 addresses a method of data communication comprising performing a downstream data transmission from an optical line termination unit (OLT) to a plurality of optical network units (ONUs). As each of the ONUs receives a downstream transmission, a phase and frequency lock of the operation of the ONU to a bit rate of the downstream transmission is achieved. The bit rate of the downstream transmission is changed while it is being received by the ONU. As the bit rate of the downstream transmission received at an ONU changes, [t]he bit rate is detected with an ONU bit rate detection circuit and a phase and frequency lock at the ONU to the downstream transmission is maintained. App. Br., p. 9. The Examiner does not dispute this description of claim 21’s scope. Appellants also correctly describe Kobayashi’s teachings as follows: Kobayashi teaches a network employing a plurality of ONUs, each of which may communicate at different bit rates at different times, and an optical service unit (OSU) adaptable to each of the bit rates exhibited by the different ONUs in the network. Each user is assigned a time domain, called a TP, in the frame, and each user may use any bit rate in his TP within permitted limits. Each ONU transmits and receives at the same bit rate and the OSU transmits to an ONU at the same bit rate employed by the ONU during its transmission. See Kobayashi, page 150, line 39 – page 151, line 10. The ONUs and the OSU both employ a bit rate discrimination (BRD) circuit. In the ONUs, the bit rate discrimination circuit extracts TPs with a Appeal 2011-004030 Application 11/015,152 5 known bit rate, while in the OSU, the BRD discriminates multiple bit rates, requiring that the clock speed of the clock recovery circuit be changed for each TP. See Kobayashi, page 151, line 30 – page 152, line 2. App. Br., pp. 7-8. The Examiner does not dispute this description of Kobayashi’s teachings. The Appellants and Examiner dispute only whether, as determined by the Examiner, it would have been obvious for Kobayashi’s ONU’s to decode data transmissions of changing bitrates in the same manner that the OSU is disclosed as decoding data transmissions of changing bitrates. Ans., p. 5; Supp. Ans., pp. 3-4. According to the Examiner, Kobayashi’s ONU’s and OSU include the same bit rate discrimination (BRD) circuit for detecting bitrates, thus suggesting that an ONU could be modified so as to – like the OSU – decode a transmission of changing bit rate in response the BRD circuit detected bitrate. Id. We hold the Examiner’s proposed modification is reasonable for the following reasons. First, each downstream TP has a header that can be used by an ONU for bitrate discrimination. See e.g., Kobayashi, p. 151, col. 1 (“Each TP, however, has a different bit rate[.] . . . [The header’s] PR and GT are used for [BRD].”). Thus, Kobayashi’s data is configured for bitrate discrimination by an ONU. Second, as pointed out by the Examiner, the OSU and ONU’s discriminate bitrates via the same BRD circuit. See Ans., p. 9; Kobayashi, p. 151, col. 2 (“The most characteristic function of the 3R circuit is [BRD]. This circuit is placed in the OSU and ONU.”). And with respect to the proposed modification, the only notable difference between the OSU and Appeal 2011-004030 Application 11/015,152 6 ONU’s circuitries is that the OSU regenerates data at changing bitrates by varying its recovery clock rate in response to the BRD circuit detected bit rate. See Kobayashi, p. 151, col. 2 – p. 152, col. 1 (“In the ONU, the BRD circuit has to extract TPs with known bit rate. . . . In the OSU, the BRD circuit has to discriminate multiple bit rates and this requires that the clock speed of the clock recovery circuit be changed for each TP. The recovered clocks are used for data regeneration[.]”); id at Fig. 9. Thus, with modifications for likewise varying an ONU recovery clock rate, Kobayashi’s modified ONU would also apparently regenerate data at changing bitrates in response to the BRD circuit detected bit rate. In light of the above considerations, the Examiner presented a prima facie case of obvious for the proposed modification. Appellants have not presented evidence of an error in an underlying basis of the prima facie case or evidence of nonobviousness rebutting the prima facie case. See Ex Parte Frye, 94 USPQ2d 1072, 1075 (BPAI 2010) (precedential) (explaining the Board’s review of obviousness rejections). Rather, Appellants repeatedly argue that Kobayashi’s ONU’s and OSU are different, which merely begets the question of whether it would have been obvious to modify the ONUs in view of the OSU (i.e., in view of the similarities and differences). For example, in the Appeal Brief, Appellants argue: [T]he [OSU] and the ONUs of Kobayashi have different needs and serve different functions with respect to bit rate selection and changes. The bit rate selections made by the [OSU] and the ONUs are performed according to different criteria. As noted above in the discussion of [withdrawn] claim 10, each ONU is served by the [OSU], with the ONU selecting its own bit rate and being served with that bit rate by the [OSU]. The [OSU] Appeal 2011-004030 Application 11/015,152 7 serves multiple ONUs which may operate at different bit rates according to criteria set by the users, with different ONUs being able to exhibit different bit rates and for each ONU to change its bit rate from TP to TP. Changing downstream bit rates during transmission to an ONU would not achieve the goals of Kobayashi, which is to adapt the bit rate provided by the [OSU] to the bit rate requirements of the ONU as defined by the ONU. App. Br., pp. 9-10. The argument is not persuasive because it neglects the proposed modification of the ONUs in view of the OSU. As the Examiner correctly notes, “the [obviousness] analysis is not limited to the needs and functions or the goals of the prior art. . . . [And,] a person of ordinary skill would see that the ONUs (disclosed by Kobayashi) would be improved by employing the same methods used on the [OSU].” Ans., p. 9. Despite the Examiner’s urging to address the proposed modification of the ONU in view of the OSU, Appellants responded by merely contending again that Kobayashi’s disclosed ONUs and OSU have different functions, stating: Examining [Kobayashi’s] Table 1, it is clearly seen that both the functions and parameters for the receivers of Kobayashi’s OSU and ONU are listed differently. So, even the relied upon summary table suggests the receivers are not the same. More specifically, the OS[U] receiver has a “Gain-Control Amplifier (GCA)” function and “Dynamic Range & Bit Rate Range” not listed for the ONU receiver. Reply Br., p. 2. Similarly, Appellants responded by merely listing differences between Kobayashi’s ONUs and OSU without any meaningful explanation of how those differences undermine the proposed modification of the ONUs in view of the OSU. Particularly, Appellants responded: Appeal 2011-004030 Application 11/015,152 8 [Kobayashi] states . . . [“]an ONU transmits and receives at the same bit rate. The OSU, on the other hand, must transmit and receive at the bit rates of all ONUs.” Kobayashi further states specifically: “In the ONU, the BRD circuit has to extract TPs with known bit rates . . . . In the OSU, the BRD circuit has to discriminate multiple rates and this requires that the clock speed of the clock recovery circuit be changed for each TP.” (emphasis added) Further, Kobayashi . . . state[s]: “The OS[U] BRD circuit uses one high-speed clock to process all bit rates, whereas the ONU BRD circuit uses its own clock.” Finally, . . . Kobayashi indicates a prototype for OSU use was built and tested, but there is no discussion of specifically building an ONU receiver. In conclusion, Kobayashi’s ONU clearly does not have “the same front-end hardware for receiving multiple bit rates as the [OSU]”.2 As noted above, it does not have the same hardware because among other reasons its “BRD circuit has to extract TPs with known bit rates” unlike the BRD circuit of the OSU which discriminates multiple rates. Reply Br., pp. 2-3 (citations omitted; footnote and italic emphasis added). Contrary to the emphasized statements of Appellants’ argument, Kobayashi’s ONU’s and OSU indeed have the same front-end hardware insofar as sharing the same BRD circuit for bitrate discrimination. See e.g., Kobayashi, Fig. 9. And, given that similarity, the Examiner presented a reasonable basis for determining that it would have been obvious for Kobayashi’s ONU’s to regenerate data in the same manner as the OSU; that is, by varying the recovery clock rate in response to the BRD circuit detected bit rate. Appellants cannot refute this determination by merely listing differences between Kobayashi’s disclosed ONU’s and OSU. 2 Quoting the Examiner’s Answer. See Ans., p. 5. Appeal 2011-004030 Application 11/015,152 9 In sum, Appellants have not shown a reversible error or presented rebuttal evidence of nonobviousness. ORDER The Examiner’s decision rejecting claims 21-24 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)(1)(iv). AFFIRMED llw Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation