Ex Parte Grasso et alDownload PDFPatent Trial and Appeal BoardSep 17, 201211000318 (P.T.A.B. Sep. 17, 2012) Copy Citation UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________________ Ex parte LAWRENCE JOSEPH GRASSO, BARNEY LOUIS HALLMAN, BRUCE JAMES WILKIE ____________________ Appeal 2010-005911 Application 11/000,318 Technology Center 2100 ____________________ Before DEBRA K. STEPHENS, DAVID M. KOHUT, JOHNNY A. KUMAR, Administrative Patent Judges. STEPHENS, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Appeal 2010-005911 Application 11/000,318 2 Appellants appeal under 35 U.S.C. § 134(a) (2002) from a non-final rejection of claims 1, 4-10, 21-23, and 26-31. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). Claims 2-3, 11-20, 24, 25, and 32 have been cancelled (App. Br. 2). We AFFIRM-IN-PART. Introduction According to Appellants, the invention relates to data processing systems employing external or remote I/O resources (Spec. 1, §1. Field of the Present Invention). STATEMENT OF THE CASE Exemplary Claim Claims 1 and 21 are exemplary claims and are reproduced below: 1. An expansion apparatus suitable for use with a first host system, comprising: a chassis; a first expansion buss port for receiving an expansion buss [sic] connection from the first host; a first expansion card within the chassis, wherein the first expansion card includes multiple adapter slots; a bridge device providing an interface between each adapter slot and the expansion buss [sic.]; a means for monitoring settings and conditions within the chassis; Appeal 2010-005911 Application 11/000,318 3 a storage means within the chassis; a means for storing an assignment state of the first expansion card in the storage means and for providing the assignment state to the first host, wherein the assignment state is indicative of whether the first host may configure the first expansion card; and a first management port for receiving a chassis management cable, the chassis management cable connecting a chassis controller to the first host, the chassis management cable transmitting, between the chassis controller and the first host, information describing environmental conditions within the chassis, and the assignment state of the first expansion card. 21. A data processing assembly comprising: a first host of a first platform type; at least one expansion drawer connected to the first host by a first expansion buss [sic] cable and including a first expansion card assigned to and configured by the first host, wherein the first host further includes a second expansion buss [sic] connected to a second expansion card, wherein the first host configures the first expansion card via the first expansion buss [sic], and the second expansion card via the second expansion buss [sic]; a storage device of the expansion drawer containing an assignment state indicative of the assignment of the first expansion card; wherein the host is enabled to retrieve the assignment state from storage device and to determine whether to configure the first expansion card depending upon information in the assignment state and the host is configured not to retain the assignment state across boot cycles; and Appeal 2010-005911 Application 11/000,318 4 the assembly is configured to enable the first host to access the first and second expansion cards via the second expansion buss [sic] responsive to a failure of the first expansion buss [sic]. References Behrbaum US 6,462,745 B1 Oct. 8, 2002 Chinnaswamy US 6,611,526 B1 Aug. 26, 2003 Bouchier US 6,725,317 B1 Apr. 20, 2004 Hewlett-Packard, “AlphaServer GS80, GS160, and GS320 Systems Technical Summary,” 2002, (herein “HP”) Hewlett-Packard, “TruCluster Software Products, Technical Update for TruCluster Software Products Version 1.6 with Tru64 UNIX Version 4.0G and AlphaServer GS160 Hard Partitions”, June 2000, (herein “HP2”) Hewlett-Packard, “AlphaServer Management Station, Adding a GS80, or GS320 to an AMS Environment”, June 2004, (herein “HP3”) Rejections (1) Claims 1 and 4-10 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, and Chinnaswamy. (2) Claims 21-23, 26, and 28-31 stand rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, Chinnaswamy, and HP2. (3) Claim 27 stands rejected under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, Chinnaswamy, HP2, and HP3. 1 1 We note Appellants misstate the basis of rejection for claim 27 in Grounds of Rejection (App. Br. 5) omitting Bouchier and Chinnaswamy. However, Appellants did indicate the proper grounds of rejection in their “Argument Regarding The Third Ground Of Rejection On Appeal” (App. Br. 13). Appeal 2010-005911 Application 11/000,318 5 GROUPING OF CLAIMS Based upon Appellants’ arguments, we select representative claim 1 to decide this appeal for the group consisting of claims 1 and 4-10. (See App. Br. 6-10). Based upon Appellants’ arguments, we select representative claim 21 to decide this appeal for the group consisting of claims 21-23, 26, and 28-31. (See App. Br. 10-13). Based upon Appellants’ arguments, we address claim 27 individually. (See App. Br. 13-14). Arguments Appellants could have made but chose not to make in the Briefs have not been considered and are deemed to be waived. See 37 C.F.R. § 41.37(c)(1)(vii)(2009). ISSUE 1 35 U.S.C. § 103(a): claims 1 and 4-10 Appellants assert their invention is not obvious over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, and Chinnaswamy because the combination does not teach or suggest “a first management port for receiving a chassis management cable, the chassis management cable connecting a chassis controller to the first host” (App. Br. 8-10). Specifically, Appellants contend Chinnaswamy teaches an interchassis link port for connecting one chassis to another but does not teach or suggest a management port for receiving a chassis management cable (App. Br. 8). According to Appellants, a chassis is not a Appeal 2010-005911 Application 11/000,318 6 host (App. Br. 9). Further, Appellants argue the recited chassis management cable transmits at least two kinds of information whereas Chinnaswamy’s interchassis link port does not receive a chassis management cable that transmits both kinds of information (App. Br. 8 and Reply Br. 6). Issue 1: Has the Examiner erred in finding the combination of HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, and Chinnaswamy would have taught or suggested “a first management port for receiving a chassis management cable, the chassis management cable connecting a chassis controller to the first host” as recited in claim 1? ANALYSIS Initially, we agree with the Examiner’s interpretation of “chassis management cable” (Ans. 19) and therefore find the chassis management bus is a chassis management cable. We further find Appellants’ definition of “host” attempts to read limitations from the Specification into the claims (see App. Br. 9). However, Appellants specifically define host as “a processing system” (see Spec. 1, l. 15; see also Spec. 15, ll. 5-6 which describes a host as including a general purpose processor connected to a common bus). Therefore we decline to import limitations asserted by Appellants into the interpretation of “host.” In light of this interpretation, we find the application module taught by Chinnaswamy teaches or suggests a processing system and thus, a first host. Indeed, Figure 16 of Chinnaswamy teaches an exemplary application module – a processing system. Appeal 2010-005911 Application 11/000,318 7 We further find Chinnaswamy in Figure 6 teaches or suggests the chassis management bus 432 connecting a chassis controller 428/430 to the first host 422 (see col. 3, l. 56 to col. 4, l. 1). Further, Chinnaswamy teaches or suggests a first management port for receiving a chassis management cable (Fig. 5, Interchassis Link Port), as set forth by the Examiner (Ans. 19). Appellants have not shown the Examiner’s interpretation of management port is in error. Further, Appellants are arguing limitations not recited in the claim (App. Br. 9). Specifically, claim 1 does not recite any functionality of the first management port aside from “for receiving a chassis management cable.” We find the interchassis link port is a port for receiving the chassis management cable. Appellants further argument that Chinnaswamy does not teach or suggest transmitting two kinds of information is also non-persuasive. First we note the type of information is non-functional descriptive matter. Indeed, the information itself has no function. Further, even if we were to give weight to the terms, the Examiner has relied on Bouchier as teaching the type of information being transmitted (Ans. 6). One cannot show nonobviousness by attacking references individually where the rejections are based on combinations of references. See In re Merck & Co., Inc., 800 F.2d 1091, 1097 (Fed. Cir. 1986). Accordingly, the Examiner did not err in finding the combination of HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, and Chinnaswamy would have taught or suggested “a first management port for receiving a chassis management cable, the chassis management cable connecting a chassis controller to the first host” as recited in independent claim 1 and dependent claims 4-10, not Appeal 2010-005911 Application 11/000,318 8 separately argued. Therefore, the Examiner did not err in rejecting claims 1 and 4-10 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) for obviousness over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, and Chinnaswamy. ISSUE 2 35 U.S.C. § 103(a): claims 21-23, 26, and 28-31 Appellants assert their invention is not obvious over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, Chinnaswamy, and HP2 because the combination does not teach or suggest “wherein the first host further includes a second expansion buss [sic] connected to a second expansion card” (App. Br. 12-13). Specifically, Appellants contend Chinnaswamy discloses one bus, not a first expansion bus and a second expansion bus (App. Br. 12). Appellants further argue the two parallel lines illustrated in Figure 6 of Chinnaswamy indicates one element (id.). Issue 2: Has the Examiner erred in concluding the combination of HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, Chinnaswamy, and HP2 would have taught or suggested “wherein the first host further includes a second expansion buss [sic] connected to a second expansion card” as recited in claim 21? ANALYSIS We agree with Appellants (Reply Br. 10-11). We do not find Chinnaswamy teaches or suggests two chassis management buses. Instead, Figure 6 and the related disclosure suggest one chassis management bus. Appeal 2010-005911 Application 11/000,318 9 The Examiner relies on Figure 16 and column 4, lines 31-37 as teaching the second expansion bus (Ans. 14 and 20-21). However, these portions are directed to the backplane which is a different element than the chassis management bus. Therefore, although we agree Chinnaswamy teaches two separate management busses for failure protection (col. 4, ll. 31-37), the Examiner has not shown that Chinnaswamy teaches or suggests a second expansion bus connected to a second expansion card that is enabled for access by the first host responsive to failure of the chassis management bus. Accordingly, the Examiner erred in finding the combination of HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, Chinnaswamy, and HP2 would have taught or suggested “wherein the first host further includes a second expansion buss [sic] connected to a second expansion card” the invention as recited in independent claim 21 and dependent claims 22, 23, 26, and 28-31, not separately argued. Therefore, the Examiner erred in rejecting claims 21-23, 26, and 28-31 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) for obviousness over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, Chinnaswamy, and HP2. ISSUE 3 35 U.S.C. § 103(a): claim 27 ANALYSIS Claim 27 depends from claim 21. The Examiner has not shown HP3 cures the deficiencies of the combination of HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, Chinnaswamy, and HP2. Therefore, the Examiner erred in rejecting claim 27 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) for obviousness over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, Chinnaswamy, HP2, and HP3. Appeal 2010-005911 Application 11/000,318 10 DECISION The Examiner’s rejection of claims 1 and 4-10 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, and Chinnaswamy is affirmed. The Examiner’s rejection of claims 21-23, 26, and 28-31 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, Chinnaswamy, and HP2 is reversed. The Examiner’s rejection of claim 27 under 35 U.S.C. § 103(a) as being unpatentable over HP, Behrbaum, Bouchier, Chinnaswamy, HP2, and HP3 is reversed. AFFIRMED-IN-PART tj Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation