Sony CorporationDownload PDFPatent Trials and Appeals BoardDec 24, 20202019004503 (P.T.A.B. Dec. 24, 2020) 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. 15/421,816 02/01/2017 Hisashi Ohashi 880001-3206-US03 1181 165569 7590 12/24/2020 MICHAEL BEST & FRIEDRICH LLP (SONY) 790 N WATER ST SUITE 2500 MILWAUKEE, WI 53202 EXAMINER SONG, DAEHO D ART UNIT PAPER NUMBER 2177 NOTIFICATION DATE DELIVERY MODE 12/24/2020 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): DCipdocket@michaelbest.com nbenjamin@michaelbest.com PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07) UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE BEFORE THE PATENT TRIAL AND APPEAL BOARD Ex parte HISASHI OHASHI Appeal 2019-004503 Application 15/421,816 Technology Center 2100 BEFORE JASON V. MORGAN, JEREMY J. CURCURI, and PHILLIP A. BENNETT, Administrative Patent Judges. CURCURI, Administrative Patent Judge. DECISION ON APPEAL STATEMENT OF THE CASE Pursuant to 35 U.S.C. § 134(a), Appellant1 appeals from the Examiner’s decision to reject claims 1 and 3–28. We have jurisdiction under 35 U.S.C. § 6(b). We REVERSE. 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 Sony Corporation. Appeal Br. 3. Appeal 2019-004503 Application 15/421,816 2 CLAIMED SUBJECT MATTER The claims are directed to “an electronic device, such as a video camera, a digital camera, a cellular phone, or a PDA, which has a display panel and an operating section and also to a method of assigning a function to a key.” Spec. 2:2–6. Claim 1, reproduced below, is illustrative of the claimed subject matter: 1. An image processing apparatus, comprising: an image processing circuitry configured to: process an image signal output from an imager of a camera, and cause a display device to display an image based on the processed image signal, and to selectively display a menu including a menu list for selecting from a plurality of menu items being associated with functions, the menu items representing candidates to assign to a part of a key device disposed on the camera in direct response to a manual input by a user and being related to one of a plurality of first camera operations; and control circuitry configured to: in response to a first input at the key device, set a mode for the camera, and in response to a second input at the key device and while the camera is in the mode set in response to the first input at the key device, assign, as a first function, a first candidate to a first operation key of the key device, and automatically assign, as a second function, a second candidate to a second operation key of the key device, the first function and the second function being paired functions. Appeal Br. 18 (Claims Appendix). Appeal 2019-004503 Application 15/421,816 3 REFERENCES The prior art relied upon by the Examiner is: Name Reference Date Jeoung US 2001/0003097 A1 June 7, 2001 Kanamori US 2001/0026263 A1 Oct. 4, 2001 Maeda US 2002/0015598 A1 Feb. 7, 2002 REJECTION Claims 1 and 3–28 are rejected under pre-AIA 35 U.S.C. § 103 as obvious over Kanamori, Jeoung, and Maeda. Final Act. 5–11. OPINION The Obviousness Rejection of Claims 1 and 3–28 over Kanamori, Jeoung, and Maeda The Examiner finds Kanamori, Jeoung, and Maeda teach all limitations of claim 1. See Final Act. 5–7. In particular, the Examiner finds Kanamori teaches “in response to a first input at the key device, set a mode for the camera” as recited in claim 1. See Final Act. 5 (citing Kanamori Figs. 6A–C). The Examiner further finds Kanamori teaches in response to a second input at the key device, . . . assign, as a first function, a first candidate to a first operation key of the key device, and automatically assign, as a second function, a second candidate to a second operation key of the key device, the first function and the second function being paired functions. See Final Act. 5 (citing Kanamori Figs. 28A–C, ¶ 192). The Examiner further finds Maeda teaches “in response to a second input at the key device and while the camera is in the mode set in response to the first input at the key device, assign, as a first function, a first candidate Appeal 2019-004503 Application 15/421,816 4 to a first operation key of the key device” as recited in claim 1. See Final Act. 6–7 (citing Maeda Figs. 6, 9). The Examiner reasons it would have been obvious to one having ordinary skill in the art at the time the invention was made to modify the system, disclosed in Kanamori and Jeoung, to include: in response to a second input at the key device and while the camera is in the mode set in response to the first input at the key device, assign, as a first function, a first candidate to a first operation key of the key device, for the purpose of reducing the number of operations in the operability of the operation device, as taught in Maeda. Final Act. 7. Appellant presents the following principal arguments: Kanamori makes clear that these inputs correspond to separate and distinct modes. That is, Kanamori’s alleged first input causes the camera to enter a “function setting mode” and the alleged second input causes the camera to enter a “still-image capture mode.” Kanamori at ¶ [0057] and [0084]. As such, if the alleged second input provides a functionality of assignment, this functionality only exists in the still-image capture mode and does not exist in the function setting mode. Appeal Br. 14. “Maeda provides an express explanation of ‘[t]he case of allocating a function to the “basic 2” key K2 in the screen 8 of FIG. 6’ that makes clear that the teachings of Maeda, alone or when combined with Kanamori and/or Jeoung, are distinct from Appellant’s claims.” Appeal Br. 15 (citing Maeda ¶ 66); see also Appeal Br. 16 (“Maeda requires at least four inputs to assign multiple functions to a single key. This is in contrast with Appellant’s claim which requires only one input to assign multiple functions to multiple keys.”). Appeal 2019-004503 Application 15/421,816 5 We determine the Examiner erred in rejecting claim 1 because we determine the Examiner’s reasoning to modify the system disclosed in Kanamori lacks a rational underpinning. As shown in Kanamori, Figs. 28A–C, the “digital camera 10b is now in the still-image capture mode approximately at the center [(Fig. 28A)] and also displays symbols indicating the functions [(Fig. 28B, sub-screen 610)] assigned to the switches [(Fig. 28C, switches 322, 324, 326, 328)] in the vicinity of the respective switches.” Kanamori ¶ 192. To the extent Kanamori teaches the recited assignments of claim 1, Kanamori does not teach that the assignments occur “while the camera is in the mode set in response to the first input at the key device” as recited in claim 1. See Final Act. 5. Maeda discloses assignments occur in a shortcut key registration mode. See Maeda Figs. 6, 9. However, we do not readily see how one of ordinary skill in the art would have modified Kanamori to achieve the claimed invention. The Examiner’s reason to make the required modification to Kanamori is “for the purpose of reducing the number of operations in the operability of the operation device, as taught in Maeda” (Final Act. 7), but we determine this reasoning lacks a rational underpinning because such a modification to Kanamori would have required, for example, the assignments of the still-image capture mode functions (Maeda Figs. 28A–C) while still in the setup mode (Maeda Figs. 6A–C). However, the setup mode already has its own functions that are specific to the setup mode. See Appeal Br. 14 (“[I]f the alleged second input provides a functionality of assignment, this functionality only exists in the still-image capture mode and does not exist in the function setting mode.”); see also Appeal Br. 15 (“Maeda, alone Appeal 2019-004503 Application 15/421,816 6 or when combined with Kanamori . . . [is] distinct from Appellant’s claims.”). In the Examiner’s Answer, the Examiner apparently attempts to remedy the above-discussed flaw in the Final Action, finding Kanamori’s still-image capture mode corresponds to “in response to a first input at the key device, set a mode for the camera” as recited in claim 1. See Ans. 4 (citing Kanamori Figs. 7A, 28A, ¶¶ 129, 150, 192). The Examiner further finds Kanamori’s shift button 406 (Kanamori Fig. 11B) corresponds to the recited “second input” in claim 1, and changes functions assigned to other buttons. See Ans. 5–6 (citing Kanamori Figs. 11B, 28C, ¶¶ 129, 154, 192). In reply, Appellant argues the Examiner relies on several misinterpretations of Kanamori, including incorrectly conflating the act of assigning multiple functions automatically to multiple keys with assigning multiple functions to a single key, and incorrectly conflating the act of assigning a function to a key with the state in which a key has previously been assigned with a function. Reply Br. 3. Appellant further argues “shift button 406 merely cycles (or ‘shifts’) through multiple functions that have been previously assigned to a button. The shift button 406 plays no role in the actual assignment of the functions, despite the Examiner’s erroneous insistence to the contrary.” Reply Br. 3 (citing Kanamori ¶ 154). Appellant further argues “Kanamori teaches a distinct method of assigning functions to buttons: using ‘the function setting mode.’” Reply Br. 3 (citing Kanamori ¶ 170). Appellant further argues Kanamori’s function setting mode, in which functions are assigned, is distinct from the still-image capture mode, in which display symbols indicate previously assigned functions. Reply Br. 4 (“[I]n the still-image capture mode, various functions are present as Appeal 2019-004503 Application 15/421,816 7 associated with corresponding keys. Kanamori at [0192]. These functions are present ‘simultaneously’ because they had previously been set while the camera was in the function setting mode.”). We find Appellant’s arguments in the Reply Brief, presented in response to the Examiner’s findings in the Examiner’s Answer, persuasive. Kanamori discloses “a shift button 406 for changing the functions assigned to the buttons of the input unit 300.” Kanamori ¶ 154. Kanamori further discloses “[t]he shift button 406 has a function of changing the functions assigned to other buttons. Thus, this shift button 406 allows a single button to have a plurality of functions.” Kanamori ¶ 154. We interpret claim 1’s “assign” and “automatically assign” as the linking of the functions to the operation keys. See Spec. 17:7–13, 20:14–17, 22:11–13. Thus, to the extent Kanamori’s still-image capture mode corresponds to “in response to a first input at the key device, set a mode for the camera” as recited in claim 1, Kanamori does not teach that the assignments as recited in claim 1 occur while in the still-image capture mode. In Kanamori, shift button 406 provides alternate functions to the buttons but not the actual linking of those functions to the buttons—the shift button 406 shifts between previously linked functions. See Kanamori ¶ 154. We, therefore, do not sustain the Examiner’s rejection of claim 1. We also do not sustain the Examiner’s rejection of claims 3–23, which depend from claim 1. We also do not sustain the Examiner’s rejection of independent claims 24, 27, and 28, for the same reasons discussed above with respect to claim 1. We also do not sustain the Examiner’s rejection of claims 25 and 26, which depend from claim 24. Appeal 2019-004503 Application 15/421,816 8 CONCLUSION The Examiner’s decision to reject claims 1 and 3–28 is reversed. DECISION SUMMARY In summary: Claims Rejected 35 U.S.C. § References Affirmed Reversed 1, 3–28 103(a) Kanamori, Jeoung, Maeda 1, 3–28 REVERSED Copy with citationCopy as parenthetical citation