Nuro, Inc.Download PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardOct 29, 20212021001870 (P.T.A.B. Oct. 29, 2021) 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. 16/046,980 07/26/2018 David FERGUSON 1012-US.02 1879 163263 7590 10/29/2021 Nuro, Inc. (WSGR Matters) Attn. Peggy Su, Patent Team 1300 Terra Bella Ave. Suite 100 Mountain View, CA 94043 EXAMINER JARRETT, SCOTT L ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 3623 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 10/29/2021 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): p_a_su@yahoo.com patents@nuro.ai psu@nuro.ai PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE ____________ BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD ____________ Ex parte DAVID FERGUSON, JIAJUN ZHU, PICHAYUT JIRAPINYO, and NAN RANSOHOFF ____________ Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,9801 Technology Center 3600 ____________ Before BIBHU R. MOHANTY, SHEILA F. McSHANE, and ROBERT J. SILVERMAN, Administrative Patent Judges. McSHANE, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 134(a), Appellant appeals from the Examiner’s decision to reject claims 1–6, 11–13, 15–22, and 31–33. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We AFFIRM. 1 We use the word Appellant to refer to “applicant” as defined in 37 C.F.R. § 1.42(a). Appellant identifies the real party in interest as Nuro, Inc. Appeal Brief filed October 28, 2020, hereafter “Appeal Br.” 1. Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 2 BACKGROUND The invention relates to positioning autonomous or semi-autonomous vehicles. Specification, hereafter “Spec.” ¶¶ 3–4. The vehicles may be used for purposes “including warehouse inventory operations, household operations, hospital deliveries, sanitation, and military or defense applications.” Id. ¶ 2. Claim 1 is the only independent claim, and this claim is reproduced from pages A1–2 of the Appeal Brief (Claims App.) as follows: 1. An autonomous or semi-autonomous platform for positioning a plurality of autonomous or semi-autonomous vehicles and displaying a plurality of items, the platform comprising: a) the plurality of autonomous or semi-autonomous vehicles, each vehicle comprising: (i) at least one compartment configured to contain and secure two or more of the plurality of items; (ii) an input device configured to receive an input data corresponding to a customer; (iii) a communication device; and (iv) an autonomous or semi-autonomous propulsion system; b) a server processor configured to provide a server application comprising: (i) a data storage module containing a plurality of locations comprising at least one inventory restocking location and a plurality of dispatch locations, wherein each dispatch location is associated with a demand for autonomous vehicle services; (ii) a status module, the status module configured to obtain a stock indication of each of the plurality of items and a current vehicle location from the communication device of one or more of the plurality of vehicles, wherein the status module Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 3 is further configured to obtain a status of the each of the plurality of items; and (iii) a fleet management module directing the autonomous or semi-autonomous propulsion system of one or more of the vehicles, via the communication device, to one of the plurality of dispatch locations or the inventory restocking location based at least on one or more of a demand, the stock indication of each of the plurality of items, and the current vehicle location; and c) a summoning processor configured to provide a summoning application comprising a summon module configured to obtain a summons from the customer, the summons comprising at least a customer location, wherein the summon module further directs the autonomous or semi-autonomous propulsion system of one or more of the vehicles, via the communication device, to the customer location, wherein the summon module further obtains the stock indication of each of the plurality of items and displays the stock indication of each of the plurality of items to the customer. The Examiner rejects claims 1–6, 11–13, 15–21, and 31–33 as unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. § 103 over Mazetti2, Ahmed3, and Atchley4 and claim 22 is rejected as unpatentable under 35 U.S.C. § 103 over Mazetti, Ahmed, Atchley, and Myllmaki5. Final Action, hereafter “Final Act.” 3–19, mailed June 2, 2020; Answer, hereafter “Ans.” 4–39, mailed November 20, 2020. DISCUSSION Appellant argues issues in a claim-specific manner. We address the issues in a similar manner. 2 US 2018/0260778 A1, published September 13, 2018. 3 US 2018/0349872 A1, published December 6, 2018. 4 US Patent 10,130,232 B2, issued November 20, 2018. 5 US Patent 9,256,852 B1, issued February 9, 2016. Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 4 A. Claim 1 Appellant argues that the Examiner erred in finding that the asserted prior art teach some of the limitations of claim 1 and that a person of ordinary skill in the art would have been motivated to combine the references. We address these issues in turn. 1. “a data storage module containing a plurality of locations comprising at least one inventory restocking location and a plurality of dispatch locations, wherein each dispatch location is associated with a demand for autonomous vehicle services” The Examiner finds that claim 1 is obvious in view of the combination of Mazetti, Ahmed, and Atchley. Final Act. 3–4, 9. Appellant argues that the Examiner fails to identify how the prior art teaches that a dispatch location is associated with a demand for autonomous vehicle services. Appeal Br. 9. More specifically, Appellant argues that the cited paragraphs of Mazetti in the Final Action disclose stocking based on demand, and utilizing a sales history of a particular autonomous vehicle to determine a route, but there is no suggestion of the dispatch locations being associated with a demand for autonomous vehicle services. Id. at 10 (citing Mazetti ¶¶ 38, 39, 62, 63, 67). Appellant also argues that the relied-upon portions of Ahmed “appear to disclose identifying a nearest autonomous vehicle to a customer, and assigning an autonomous vehicle to a customer location,” but do not suggest “dispatch locations in a data storage module which are each associated with a demand for autonomous vehicle services.” Id. at 9–10 (citing Ahmed ¶¶ 54, 57, 63). On this issue, we are not persuaded of reversible error by the Examiner. The Examiner relies on (Final Act. 4; Ans. 5) a portion of Mazetti, for instance, which states: Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 5 The method comprises logging a demand for specific sales items from customers, wherein the logged demand comprises a sales history of sold items and geographical location information, routing the vending vehicle to a geographical location based on the logged demand and automatically stocking the vending vehicle with at least one sales item based on the logged demand. The advantage with this is that autonomous vending vehicles may be routed based on sales history to go to geographical locations where it is determined to be the most sales opportunities. In other words, the autonomous vending vehicles will be routed to where the demand of the items it is carrying is high. Mazetti ¶ 17 (emphasis added). Additionally, the Examiner relies on Ahmed’s disclosure that an application will deploy an autonomous vehicle to provide services, such as groceries, “at the . . . location desired by the user.” Final Act. 3 (citing Ahmed ¶ 38); Ans. 8. We agree with the Examiner that these disclosures, at least, teach dispatch locations associated with a demand for autonomous vehicle services, that is, locations of user’s orders where the autonomous vehicles are sent to provide services. See Ans. 4. 2. “a status module, the status module configured to obtain a stock indication of each of the plurality of items and a current vehicle location from the communication device of one or more of the plurality of vehicles, wherein the status module is further configured to obtain a status of each of the plurality of items” Appellant asserts that the Examiner appears to admit that Mazetti does not disclose the portion of the limitation that recites that “[the] status module is configured to obtain [the] status of each of [the] plurality of items.” Appeal Br. 11. Appellant contends that Examiner instead relies on Ahmed for its disclosure, for instance, of a method to track stock levels for each Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 6 product in a rack, but there is no suggestion of a status module configured to obtain a current vehicle location, that obtains a stock indication of items. Id. (citing Ahmed ¶ 51). Appellant contends that “[a] stock level . . . is not equivalent to a status of each of a plurality of items.” Id. As an initial matter, we do not agree with Appellant that the Examiner did not rely on Mazetti for the teaching of this limitation; the Final Action includes the Examiner’s findings related to Mazetti’s teaching of a system and method for obtaining status of items. Final Act. 6, 9. Turning to the term “status,” although Appellant argues that a stock level is not equivalent to the status of items, Appellant fails to provide its interpretation of “status,” but notes that “[o]btaining a status of each of a plurality of items facilitates the application of a product detection algorithm to detect an absence of one or more items, thereby allowing the inventory on a vehicle to be tracked.” Appeal Br. 10–11 (citing Spec. ¶ 115). We have reviewed the Specification and it indicates that, for instance, the status module may apply a product detection algorithm to determine item status, but the Specification does not limit how status may be determined or identify what the “status” of items is. See Spec. ¶ 115. The Examiner’s proposed interpretation is that the term “status” may be interpreted to include “any information, data, knowledge . . . related to the state, condition, availability, presence, absence, number, quantity, level . . .related to products, items, stock, inventory” under the broadest reasonable interpretation of the term. Ans. 9. In light of that interpretation, which we agree with, we also agree with the Examiner that, at least, Mazetti’s disclosure in paragraph 46, reproduced in part below, teaches a status module that obtains the status items, as well as a vehicle location. Final Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 7 Act. 9 (citing Mazetti ¶ 46); Ans. 11. Vending parameters are then registered S110. Registering vending parameters comprises for example to store the information in the memory. The vending parameters comprises at least: type of the removed at least one item and position data of the vending vehicle. In other words, the vending parameters comprise what item or items have been removed and the position of the autonomous vending vehicle when they were removed. The autonomous vending vehicle then sends S300 a request for a low stock item to a server 30 when the amount of the at least one item is below a predetermined threshold value. Mazetti ¶ 46 (emphasis added). Consistent with this disclosure, we agree with the Examiner that Mazetti discloses that the control unit of the vending vehicle (Mazetti, Fig. 5, Item 12) tracks the removal of certain items from the vending vehicle, as well as the location of the vehicle. Accordingly, we agree with the Examiner that, at least, Mazetti teaches “[the] status module is configured to obtain [the] status of each of [the] plurality of items.” Appeal Br. 11. 3. “summoning processor configured to provide a summoning application comprising a summon module configured to obtain a summons from the customer, the summons comprising at least a customer location, wherein the summon module further directs the autonomous or semiautonomous propulsion system of one or more of the vehicles, via the communication device, to the customer location, wherein the summon module further obtains the stock indication of each of the plurality of items and displays the stock indication of each of the plurality of items to the customer.” Appellant argues that the Examiner relies upon Atchley for the teaching of displaying a stock indication of items to customers, but Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 8 Appellant argues that Atchley’s teaching of alerting a customer that an item is available for purchase is not equivalent to displaying a stock indication of each of a plurality of items to a customer. Appeal Br. 13 (citing Atchley, cols. 35–36). Appellant further contends that the Examiner does not provide reasoning as to which aspects of Atchley are relied upon for the disclosure of displaying a stock indication, and no prima facie case of obviousness has been established. Id. at 13–14. In the Final Action, the Examiner found that “stock indication” is “ANY information associated with or related to stock, inventory, items, goods, etc.” Final Act. 6. As the Examiner notes (id. at 6), Atchley discloses The control circuit 1032 of the MTU [mobile transport unit] 1030 may be configured to receive an item request from a customer via the user interface device 1035. The MTU 1030 may forward the item request to the central computer system 1010 via the wireless transceiver 1031 to determine whether the item is in-stock based on the inventory database. . . . The control circuit 1032 may also be configured to receive an item display location from the central computer system 1010 via the wireless transceiver 1031, cause the motorized wheel system 1034 to travel to the display area of the requested item, and use the sensor device 1033 to detect whether the item is available in the display space based on instructions received from the central computer system 1010. In some embodiments, the control circuit 1012 may be further configured to provide an ‘item out of stock’ and/or an item unavailable response to the customer via the user interface device 1035 based on instructions received from the central computer system 1010. Atchley, 32:59–33:12 (emphasis added). Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 9 The Examiner also finds that the system and method of Mazetti and Ahmed “would have benefited from receiving and displaying stock indication to a customer in view of the disclosure of Atchley.” Final Act. 12. The Examiner further finds that in combination the element would perform the same function as it did separately, and one or ordinary skill in the art would have recognized that the results of the combination were predictable. Id. We agree with the Examiner’s findings that Atchley determination and notification of the availability of stock is equivalent to obtaining the stock indication of items and displaying stock indication at least in light of its disclosures at column 32 line 59 to column 33 line12, and these teachings are applicable to Mazetti and Ahmed, in combination, to provide stock indication for items on a vehicle. 4. Motivation to Combine References Appellant contends that one of ordinary skill in the art would not be motivated to combine the references asserted because “Ahmed and Mazetti are directed towards vehicles which carry stock onboard which is available for purchase [and] Atchley is directed towards a motorized transport unit which ‘shops’ in a facility.” Appeal Br. 8, n.1, 14. The Examiner finds that it would have been obvious to one skilled in the art that Mazetti’s system would have benefited from Ahmed’s teaching of enabling customers to summon one of a plurality of vehicles in a fleet of autonomous/semi-autonomous vehicles. Final Act. 11. The Examiner also finds that it would have been obvious to one skilled in the art that Mazetti and Ahmed “would have benefited from receiving and displaying stock indication to a customer in view of the disclosure of Atchley.” Id. at 12. The Examiner further finds that Atchley is from the same field of endeavor Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 10 as Mazetti and Ahmed, that is, autonomous vehicle management. Id. at 11. A reference qualifies as prior art for an obviousness determination under § 103 when it is analogous to the claimed invention. In re Klein, 647 F.3d 1343, 1348 (Fed. Cir. 2011); Innovention Toys, LLC v. MGA Entertainment, Inc., 637 F.3d 1314, 1321 (Fed. Cir. 2011); In re Bigio, 381 F.3d 1320, 1325 (Fed. Cir. 2004). A reference is considered analogous prior art; (1) if the reference is from the same field of endeavor as the claimed subjected matter, regardless of the problem addressed, or (2) if “the reference still is reasonably pertinent to the particular problem with which the inventor is involved,” even though the reference is not within the field of the inventor’s endeavor. Bigio, 381 F.3d at 1325. The “field of endeavor” test asks if the structure and function of the prior art is such that it would be considered by a person of ordinary skill in the art because of the similarity to the structure and function of the claimed invention as disclosed in the application. Id. at 1325–27. It is necessary to apply “common sense” in “deciding in which fields a person of ordinary skill would reasonably be expected to look for a solution to the problem facing the inventor.” Id. at 1326 (citations and quotation marks omitted). Further, “[t]he Supreme Court’s decision in KSR . . . directs us to construe the scope of analogous art broadly.” Wyers v. Master Lock Co., 616 F.3d 1231, 1238 (Fed. Cir. 2010). Here, we discern no reversible error with the Examiner’s finding that Atchley, Mazetti, and Ahmed are all from the same field of endeavor, that is, autonomous vehicle management. See, e.g., Atchley, 4:58–5:16, 19:3–18 (discussing use of motorized transport units with automated operation to assist in shopping); Mazetti, code (57) (invention for controlling stocking and routing of autonomous vending vehicle); Ahmed, code (57) (invention Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 11 for deploying autonomous vehicle to carry consumer merchandise to a customer). 5. Summary Accordingly, after considering Appellant’s contentions and the evidence presented in this Appeal, we are not persuaded that Appellant identifies reversible error, and we, therefore, sustain the § 103 rejection for claim 1. B. Claim 15 Dependent claim 15 recites “wherein each dispatch location in the data storage module is associated with the demand, and is further associated with at least one of a current customer density, a historic customer density, a time-based customer density.” Claims App. A-4. The Examiner finds that Mazetti teaches the elements of claim 15. Final Act. 15 (citing Mazetti ¶¶ 59, 62, 63, 68, 71). The Examiner further finds that the claim requires that the data storage module is associated with demand, as well as at least one of a current customer density or historic customer density or time-based customer density. Ans. 22. Appellant argues that the Examiner did not identify which features of the prior art disclose the claim elements and the Examiner failed to provide a prima facie case of obviousness. Appeal Br. 16–17. Appellant contends that although Mazetti discloses logging demand, it does not disclose “storing each dispatch location of a plurality of locations with a demand and at least one of a current customer density, a historic customer density, and a time- based customer density.” Id. at 17. In Reply, Appellant also asserts that the Examiner provides new rationale for the first time in the rejection of claim 15 in the Answer, without indicating that it is a new ground of rejection. Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 12 Reply Brief, hereafter “Reply Br.” 2, mailed January 19, 2021. Appellant also asserts that the Examiner includes some additional citations to Mazetti in the Answer that were not identified in the Final Action. Id. at 3. Appellant contends that there is no suggestion in the Examiner’s citations to Mazetti that a data storage module is associated with a demand and any aspect of customer density. Id. at 3–4. We are not persuaded of error in the Examiner’s findings on this claim. The Examiner relies on a portion of paragraph 62 of Mazetti (Final Act. 15), which states: The method comprises logging Sl a demand for specific sales items from customers, wherein the logged demand comprises a sales history of sold items and geographical location information. The sales history comprises for example type of item, price of item, location of the sales and time of sales. The method further discloses routing S3 the vending vehicle to a geographical location based on the logged demand and automatically stocking S4 the vending vehicle with at least one sales item based on the logged demand. The advantage with this is that autonomous vending vehicles may be routed based on sales history to go to geographical locations where it is determined to be the most sales opportunities. In other words, the autonomous vending vehicles will be routed to where the demand of the items it is carrying is high. Mazetti ¶ 62 (emphasis added). We agree with the Examiner that claim 15 only requires one of a current customer density or historic customer density or time-based customer density. See Ans. 22. A fair reading of paragraph 62 of Mazetti is that a dispatch location is associated with historic customer density, that is, autonomous vending vehicles are routed to areas with high Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 13 logged demand, which are those areas with “historic customer density.” The Examiner has also provided sufficient evidence that Mazetti teaches that a dispatch location is associated with a demand. Claim 15 depends from claim 1, and as discussed above for claim limitation 1.b.i., Mazetti teaches “a data storage module containing . . . a plurality of dispatch locations, wherein each dispatch location is associated with a demand for autonomous vehicle services,” and, accordingly, Mazetti also teaches the similar limitation of claim 15. See Final Act. 3–4; Ans. 4–8, 22. Although Appellant argues that the Examiner has relied upon new rationale in the Answer, we determine that the basis provided in the Final Action is sufficient to support a rejection by identification of portions of Mazetti that disclose the claim elements.6 Additionally, whether there is a new ground of rejection depends upon whether the basic thrust of a rejection has remained the same. See In re Kronig, 539 F.2d 1300, 1303 (CCPA 1976). A decision does not contain a new ground of rejection because it elaborates or explains a rejection, thoroughly responds to an appellant’s arguments using different language, or restates the reasoning of the rejection in a different way—so long as the “basic thrust of the rejection” is the same. Id. (holding that the Board’s reasoning did not constitute a new ground of rejection where “the basic thrust of the rejection at the examiner and board level was the same.”). And here we determine that the basic thrust of the Examiner’s rejection of claim 15 does not change, and, additionally, Appellant had a fair opportunity to respond to the rejection. See id. at 1302. 6 We also note that Appellant had the option (per 37 C.F.R. § 41.39(b)) of requesting that prosecution be re-opened, instead of maintaining the Appeal and filing a Reply Brief, if there were potential new grounds. Here, Appellant opted to file a Reply Brief. Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 14 Accordingly, after considering Appellant’s contentions and the evidence presented in this Appeal, we are persuaded that Appellant does not identify reversible error, and we therefore sustain the § 103 rejection for claim 15. C. Claim 17 Dependent claim 17 recites “wherein the communication device is further configured to receive a selection of an item, and wherein the input device is configured to receive a payment from the customer for the item.” Claims App. A-4. Appellant argues that the Examiner fails to provide sufficient rationale in support of the rejection of the claim. Appeal Br. 18–19. Appellant asserts that paragraph 14 of Mazetti is insufficient to teach the elements of claim 17 because there is no disclosure of a communication device receiving a selection of an item or an input device configured to receive payment. Id. at 19. More specifically, Appellant contends that there is no reasonable suggestion of devices on the vehicle of Mazetti that receives an item selection and receives a payment. Id. at 20. In Reply, Appellant also argues that the Examiner provides rationale for the rejection of claim 17 in the Answer not previously presented, without indicating that it is a new ground of rejection. Reply Br. 5. Appellant asserts that the Examiner includes some additional citations to Mazetti not included in the Final Action. Id. at 6. Appellant further contends that paragraph 14 of Mazetti does not indicate where the customer profile is registered or that charging the customer account for payment involves an input device to receive customer payment. Id. The Examiner relies on paragraph 14 of Mazetti for the disclosure of Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 15 the elements of claim 17 (Final Act. 15; Ans. 25–26), which, in part, states: According to some aspects, the method comprises initiating a transaction of items by registering an entrance of a customer to the vending vehicle and registering a customer profile, wherein the profile comprises information regarding at least an account for payment and detecting exit of a customer from the vending vehicle and charging the customer account for payment for removal of the at least one item. So a customer enters the autonomous vending vehicle, receives at least one item and upon exit is charged for the item. Mazetti ¶ 14 (emphasis added). The Examiner also finds that the autonomous vending vehicle of Mazetti has an input device to receive input corresponding to a customer and a communication means that communicates with the server. Final Act. 8 (citing Mazetti, ¶¶ 44, 45, 58, 62, Fig. 5, item 14). Mazetti also states that “a customer registers using her/his credit card or bank account card and opens a door on the autonomous vending vehicle.” Ans. 27 (citing Mazetti ¶ 58 (emphasis added)). We find that Mazetti’s disclosures provide sufficient support that the input device of the vending vehicle is configured to receive a payment from the customer for an item. Further, paragraph 39 of Mazetti, for instance, indicates that purchases may be done by an in-place ordering system, and with the client picking up the products at the autonomous vending vehicle with charging upon exit. Final Act. 15; Ans. 26–27. We find that this provides sufficient evidence of Mazetti’s teaching of a vehicle communication device receiving a selection of an item. Although Appellant argues that the Examiner relies upon new rationale in the Answer, we determine that the basis provided in the Final Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 16 Action is sufficient to support a rejection by the identification of portions of Mazetti that disclose the claim elements. An Examiner’s Answer does not contain a new ground of rejection when it provides additional support for the rejection and the basic thrust of the rejection remains the same. See In re Kronig, 539 F.2d at 1303. Accordingly, after considering Appellant’s contentions and the evidence presented in this Appeal, we are persuaded that Appellant does not identify reversible error, and we, therefore, sustain the § 103 rejection for claim 17. D. Claim 19 Claim 19 recites “wherein each vehicle further comprises an energy storage device configured to provide power to the autonomous or semi- autonomous propulsion system,” and “wherein the status module further receives a power status associated with the energy storage device and the fleet management module further directs the autonomous or semi- autonomous propulsion system of one or more of the vehicles based on the power status, and wherein when the power status indicates low power, the fleet management module directs the autonomous or semi-autonomous propulsion system to the inventory restocking location.” Claims App. A-4. Appellant asserts that Atchley does not suggest that a docking station is located at an inventory restocking location or that a fleet management system directs the autonomous or semi-autonomous propulsion system. Appeal Br. 21–22. The Examiner finds that Ahmed discloses directing autonomous/semi- autonomous vehicles to recharging stations/locations. Final Act 15 (citing Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 17 Ahmed ¶¶ 50, 61, Fig. 147, item 210). We agree with the Examiner that Ahmed teaches the elements of this claim. For instance, Ahmed discloses that the restocking depots can be used for restocking and recharging. Ahmed ¶ 50. Further, Figure 14 of Ahmed depicts a fleet management system interacting with a retailer restocking/recharging interface, which receives routing information. Id. ¶¶ 61, 80; Fig. 14. Accordingly, after considering Appellant’s contentions and the evidence presented in this Appeal, we are persuaded that Appellant does not identify reversible error, and we therefore sustain the § 103 rejection for claim 19. E. Claim 31 Dependent claim 31 recites “wherein the status of the each of the plurality of items includes an expired status of the each of the plurality of items.” Claims App. A-6. Appellant asserts that Atchley discloses “MTU may scan for a visible or invisible expiration date code/stamp on the requested item” and “if the item is present, the system may determine that the item is unavailable because it is past its expiration date.” Appeal Br. 23 (citing Atchley, 35:54– 58). Appellant argues, however, that claim 31 recites that expiration status should be determined for a plurality of items, and “[d]etermining an expiration date does not reasonably suggest obtaining a stock indication and a status of each of a plurality of items.” Id. at 23–24. Appellant also contends that “Atchley scans for an expiration date on an item that is not onboard the MTU,” and that does not reasonably suggest that a status 7 The Examiner refers to “Fig. 13,” however, in context, it appears that the reference should have been to “Fig. 14.” See Final Act. 15. Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 18 module obtains an expired status for each on the items on the vehicle. Id. at 23. The Examiner relies on the disclosures of Atchley for the teaching of these claim elements (Final Act. 16; Ans. 31–32), and, more specifically, Atchley states: In step 1125 the system determines whether the item is available in the display space based on information captured by one or more sensors of the MTU. Due to shrinkage, damage, lost, and misplacement, items that are indicated as being in- stock in the inventory database may not always be available for purchase on the sales floor. The MTU instructed in step 1120 may include one or more of an optical sensor, an image sensor, a radio frequency identification (RFID) scanner, an optical code scanner, a temperature sensor, etc. The information captured by the one or more sensors of the MTU comprises one or more of an image of the display space, a three-dimensional scan of the display space, a barcode scan, an RFID scan, and an environmental temperature of the display space. The system may determine whether the item is available in the display space is based one or more of a presence of the item, an appearance of the item, an expiration date of the item, an appearance of the display area, and a storage environment of the item. In some embodiments, the system may capture an image of the display space using an image sensor on the MTU to determine whether the item is in the display space. In some embodiments, the system may scan for RFID tags around the area of the display space to determine whether a requested item is in the display space. In some embodiments, the MTU may scan for a visible or invisible expiration date code/stamp on the requested item. Even if the item is present, the system may determine that the item is unavailable because it is past its expiration Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 19 date. Atchley, 35:30–65 (emphasis added). Based at least on these disclosures, we agree with the Examiner’s findings that Atchley teaches determination of the expiry status of items. See Final Act. 16. Additionally, the Examiner relies on these teachings in combination with Mazetti and Ahmed, where the combination would teach expiry status determination for items on a vehicle. Accordingly, after considering Appellant’s contentions and the evidence presented in this Appeal, we are persuaded that Appellant does not identify reversible error, and we therefore sustain the § 103 rejection for claim 31. F. Claim 33 Dependent claim 33 recites “wherein the status module is further configured to obtain a status of the each of the plurality of items from the communication device of the one or more of the plurality of vehicles, the communication device being arranged to transmit the status of the each of the plurality of items to the status module.” Claims App. A-6. Appellant argues that the Examiner does not state the rationale as to why Atchley teaches this claim limitation. Appeal Br. 25. Appellant further asserts that “Ahmed and Atchley do not appear to disclose . . . that a status module (of a server processor) obtains a status of each of a plurality of items (contained in a compartment of a vehicle of a plurality of vehicles) from a communication device of one or more of the plurality of vehicles.” Id. at 26. The Examiner relies on Ahmed and Atchley for the teaching of the elements of claim 33. Final Act. 18; Ans. 32–36. Ahmed, for instance, states that “[o]nce stock levels drop below a defined threshold, the Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 20 autonomous vehicle 100 will communicate with and talk to its closest restocking depot” and “that stock levels for each product” are tracked and the network is informed about “stock levels at all times for the whole fleet.” Ahmed ¶¶ 50, 51. We are not persuaded by Appellant’s arguments because there is disclosure in Ahmed that the autonomous vehicle communicates the status of items to a network, which is the equivalent of a status module. Accordingly, after considering Appellant’s contentions and the evidence presented in this Appeal, we are persuaded that Appellant does not identify reversible error, and we, therefore, sustain the § 103 rejection for claim 33. G. Claims 2–6, 11–13, 16–22, and 32 Dependent claims 2–6, 11–13, 16–22, and 32 depend directly or directly from claim 1 and Appellant relies on the arguments for claim 1 for these claims. Appeal Br. 15. We do not find the arguments directed to claim 1 to be persuasive for the reasons discussed above. Accordingly, after considering Appellant’s contentions and the evidence presented in this Appeal, we are persuaded that Appellant does not identify reversible error, and we, therefore, sustain the § 103 rejection for claims 2–6, 11–13, 16–22, and 32. CONCLUSION For the above reasons, the Examiner’s rejection of claims 1–6, 11–13, 15–22, and 31–33 is affirmed. DECISION SUMMARY In summary: Appeal 2021-001870 Application 16/046,980 21 Claim(s) Rejected 35 U.S.C. § Reference(s)/Basis Affirmed Reversed 1–6, 11– 13,15–21, 31–33 103 Mazetti, Ahmed, Atchley 1–6, 11–13, 15–21, 31– 33 22 103 Mazetti, Ahmed, Atchley, Myllmaki 22 Overall Outcome 1–6, 11–13, 15–22, 31– 33 TIME PERIOD FOR RESPONSE No time period for taking any subsequent action in connection with this appeal may be extended under 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a). See 37 C.F.R. § 1.136(a)(1)(iv). AFFIRMED Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation