Patriot Scientific der Highflyer 2006
http://www.investorshub.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=19050421
Sehr lang; Enthält die ausführliche Argumente der Rechtsanwälte der defendants: "the Court should deny"
auf Deutsch "das Gericht möge den Antrag der Verteidiger (J2) ablehnen.
Da schreibt man ganz zum Schluss: "For the foregoing reasons, defendants respectfully request that the Court deny TPL’s motion to amend its infringement contentions. Simply pointing to an on-chip clock generator, a connection of an external crystal to plus and minus pins, or a PLL, cannot be sufficient because those structures all existed in prior art, including prior art that TPL explicitly argued did not contain an entire on-chip ring oscillator. See, e.g., Ex. CC at 4 [‘336 File History, 7/7/97 Amendment] (distinguishing Magar prior art reference that disclosed an external crystal across plus and minus pins connected to on-chip clock generator)."
Diese Formulierungen kommen mir bekannt vor, ist ja auch fast das was der Retter der armen Verbraucher: PUBPAT in seiner Antragsbegründung schreibt. Ob das nun gut für PTSC / TPL ist, das das Gericht den Antrag abgelehnt hat, kann ich nicht einschätzten. Ich glaube an einen positiven Ausgang eher aus einer einfachen Logik heraus. Nach solchen Gerichtstexten brummt mir der Kopf und ich bin so schlau oder dumm wie vorher. Auch wenn man mir heute vorwerfen kann, ich sei ein Haussetrottel, der ewige Optimist, Zahltag ist erst noch.
Bis dahin gibt’s vielleicht noch einen kleinen Börsencrash, und mit anständig "Rückenwind" auch ein positives Prozessende für PTSC-Aktionäre.
Viele Grüße Abenteurer
Jedoch halte ich diese Entscheidung des Gerichtes zugunsten der Kläger für ein positives Zeichen. Mal sehen, was in Agoracom dazu gesagt wird.
„PTSC gegen Intel für 2 Milliarden $$$“ oder
"AMD erwirt Lizenz und Anteile an PTSC"
Und so lange daraus nicht „PTSC gewinnt Patentrechtsstreit, J2 müssen 400 Mio. USD Schadensersatz zahlen“ geworden ist, bleiben die Trend-Investoren weg, steigt die Aktie nicht. Die Aktionäre, die jetzt die Aktie halten sind eine gute Basis, die verkaufen nicht gleich beim kleinsten Rückschlag, wollen entsprechend hohe Preise für die eigenen Papiere. Sie sehen, wie ich glaube, eher das Ganze, kalkulieren ihr Risiko und verhalten sich der eigenen Einschätzung entsprechend. Wie heist es doch so schön: "Skepsis ist die beste Basis für steigende Kurse." Aber verlieren die den Prozess in Texas, dann sind die Aktien vermutlich nur noch Klopapier.
Grüße Abenteurer
First click on the icon box next to his name then go down to the Study Group with Jim Turley and read who is there. Very , very nice company.
http://www.glgroup.com/Council-Member/Jim-Turley-31524.html
... The news that we are waiting approval to announce is that we have entered into a long term Distribution Agreement with ANIXTER, a leading distributor of electrical and communications products worldwide. Under this agreement they have become a most favored company from a pricing standpoint. We are also negotiating a second agreement with a different leading distributor that we hope will come together in the next few weeks. ...
http://www.agoracom.com/ir/patriot/message/558315
Anixter:
http://www.anixter.com/AXECOM/US.NSF/HomePage
oder die deutsche Seite:
http://www.anixter.de/AXECOM/de.NSF/HomePage?OpenForm
Posted by l2007s on June 14, 2007 at 2:43PM
I recently wrote to Holocom and told them that I was a PTSC shareholder. I mentioned that I had been checking their website and hadn't seen any new information. I asked if they had any good news to share. I was surprised to get a reply e-mail from their CEO. Apparently the original recipient of my e-mail thought that Mr. Burns should be the one to respond. Below is that response: FYI...he copied Mr. Pohl and Mr. Turley on this response
I am not a regular poster, however, I wanted to share this with everyone.
LS
Thank you for your interest in SSDI dba Holocom Networks.
The way our business works we have a continuous flow of orders going on. The news that we are waiting approval to announce is that we have entered into a long term Distribution Agreement with ANIXTER, a leading distributor of electrical and communications products worldwide. Under this agreement they have become a most favored company from a pricing standpoint. We are also negotiating a second agreement with a different leading distributor that we hope will come together in the next few weeks.
Our sales continue to rise, following the foreclosure sale and start up of the business. We have risen to roughly $300,000/month currently and hope to take that revenue number higher in the next few months. However, we sell most of our products to the US Government, and that market is a bit unpredictable. If sales continue to trend upward, we should remain profitable for the balance of the FY. Still, our numbers are quite small in relation to Patriot overall, so they may not rise to the level of materiality in the overall scheme of things.
I remain committed to run the business as best we can, with a single goal of generating a profit each and every month as we grow. While this cannot be guaranteed, you have my assurance that all of us here are working diligently to make this investment by Patriot pay off well.
Sincerely,
John M. Burns
CEO SSDI Holocom
Shareholders' Letter, June 2007
To All Friends of Patriot Scientific Corporation-
I'd like to welcome you all and express my thanks to those who've welcomed me. I'd like this letter to become a semi-regular communication to you, our shareholders, partners, and interested parties. I'm aiming for once a month, but please don't lose sleep if subsequent letters don't arrive exactly on schedule.
Because Patriot is a publicly held company there are certain things I won't be able to discuss in these open letters. I'm sure you all understand. I don't like withholding information, but I'm also constrained by federal law, SEC rules, business concerns, and good common sense from sharing absolutely everything that goes on here. I'll be as forthright as I can be.
- First off, I'd like to salute David Pohl, my predecessor here at Patriot. When the company was struggling and in dire straits David resurrected it and put it back on track with the help and support of the company's board of directors. Even more, David abolished all of the company's debt, established a share-buyback plan, oversaw the first dividends paid by our company, and it was under his watch that we've seen our technology flourish and built up our healthy cash reserves. Well done, David, and congratulations.
- As for myself, I'm jumping in with both feet. Although I haven't previously been CEO of a public corporation, how many of us can say that we have? I have the knowledge, experience, and industry connections to lead the company forward. I served as senior vice president in charge of both marketing and technology strategy at ARC International (LSE:ARK), a microprocessor IP company very similar to Patriot. (Note that I've never worked for ARM Holdings, a different British company with a similar name and product focus.) ARC was private when I joined. I opened the company's first U.S. office and hired all of its sales, marketing, and engineering staff. In the span of just a few months I helped coordinate three acquisitions that doubled the size of our company and broadened our product line. A few months later we took the combined company public on the London Stock Exchange, raising $250 million for our investors and shareholders.
- Many well-wishers have asked if I'll be moving permanently to the San Diego area. Of course. Patriot's headquarters are located in Carlsbad and I'm already making arrangements to move my family here.
- Concurrent with that, I'm winding down my consulting and analysis business, Silicon Insider. I've discharged my remaining commitments to clients and I won't be accepting any further engagements. I've enjoyed running the business and I'm very thankful to my clients, but my attention lies with Patriot now.
- Our company has many thousands of shareholders, some bigger than others. Sometimes there's a tendency for smaller shareholders to suspect the larger ones of exerting a bit too much influence. I think some folks are just bound to see conspiracy and intrigue behind every shadow, and there's nothing I can do about that. Let me just say that I've never come under any pressure from any of our shareholders, large or small. This company is not run by committee, nor is there any secret cabal that guides our decisions. I serve at the pleasure of Patriot's board of directors and none other. All the decisions come from this office.
- On a related note, I'm sure many of you have great ideas or would like some private discussions with me or with members of our board of directors. While I appreciate your interest and enthusiasm, I simply don't have time. Besides, there isn't anything I could tell you privately that I can't say here. It's not fair - or legal - to share information with one investor without simultaneously sharing it with everyone. Feel free to call, write, or send e-mail. Just don't expect a response. Ken AuYeung and Frank Hawkins at Hawk Associates will continue to take your calls and answer your e-mails and be as helpful to you as possible.
- Now that I'm no longer just a board member, I've begun recruiting one or two new members to join our board of directors and expand our expertise. It's likely that at least one of these new members will have a good technical background.
- We're very busy here at Patriot Scientific, working to grow the company and increase shareholder value. Though there may be occasional quiet periods where nothing appears to be happening from the outside, rest assured there's plenty of activity inside. I'll be happy to share our progress when I can, and beg your patience during those times that I can't. Best wishes to everyone associated with Patriot Scientific.
-Jim Turley
President/CEO
Patriot Scientific Corporation
New Pacer--Markman Hearing Ruling--(Unformatted) I will format later.
Posted by wolfpackvolt on June 15, 2007 at 5:46PM
http://www.agoracom.com/ir/patriot/message/558712
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
MARSHALL DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY PROPERTIES LTD. and PATRIOT SCIENTIFIC CORP., Plaintiffs, vs. MATSUSHITA ELECTRIC INDUSTRIAL CO., LTD., ET AL., Defendants. §§§§§§§§§§§ CIVIL ACTION NO. 2:05-CV-494 (TJW)
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
After considering the submissions and the arguments of counsel, the Court issues the following order concerning the claim construction issues:
I. Introduction
Plaintiffs Technology Properties Limited (“TPL”) and Patriot Scientific Corp. accuse multiple defendants of infringing United States Patent Nos. 5,809,336 (“the ‘336 patent”) entitled “High Performance Microprocessor Having Variable Speed System Clock,” 6,598,148 (“the ‘148 patent”) entitled “High Performance Microprocessor Having Variable Speed System Clock,” and 5,784,584 (“the ‘584 patent”) entitled “High Performance Microprocessor Using Instructions that Operate within Instruction Groups.” This opinion resolves the parties’ various claim construction disputes.
II. Background of the Technology
The ‘336 patent discloses a mechanism to improve the speed of microprocessor operations. First, a variable speed clock circuit is fabricated on the same chip as the microprocessor. By placing Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 1 of 28 2 the clock circuitry on the microprocessor, the clock will be subject to the same variations in operating conditions as the microprocessor. Second, the slower input/output clock is separated from the system clock. The ‘148 patent also discloses a mechanism to improve the speed of the microprocessor. In addition to the on-chip clock described in the ‘336 patent, the microprocessor of the ‘148 patent includes memory on a majority of the microprocessor substrate. The ‘584 patent addresses a bottleneck problem where the computing speed of the microprocessor depends on how quickly instructions can be loaded from memory into the instruction register of the microprocessor. Microprocessors can only process instructions as fast as the instructions can be loaded from the memory. The ‘584 patent discloses improvements on how to fetch and decode instructions. This is accomplished by arranging certain instructions into a group and fetching the entire group of instructions into the instruction register. As a result, the microprocessor no longer needs to wait for those instructions to be loaded from memory into the instruction register.
III. General Principles Governing Claim Construction
“A claim in a patent provides the metes and bounds of the right which the patent confers on
the patentee to exclude others from making, using or selling the protected invention.” Burke, Inc.
v. Bruno Indep. Living Aids, Inc., 183 F.3d 1334, 1340 (Fed. Cir. 1999). Claim construction is an
issue of law for the court to decide. Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc., 52 F.3d 967, 970-71
(Fed. Cir. 1995) (en banc), aff’d, 517 U.S. 370 (1996).
To ascertain the meaning of claims, the court looks to three primary sources: the claims, the
specification, and the prosecution history. Markman, 52 F.3d at 979. Under the patent law, the
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 2 of 28
3
specification must contain a written description of the invention that enables one of ordinary skill
in the art to make and use the invention. A patent’s claims must be read in view of the specification,
of which they are a part. Id. For claim construction purposes, the description may act as a sort of
dictionary, which explains the invention and may define terms used in the claims. Id. “One purpose
for examining the specification is to determine if the patentee has limited the scope of the claims.”
Watts v. XL Sys., Inc., 232 F.3d 877, 882 (Fed. Cir. 2000).
Nonetheless, it is the function of the claims, not the specification, to set forth the limits of
the patentee’s claims. Otherwise, there would be no need for claims. SRI Int’l v. Matsushita Elec.
Corp., 775 F.2d 1107, 1121 (Fed. Cir. 1985) (en banc). The patentee is free to be his own
lexicographer, but any special definition given to a word must be clearly set forth in the
specification. Intellicall, Inc. v. Phonometrics, 952 F.2d 1384, 1388 (Fed. Cir. 1992). And, although
the specification may indicate that certain embodiments are preferred, particular embodiments
appearing in the specification will not be read into the claims when the claim language is broader
than the embodiments. Electro Med. Sys., S.A. v. Cooper Life Sciences, Inc., 34 F.3d 1048, 1054
(Fed. Cir. 1994).
This Court’s claim construction decision must be informed by the Federal Circuit’s decision
in Phillips v. AWH Corporation, 415 F.3d 1303 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en banc). In Phillips, the court set
forth several guideposts that courts should follow when construing claims. In particular, the court
reiterated that “the claims of a patent define the invention to which the patentee is entitled the right
to exclude.” 415 F.3d at 1312 (emphasis added) (quoting Innova/Pure Water, Inc. v. Safari Water
Filtration Systems, Inc., 381 F.3d 1111, 1115 (Fed. Cir. 2004)). To that end, the words used in a
claim are generally given their ordinary and customary meaning. Id. The ordinary and customary
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 3 of 28
4
meaning of a claim term “is the meaning that the term would have to a person of ordinary skill in
the art in question at the time of the invention, i.e., as of the effective filing date of the patent
application.” Id. at 1313. This principle of patent law flows naturally from the recognition that
inventors are usually persons who are skilled in the field of the invention. The patent is addressed
to and intended to be read by others skilled in the particular art. Id.
The primacy of claim terms notwithstanding, Phillips made clear that “the person of ordinary
skill in the art is deemed to read the claim term not only in the context of the particular claim in
which the disputed term appears, but in the context of the entire patent, including the specification.”
Id. Although the claims themselves may provide guidance as to the meaning of particular terms,
those terms are part of “a fully integrated written instrument.” Id. at 1315 (quoting Markman, 52
F.3d at 978). Thus, the Phillips court emphasized the specification as being the primary basis for
construing the claims. Id. at 1314-17. As the Supreme Court stated long ago, “in case of doubt or
ambiguity it is proper in all cases to refer back to the descriptive portions of the specification to aid
in solving the doubt or in ascertaining the true intent and meaning of the language employed in the
claims.” Bates v. Coe, 98 U.S. 31, 38 (1878). In addressing the role of the specification, the Phillips
court quoted with approval its earlier observations from Renishaw PLC v. Marposs Societa’ per
Azioni, 158 F.3d 1243, 1250 (Fed. Cir. 1998):
Ultimately, the interpretation to be given a term can only be determined and
confirmed with a full understanding of what the inventors actually invented and
intended to envelop with the claim. The construction that stays true to the claim
language and most naturally aligns with the patent’s description of the invention will
be, in the end, the correct construction.
Consequently, Phillips emphasized the important role the specification plays in the claim
construction process.
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 4 of 28 5 The prosecution history also continues to play an important role in claim interpretation. The prosecution history helps to demonstrate how the inventor and the PTO understood the patent.
Phillips, 415 F.3d at 1317. Because the file history, however, “represents an ongoing negotiation
between the PTO and the applicant,” it may lack the clarity of the specification and thus be less
useful in claim construction proceedings. Id. Nevertheless, the prosecution history is intrinsic
evidence. That evidence is relevant to the determination of how the inventor understood the
invention and whether the inventor limited the invention during prosecution by narrowing the scope
of the claims.
Phillips rejected any claim construction approach that sacrificed the intrinsic record in favor
of extrinsic evidence, such as dictionary definitions or expert testimony. The en banc court
condemned the suggestion made by Texas Digital Systems, Inc. v. Telegenix, Inc., 308 F.3d 1193
(Fed. Cir. 2002), that a court should discern the ordinary meaning of the claim terms (through
dictionaries or otherwise) before resorting to the specification for certain limited purposes. Id. at
1319-24. The approach suggested by Texas Digital–the assignment of a limited role to the
specification–was rejected as inconsistent with decisions holding the specification to be the best
guide to the meaning of a disputed term. Id. at 1320-21. According to Phillips, reliance on
dictionary definitions at the expense of the specification had the effect of “focus[ing] the inquiry on
the abstract meaning of words rather than on the meaning of the claim terms within the context of
the patent.” Id. at 1321. Phillips emphasized that the patent system is based on the proposition that
the claims cover only the invented subject matter. Id. What is described in the claims flows from
the statutory requirement imposed on the patentee to describe and particularly claim what he or she
has invented. Id. The definitions found in dictionaries, however, often flow from the editors’
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 5 of 28
6
objective of assembling all of the possible definitions for a word. Id. at 1321-22.
Phillips does not preclude all uses of dictionaries in claim construction proceedings. Instead,
the court assigned dictionaries a role subordinate to the intrinsic record. In doing so, the court
emphasized that claim construction issues are not resolved by any magic formula. The court did not
impose any particular sequence of steps for a court to follow when it considers disputed claim
language. Id. at 1323-25. Rather, Phillips held that a court must attach the appropriate weight to
the intrinsic sources offered in support of a proposed claim construction, bearing in mind the general
rule that the claims measure the scope of the patent grant. The court now turns to a discussion of
the relevant claim terms.
IV. Discussion
Claim 1 of the ‘336 patent, Claim 1 of the ‘148 patent, and Claim 29 of the ‘584 patent are representative of how the terms in dispute are used in the asserted claims. Claim 1 of the ‘336 patent is an independent apparatus claim. It provides: A microprocessor system, comprising a single integrated circuit including a central processing unit and an entire ring oscillator variable speed system clock in said single integrated circuit and connected to said central processing unit for clocking said central processing unit, said central processing unit and said ring oscillator variable speed system clock each including a plurality of electronic devices correspondingly constructed of the same process technology with corresponding manufacturing variations, a processing frequency capability of said central processing unit and a speed of said ring oscillator variable speed system clock varying together due to said manufacturing variations and due to at least operating voltage and temperature of said single integrated circuit; an on-chip input/output interface connected to exchange coupling control signals, addresses and data with said central processing unit; and a second clock independent of said ring oscillator variable speed system clock connected to said input/output interface. Claim 1 of the ‘148 patent is an independent apparatus claim. It provides: A microprocessor integrated circuit comprising: a program-controlled processing unit operative in accordance with a sequence of program Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 6 of 28 7 instructions; a memory coupled to said processing unit and capable of storing information provided by said processing unit; a plurality of column latches coupled to the processing unit and the memory, wherein, during a read operation, a row of bits are read from the memory and stored in the column latch; and a variable speed system clock having an output coupled to said processing unit; said processing unit, said variable speed system clock, said plurality of column latches, and said memory fabricated on a single substrate, said memory using a greater area of said single substrate than said processing unit, said memory further using a majority of a total area of said single substrate. Claim 29 of the ‘584 patent is a method claim. It provides: In a microprocessor system including a central processing unit, memory, and an instruction register, a method for providing instructions and operands from said memory to said central processing unit comprising the steps of: providing instruction groups to said instruction register from said memory wherein certain of said instruction groups include at least one instruction that, when executed, causes an access to an operand or an instruction or both, said operand or instruction being located at a predetermined position from a boundary of said instruction groups; decoding said at least one instruction to determine said predetermined position; locating said predetermined position; and supplying, from said instruction groups, using the predetermined location, said operand or instruction or both to said central processing unit.
A. Agreed Construction
The parties have agreed to the construction of the following terms.
1. ‘336 Patent
“Oscillator” means “a circuit capable of maintaining an alternating output.” “On-chip input/output interface” means “a circuit having logic for input/output Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 7 of 28 8 communications, where that circuit is located on the same semiconductor substrate as the CPU (claims 1-2, 6-10) or the microprocessor (claims 3-5).” “Integrated circuit” means “a miniature circuit on a single semiconductor substrate.” “External memory bus” means “a group of conductors coupled between the I/O interface and an external storage device.”
2. ‘148 Patent
“Integrated circuit substrate” means “a single supporting material upon or within which is formed a miniature circuit.”
3. ‘584 Patent
“Instruction” means “a command to a processor that tells the processor what operation to perform.” “Boundary of said instruction groups” means “beginning or end of an instruction group.” “Supplying, from said instruction groups, using the predetermined location, said operand or instruction or both to said central processing unit” means “using the results of the locating step in the step of transferring the bits from the accessed operand or instruction to the central processing unit.” “Instruction register” means “a hardware element that receives and holds an instruction group as it is extracted from memory; the register either contains or is connected to circuits that interpret the instructions in the group.” Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 8 of 28 9
B. Disputed Constructions
1. ‘336 Patent
a. “central processing unit”
The first term for construction is “central processing unit.” The plaintiffs propose “an
electronic circuit that controls the interpretation and execution of programmed instructions.” The
defendants propose “the central electronic circuit in a computer that controls the interpretation and
execution of programmed instructions.” There are two main disputes - 1) whether the circuit needs
to be in a computer and 2) whether the circuit needs to be the “central electronic circuit.”
In support of their construction, the plaintiffs argue that the specification teaches that the
microprocessor can be used in applications other than a computer (e.g., HDTV and automobiles).
‘336 patent, 9:61-10:12. The plaintiffs also observe that the specification states that the
microprocessor can be part of a multiprocessor system and, therefore, no one CPU is the “central
electronic circuit” for the computer. See ‘336 patent, 11:64-12:4. The defendants, on the other hand,
argue that they did not intend to limit the use of the CPU to a computer. They assert, however, that
a CPU must be part of a computer chip.
The parties appear to agree that one of ordinary skill in the art would understand that a
computer chip or other integrated circuit can be used in various devices, such as automobiles or
televisions. The Court construes the term to mean “an electronic circuit on an integrated circuit that
controls the interpretation and execution of programmed instructions.”
b. “microprocessor”
The plaintiffs propose “an electronic circuit that executes programmed instructions and is capable of interfacing with input/output circuitry and/or memory circuitry.” The defendants propose Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 9 of 28
10
“an electronic circuit that uses a central processing unit to interpret and execute programmed
instructions.” The main disputes are whether the microprocessor must be capable of interfacing with
input/output circuitry and/or memory circuitry, and whether the microprocessor needs to use a central
processing unit.
The plaintiffs argue that the patent discloses a microprocessor that communicates with
memory circuitry. ‘336 patent, 8:56-58, 11:49-54. The plaintiffs also argue that the claim language
does not support the fact that a microprocessor is required to use a central processing unit because
claim 3 does not recite the use of a central processing unit whereas all other independent claims
require the use of a central processing unit.
The defendants argue that one of ordinary skill in the art would understand that
microprocessors include a central processing unit. In addition, the defendants contend that not all
microprocessors need to interface with input/output circuitry because some microprocessors
communicate solely with external memory. The defendants also contend that microprocessors do
not need to connect to external memory because some microprocessors rely solely on on-chip
memory.
The Court is not persuaded that the additional limitations proposed by the plaintiffs or the
defendants are appropriate. The input/output interface and the central processing unit limitations are
included in other portions of the claims and, therefore, adding those limitations to the construction
would be superfluous. See, e.g., ‘336 patent, 32:12-13, 25-26. The Court construes
“microprocessor” to mean “an electronic circuit that interprets and executes programmed
instructions.”
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 10 of 28 11
c. “ring oscillator”
The next term is “ring oscillator.” The plaintiffs contend that this term means “an oscillator
having a multiple, odd number of inversions arranged in a loop.” The defendants propose “an
[oscillator] having an odd number of inverting logic stages connected in a loop.” The main dispute
is whether a ring oscillator is required to have multiple inverters or whether it can have just one.
The plaintiffs argue that a single inverter would not be appropriate because it could not
maintain an oscillating output. The defendants, on the other hand, rely on extrinsic evidence to
support their proposed construction. Specifically, the defendants cite to a semiconductor textbook
depicting a ring oscillator with only one inverter.
The plaintiffs have the better argument. The extrinsic evidence cited by the defendants also
supports the plaintiffs’ construction. It states that timers are built as “chains of inverters,” not just
one inverter. Defendants’ Claim Construction Brief, Ex. U, MEAD & CONWAY, INTRODUCTION TO
VLSI SYSTEMS (1980), at 234. Accordingly, the Court adopts the plaintiffs’ proposed construction.
d. “an entire ring oscillator variable speed system clock in said
integrated circuit”
The plaintiffs argue that this term means “a ring oscillator that generates the signal(s) used for timing the operation of the CPU, capable of operating at speeds that can change, where the ring oscillator is located entirely on the same semiconductor substrate as the CPU.” The defendants’ proposed construction is “a [ring oscillator variable speed system clock] that is completely on-chip and does not rely on a control signal or an external crystal/clock generator.” The dispute is whether the ring oscillator may rely on a control signal or an external crystal/clock generator. In support of their construction, the defendants argue that the applicant disclaimed use of a Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 11 of 28
12
control signal and a external crystal/clock generator in order to distinguish over prior art. The
plaintiffs contend that it did not disclaim all types of control signals, such as voltage and current
controlled oscillators; there was only a disclaimer of the more narrow “command input.” In addition,
the plaintiffs argue that, although an external crystal is not directly used to generate a system clock
signal, the external crystal can be used as a reference signal to account for delay across certain circuit
elements.
The Court agrees with the defendants that the applicant disclaimed the use of an input control
signal and an external crystal/clock generator to generate a clock signal. See Response to Office
Action, April 11, 1996, at 8; Response to Office Action, January 13, 1997, at 4; Response to Office
Action, July 7, 1997, at 3-4. Accordingly, the Court construes the term to mean “a ring oscillator
variable speed system clock that is located entirely on the same semiconductor substrate as the CPU
and does not directly rely on a command input control signal or an external crystal/clock generator
to generate a clock signal.”
e. “variable speed”
The next term is “variable speed.” The plaintiffs’ proposed construction is “capable of operating at speeds that can change.” The defendants argue that the term means “a speed (frequency) that is not tightly controlled and varies more than minimally.” The plaintiffs contend that the specification discloses a ring oscillator that is capable of operating at various speeds based on variations in operating conditions. ‘336 patent, 16:59-63. The plaintiffs also argue that the defendants’ proposed construction is too restrictive. The defendants, on the other hand, point to the prosecution where the applicant describes fixed-frequency as a speed that is “tightly controlled” and “var[ies] minimally.” Amendment, July 7, 1997, at 3-4. According Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 12 of 28
1 The parties appear to agree that these two terms should have the same construction.
13
to the defendants, “variable speed” is the opposite of fixed-frequency.
Notwithstanding the defendants’ arguments, one of ordinary skill in the art would understand
“variable speed” to describe a component capable of operating at different speeds. Accordingly, the
Court construes the term to mean “capable of operating at different speeds.”
f. “system clock” and “variable speed clock”1
The plaintiffs propose “a circuit that generates the signal(s) used for timing the operation of the CPU.” The defendants contend that the term means “a circuit that is itself responsible for determining the frequency of the signal(s) used for timing the operation of the CPU.” The dispute is whether the circuit alone is responsible for determining the frequency of the signal. A system clock does not generate the signal alone because the timing can be derived from the ring oscillator. ‘336 patent, 16:63-67. Accordingly, the Court adopts the plaintiffs’ proposed construction.
g. “oscillator . . . clocking”
The plaintiffs contend that no construction is necessary, but if a construction is required, they propose “the oscillator generates the signal(s) used for timing the operation of the CPU.” The defendants propose “an oscillator that is itself determining the frequency of the signal(s) used for timing.” The Court agrees that the term requires construction. The Court construes the term to mean “an oscillator that generates the signal(s) used for timing the operation of the CPU.”
h. “processing frequency”
The plaintiffs propose “the speed at which the CPU operates.” The defendants propose Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 13 of 28
14
“fastest safe operating speed.” The issue is whether the term refers to the “fastest safe operating
speed.”
The plaintiffs contend that the specification uses the language “maximum possible
frequency” with regard to one embodiment of the CPU. The plaintiffs also point out that “fastest
safe operating speed” was mentioned in response to an office action. Response to Office Action,
January 8, 1997, at 4. The response to the office action states that the present invention provides
a variable speed clock for the microprocessor, with the clock speed varying
in the same way as variations in the operating characteristics of the electronic
devices making up the microprocessor. This allows the microprocessor to
operate at its fastest safe operating speed, given its manufacturing process or
changes in its operating temperature or voltage. Id. at 3-4.
According to the plaintiffs, this does not mean that the CPU must operate at the fastest safe operating
speed, but that it is capable of operating at its fastest safe operating speed.
In support of their proposed construction, the defendants point to the specification which
states that the “CPU will always execute at the maximum frequency possible, but never too fast.”
‘336 patent, 17:1-2. The defendants also point to a portion of the prosecution history which states
that
these claims further state that the plurality of transistors included within the
ring oscillator clock have operating characteristics which vary similarly to
operating characteristics of transistors included within the microprocessor,
thereby enabling the processing frequency of the microprocessor to track the
speed of the ring oscillator clock: ‘...CPU clock 70 executes at the fastest
speed possible using the adaptive ring counter clock 430. Speed may vary by
a factor of four depending upon temperature, voltage, and process. Response
to Office Action, April 11, 1996, at 8-9.
Frequency is not limited to the fastest safe operating speed. The portion of the prosecution
history cited by the defendants refers to varying the processing frequency based on operating
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 14 of 28
This construction would also include 2 the terms “vary together,” “varying . . . in the same
way,” and “varying in the same way.”
15
conditions. In the Court’s view, the applicants did not clearly define or limit the term “processing
frequency.” Accordingly, the Court adopts the plaintiffs’ proposed construction.
i. “processing frequency capability”
The plaintiffs propose “the range of speeds at which the CPU can operate.” The defendants propose “fastest safe operating speed at which the CPU can operate.” As discussed in the previous section, “processing frequency” is not limited to the “fastest safe operating speed.” In addition, “capability” is not limited to a range or to the fastest speed. Accordingly, the Court construes the term to mean “the speeds at which the CPU can operate.”
j. “varying together”2
The next term is “varying together.” The plaintiffs contend that the term means “both increase
or both decrease.” The defendants’ proposed construction is “increasing and decreasing by the same
amount.” The dispute is whether this term is limited to “the same amount.”
The defendants claim that the only way for the invention to work is to match the clock speed
to the CPU’s processing speed capability. According to the defendants, if the frequency capability
increased from 50 MHz to 100 MHZ but the clock rate only increased from 25 MHz to 150 MHZ,
then the CPU would not be operable. In addition, the defendants argue that there are numerous
statements in the prosecution history stating that the processing frequency should “track” or “vary
correspondingly with” the clock rate. See Response to Office Action, April 11, 1996, at 6, 8;
Response to Office Action, January 8, 1997, at 4.
There is no limitation in the intrinsic evidence requiring the variation between the frequency
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 15 of 28 16 capability and the clock to match exactly. The Court construes the term to mean “increasing and decreasing proportionally.”
k. “second clock”
The plaintiffs’ proposed construction is “a clock not derived from the first clock.” The defendants contend that no construction is necessary, but if construction is necessary, then they propose “another clock.” The plaintiffs argue that the claims state that the second clock is independent of the first clock. According to the plaintiffs, a second clock derived from the first clock would not be independent as required by the claims. The defendants appear to agree that the first clock is independent of the second clock. In any event, the independence of the second clock is required by the claim language. Accordingly, the Court declines to construe this term.
l. “external clock”
The plaintiffs propose “a clock not derived from the first clock, and which is not originated on the same semiconductor substrate upon which the entire variable speed clock is located.” The defendants contend that no construction is necessary, but if a construction is necessary, then they propose “a clock not on the integrated circuit substrate.” As discussed previously, the defendants appear to agree that, like the second clock, the external clock is independent of the first clock. The plaintiffs’ proposed construction includes limitations already in the claims. The Court construes “external clock” to mean “a clock not on the integrated circuit substrate.” Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 16 of 28 17
m. “second clock independent of said ring oscillator . . . system clock”
and “second clock independent of the ring oscillator system clock”
The plaintiffs propose “a change in the frequency of the ring oscillator does not affect the frequency of the second clock.” The defendants propose “a second clock wherein a change in the frequency of one of the second clock or the ring oscillator system clock does not affect the frequency of the other.” The dispute is whether the term “independent” means “one-way independence” or “two-way independence.” The plaintiffs argue that the specification only refers to one-way independence because it describes the situation where the I/O clock has a fixed speed while the CPU clock has a variable speed. According to the plaintiffs, there is no discussion about the situation where the I/O clock speed can be modified without affecting the CPU clock speed; the specification only states that varying the CPU clock speed would not affect the I/O clock speed. The defendants argue that the plaintiffs’ construction would conflict with the purpose of the invention of having a first clock function independently from the second clock. According to the defendants, the specification describes the first and second clock as functioning independently from one another. The defendants have the better argument. One of ordinary skill in the art would understand the term “independence” to mean “two-way independence.” Accordingly, the Court construes the term to mean “a second clock wherein a change in the frequency of either the second clock or ring oscillator system clock does not affect the frequency of the other.”
n. “external clock is operative at a frequency independent of a clock
frequency of said oscillator”
The plaintiffs propose “a change in the frequency of the oscillator (claims 6-9) or the variable Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 17 of 28 18 speed clock (claim 10) does not affect the frequency of the external clock.” The defendants propose “an external clock wherein a change in the frequency of one of the external clock or oscillator does not affect the frequency of the other (claim 6).” The Court construes the term to mean “an external clock wherein a change in the frequency of either the external clock or oscillator does not affect the frequency of the other.”
o. “fixed frequency”
The plaintiffs contend that no construction is necessary, but if the court determines that a construction is needed, then they propose “a non-variable frequency.” The defendants propose “having a speed that is tightly controlled and varies minimally.” This term is not a technical term and can be understood according to its plain and ordinary meaning. Accordingly, the Court declines to construe this term.
2. ‘148 Patent
a. “processing unit”
The plaintiffs propose “an electronic circuit that controls the interpretation and execution of programmed instructions.” The defendants do not appear to dispute the plaintiffs’ proposal. Accordingly, the Court adopts the plaintiffs’ proposed construction.
b. “memory” and “a memory”
The plaintiffs propose “all of the storage elements on the substrate and the control circuitry configured to access the storage elements.” The defendants claim that this term is indefinite, but if construction is possible, they propose “an information storing array that does not include registers, Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 18 of 28
The defendants do not present their 3 arguments for indefiniteness in their claim
construction briefing.
19
cache or column latches.”3 The main dispute appears to be whether or not memory can include
registers, cache, or column latches.
The defendants contend that “memory” and “column latches” must have different meanings
because when two claim terms are used, they are presumed to mean different things. See ‘148 patent,
claim 1. The defendants, therefore, argue that “memory” cannot include “column latches.” The
defendants also point out that the specification recognizes that latches, registers and cache can exist
within the CPU which is separate from the memory. See ‘148 patent, 4:5-10, 4:14-19, 5:58-60.
The plaintiffs contend that the specification describes DRAM to include registers and column
latches. ‘148 patent, 8:65-9:4. The defendants, moreover, agree that registers, cache, and column
latches may be considered part of the memory when they are included in the storage array.
Defendants’ Responsive Claim Construction Brief, at 34.
In the Court’s view, the plaintiffs’ proposal is too broad because it would include storage
elements that are within the CPU. On the other hand, the defendants’ proposed construction is too
limiting because it would exclude registers and cache that one of ordinary skill in the art would
consider to be types of memory. The claim language, however, does indicate that “memory” does not
include “column latches.” “Memory” and “column latches” are two distinct elements in Claim 1 of
the ‘148 patent. The claim also states, in relevant part, that “a plurality of column latches [is] coupled
to . . . the memory . . . .” ‘148 patent, 31:11-12. If “memory” included “column latches,” then the
claim would not need to specify that “column latches” are coupled to the “memory.” Accordingly,
the Court construes “memory” to mean “storage elements other than column latches.”
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 19 of 28
20
c. “total area of said single substrate” or “total area of said
substrate”
The plaintiffs propose “the total surface of the supporting material upon or within which is
formed an interconnected array of circuit elements.” The defendants propose “area enclosed by the
outermost edges of the substrate.” This term is used in the context of memory which is claimed to
occupy “a majority” of the “total area” of the substrate. The issue is what constitutes the “area.”
The plaintiffs argue that the defendants’ proposal would include areas of the substrate that are
not being actively used (e.g., the sides and back of the substrate). According to the plaintiffs, the
proper approach is to refer to the portion of the substrate that has active circuitry as depicted in Figure
9 of the ‘148 patent.
The area of the substrate refers to the top portion of the substrate, and not the sides or back.
See ‘148 patent, Fig. 9. The Court construes the term to mean “the total top surface area of the
substrate.”
d. “area of said single substrate” or “area of said substrate”
The Court construes this term to mean “the top surface area of the substrate.”
e. “variable”
This is not a technical term that requires construction and may be understood according to its
plain and ordinary meaning. The Court declines to construe this term.
f. “system clock”
The Court adopts its previous construction of this term in the ‘336 patent. See Section
IV(B)(1)(f).
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 20 of 28
21
g. “ring oscillator”
The Court adopts its previous construction of this term in the ‘336 patent. See Section
IV(B)(1)(c).
h. “a ring oscillator having a variable output frequency”
The Court adopts its previous construction of “ring oscillator” in the ‘336 patent. See Section
IV(B)(1)(c). No further construction of this term is necessary.
i. “the [ring oscillator] disposed on said integrated circuit substrate”
The Court adopts its previous construction of “ring oscillator” in the ‘336 patent. See
Section IV(B)(1)(c). No further construction of this term is necessary.
j. “interface ports for interprocessor communication”
The plaintiffs contend that no construction is necessary. Alternatively, if a construction is
needed, then the plaintiffs propose “channels through which data can be transferred between two
separate processing units.” The defendants propose “channels through which data is transferred
between two separate processing units.” The dispute is whether the interface ports may be used for
purposes other than to transfer data.
The defendants argue that the plaintiffs’ construction would allow the interface ports to be
used for any purpose and render the words “for interprocessor communication” meaningless. The
plaintiffs contend that the specification describes interface ports for use other than interprocessor
communication. See ‘148 patent, 9:64-10:12.
One of ordinary skill in the art would understand that interface ports are not limited solely to
the transfer of data. The Court construes the term to mean “channels through which data is allowed
to be transferred between two separate processing units.”
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 21 of 28
22
3. ‘584 Patent
a. “microprocessor”
The Court adopts its previous construction of this term in the ‘336 patent. See Section
IV(B)(1)(b).
b. “central processing unit”
The Court adopts its previous construction of this term in the ‘336 patent. See Section
IV(B)(1)(a).
c. “instruction groups”
The next term is “instruction groups.” The plaintiffs’ proposed construction is “sets of from
1 to a maximum number of sequential instructions, each set being provided to the instruction register
as a unit and having a boundary.” The defendants propose “sets of from 1 to a maximum number of
sequential instructions, in which the execution of the instruction depends on each set being provided
to the instruction register as a unit and in which any operand that is present must be right justified and
which cannot encompass a single 32-bit traditional conventional instruction.” The dispute is whether
an operand that is present in the instruction group must be right justified and whether the instruction
group may encompass a single 32-bit traditional conventional instruction.
The plaintiffs contend that right justified operands are a feature of the preferred embodiment.
The plaintiffs also argue that the claim language was broadened during prosecution history when the
language “selecting, in accordance with position in said instruction register of one of said instructions
of one of said instruction groups, an operand from said one of said instruction groups” was removed
from the claim. Amendment, June 12, 1997, at 6. In addition, the plaintiffs point out that the
specification includes 32-bit instructions. See ‘584 patent, 20:41-42.
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 22 of 28
23
The defendants argue that the specification states that “operands must be right justified in the
instruction register.” ‘584 patent, 16:15-16. In addition, the defendants argue that the applicants
limited operands in this manner to overcome prior art rejections. See Amendment, June 17, 1997,
at 13; Amendment, February 5, 1998, at 7. The defendants also contend that although the
specification includes 32-bit instructions, the specification never identifies a single 32-bit instruction
as instruction groups. According to the defendants, the specification defines “instruction group” as
“being 8-bit and 16 or 24-bit instructions.” ‘584 patent, 23:4-7.
The specification and prosecution history refer to the fact that operands in the instruction
register must be right justified. The applicants, however, did not exclude a single 32-bit instruction
as an instruction group. In a preferred embodiment, a microprocessor fetches instructions “in 32-bit
chunks called 4-byte instruction groups” where an “instruction group may contain from one to four
instructions.” ‘584 patent, 23:4-5, 19:18-19. If a 4-byte (or 32-bit) instruction group contains one
instruction, then the instruction group may contain a single 32-bit instruction. The Court construes
“instruction groups” to mean “sets of from 1 to a maximum number of sequential instructions, each
set being provided to the instruction register as a unit and having a boundary, and in which any
operand that is present must be right justified.”
d. “operand”
The plaintiffs argue that the term means “an input to an operation specified by an instruction
that is encoded as part of the instruction.” The defendants propose “an input to a single operation
specified by an instruction that is encoded as part of the instruction where the size of the input can
vary depending on the value of the input.”
The plaintiffs argue that the defendants’ proposed construction would exclude a preferred
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 23 of 28
24
embodiment which includes fixed length operands. See ‘584 patent, 29:62-27:7. However, the
plaintiffs appear to agree that the size of the input can vary.
The intrinsic evidence does not show a clear limitation where the size of the input needs to
vary depending on the value of the input. The Court construes the term to mean “an input to a single
operation specified by an instruction that is encoded as part of the instruction where the size of the
input can vary.”
e. “said instruction groups include at least one instruction that, when
executed, causes an access to an operand or instruction or both”
The plaintiffs propose “the instruction being executed causes the CPU to use an immediate
operand or execute a second instruction which is not the next sequential instruction.” The defendants’
proposed construction is “the instruction being executed causes the CPU to use data or execute a
second instruction.” The main dispute is whether the second instruction can be the next sequential
instruction.
The plaintiffs argue that one of ordinary skill in the art would regard the normal program flow
of going from one instruction to the next sequential instruction as “causing an access to an
instruction.” The defendants contend that the specification describes a SKIP instruction where the
second instruction accessed is the next sequential instruction. ‘584 patent, 23:12-14. In reply, the
plaintiffs contend that claim 29 refers to control flow instructions, not ordinary instructions.
The intrinsic evidence does not support the limitation proposed by the plaintiffs. Accordingly,
the Court construes the term to mean “the instruction being executed causes the CPU to use an
operand or execute a second instruction.”
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 24 of 28
25
f. “said operand or instruction being located at a predetermined
position from a boundary of said instruction groups”
The plaintiffs propose “the immediate operand or the instruction that is accessed has a
position, relative to the beginning or end of the instruction group that includes the operand or
instruction being accessed, that is determined based on a portion of an accessing instruction that
identifies an operation to be performed and without reference to operand or address bits in the
accessing instruction.” The defendants propose “the bits forming the accessed operand or instruction
either begin or end at a position defined in relation to the boundaries of the instruction group in the
instruction register rather than the currently executing instruction.” The principal dispute is whether
the instruction group refers to the group in which the currently executing instruction is located or
whether it refers to the group in which the instruction or operand being accessed is located.
The plaintiffs argue that, during prosecution, the applicants referred to the predetermined
position of the accessed operand or instruction. See Supplemental Amendment, February 5, 1998,
at 6-8. The plaintiffs also argue that instruction location is determined based on the particular place
for instructions of that type. In addition, the plaintiffs contend that the target address specified by the
instruction has no effect on the decision to begin executing at the beginning boundary of a target
group.
The defendants argue that the Abstract explains the meaning of this phrase. It states
A high-performance microprocessor system using instruction that access
operands and instructions located relative to the current instruction group
rather than located relative to the current instructions, as is the convention, is
disclosed herein. ‘584 patent, Abstract.
The defendants also contend that the plaintiffs add limitations that are not supported by the intrinsic
evidence.
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 25 of 28
26
In reply, the plaintiffs contend that the term “current” in the Abstract refers to the target group,
not the accessing group. For example, one of ordinary skill in the art would, in the case of a
BRANCH instruction, determine the target instruction relative to the boundary of the target group,
not the accessing group.
A “predetermined position” refers to a position based on the instruction group being accessed.
See ‘584 patent, 2:29-35. The Court construes the term to mean “the operand or instruction is
accessed at a position defined in relation to the boundaries of the instruction group that includes the
operand or instruction being accessed.”
g. “decoding said at least one instruction to determine said
predetermined position”
The plaintiffs contend that the term means “interpreting an instruction, in particular the
portion thereof that signifies the operation to be performed, in order to identify a position relative to
the beginning or end of the instruction group that includes the operand or instruction being accessed,
without reference to the operand or address bits in the instruction being interpreted.” The defendants
propose “interpreting an instruction, in particular the portion thereof that signifies the operation to
be performed, in order to identify a position relative to the beginning or end of the current instruction
group.”
The Court construes the term to mean “interpreting an instruction, in particular the portion
therefor that signifies the operation to be performed, in order to identify a position relative to the
beginning or end of the instruction group that includes the operand or instruction being accessed.”
h. “locating said predetermined position”
The next term is “locating said predetermined position.” The plaintiffs argue that this term
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 26 of 28
27
means “establishing operand or instruction supply within the instruction group that includes the
operand or instruction being accessed at the predetermined position.” The defendants argue that the
term means “using the results of the decoding step to ascertain the address of the accessed operand
or instruction by referencing the current instruction group address rather than the current executing
instruction address without adding or subtracting an operand with the current Program Counter.” The
parties make similar arguments with regards to “predetermined position” as discussed in the previous
section.
The plaintiffs oppose the additional limitation in the defendants’ proposed construction of
“without adding or subtracting an operand with the current Program Counter.” According to the
plaintiffs, this would exclude a preferred embodiment from the specification stating that the processor
“treats the three operands similarly by adding or subtracting them to the current program counter.”
‘584 patent, 11:13-15. In support of this additional limitation, the defendants argue that additions and
subtractions are done only at assembly/linking and not at run time. See ‘584 patent, 20:43-50.
The defendants’ construction improperly incorporates a limitation from the preferred
embodiment. The Court construes the term to mean “locating the operand or instruction within the
instruction group that includes the operand or instruction being accessed at the predetermined
position.”
V. Conclusion
The Court adopts the constructions set forth in this opinion for the disputed terms of the ‘336
patent, the ‘148 patent, and the ‘584 patent. The parties are ordered that they may not refer, directly
or indirectly, to each other’s claim construction positions in the presence of the jury. Likewise, the
parties are ordered to refrain from mentioning any portion of this opinion, other than the actual
Case 2:05-cv-00494-TJW Document 259 Filed 06/15/2007 Page 27 of 28
28
definitions adopted by the Court, in the presence of the jury. Any reference to claim construction
proceedings is limited to in
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einen Beitrag nach unten
Erste Analysen sind schon gemacht.
OK, People...
Posted by ease2002 on June 15, 2007 at 9:31PM
My father, who is my contact, just spent one hour reviewing the Markman ruling. I formatted it into Word and it was 15 pages. My father is an avid reader and reads very quickly, so the review was quite thorough.
Of the 13 disputed terms for the '336, it appears that we have won outright, or the court has leaned heavily in our favor for 11 claims. The two that remain were not in our opinion (my father's and mine) outright wins for the defense, and they appear to be either middle road, or marginal defense victories. This has lead us to believe that the '336 is intact. In our opinion, which is not legal, but highly technical due to my father's 40 yr plus experience as an EE, the defendants will have to pay on the '336.
For the '148, it looks like we won, or the court leans on our side, period. Many of the disputed terms in the '148 were addressed in the '336 and it appears as though we won those in the '336, so by default we won them in the '148.
For the '584, as far as I am concerned, that is a toss up. I don't know. The defendants faired better on the disputed terms for the '584 than on any other patent.
My father (contact) warns that he does not know where the main money lies with each disputed term, but he does believe that the defendants will have to pay, unless ofcourse something unforseen happens...USPTO, or some other rubbish...
I am pretty psyched about the '336, I didn't see one term, maybe besides "microprocessor" which IMO means nothing, that the defense got...
Looks good from our end...I look forward to some other technical analysis. Maybe DDiligen and APatentLawyer can chime in on their interpretations.
I need a drink!
GLTAL
Link: http://www.agoracom.com/ir/patriot/message/558852
Viel Spaß beim Lesen
Ansprüche nicht mehr vom Tisch zu wischen. Jetzt geht es nur noch um die Höhe der Entschädigung. Das riecht nach einer Einigung in den nächsten Wochen, denn ein Urteil käme die Beklagten noch viel teurer als eine Einigung.
Schöner hätte das Wochenende nicht beginnen können.
Posted by tnm69 on June 16, 2007 at 7:34AM
It appears that TPL/PTSC have been about 87percent successful in the Markman. Dont expect a motion for summary Judgement to be filed next week. The Attorneys for TPL/PTSC will break the Courts findings down, interwine the ruling with TPL-s argument and then file it. Might not be heard for 45 to 60 days.
But while waiting for the filing, many will jump in and try to make a quick settlement. Hopefully the price just went up. The anticipation of the filing might be a bigger push then the actual filing.
If our board has the balls now to look out for PTSC and all the stockholders, then we should see a significant increase in the sp.They must immediately deal with any warrants not cashed in,look agressively for an effective way to change stock exchanges.
If I'm right on my thinking then in 60 to 90 days, it would not be unreasonable for the sp to be $4 to $5 or higher. Depends on how many Companys sign and PaYYYYYYYYYYYYYY.
Just My Thoughts and opinion
Hallo Abenteurer, Joker, Ramses und alle anderen. Wo seid Ihr ? Jetzt werden wir alle für unsere Ausdauer belohnt.
Aber zurück zum Thema. Das hört sich super an, nur sollten wir nicht Kurse von 5 $ in einer Woche erwarten. Natürlich wird es Montag nur nach oben gehen, vielleicht wird sie auch kurz ausgesetzt. Von den 0,18 sind wir ab jetzt meilenweit entfernt.
Schade Bernd, das wir nichts mehr von dir hören werden hier im Thread.
Ein schönes Wochenende allen die dabei sind.
Posted by PCsReasy on June 16, 2007 at 11:20AM
Kann das jemand bestätigen ?
Habe keine Häme übrig fürPTSC-Basher, weil ich 2006 8 x kräftig5-stellig Shares nachgekauft habe, 2007 nochmals 1 x.
Mitleid habe ich mit jenen Zauderern, die nicht sehr billig nachkauften, sondern erst nächsten Montag plötzlich rein wollen, alle auf einmal, unlimitiert.
Mir soll's Recht sein, Kurs explodiert deshalb umsomehr.
Wieviel hast du denn schon ge- resp. nachgekauft ? Danke für eine ehrliche Antwort.
Gruss
Gilbertus
Ich bin voll investiert, die letzte Dividende ist auch in PTSC Papierchen geflossen, aber meine Aktien bekommt der Markt erst bei Preisen über 5USD.
Glückwunsch an alle,
Abenteurer
gefallen! Hab hier noch ein paar Links, kamen von US336 auf wo, die meisten werden Ihn kennen.
Da USS 336 grad so richtig los legt schieb ich noch ein paar Postings nach.....
#87106 von US336 16.06.07 23:59:32 Beitrag Nr.: 29.960.808 Dieses Posting: versenden | melden | drucken | Antwort schreiben | | ||
Nächste Woche News von PTSC oder TPL Group, genau sowas oder sowas ähnlich... Power-One Announces Favorable Markman Hearing Ruling In Patent Litigation Against Artesyn Technologies http://www.power-one.com/investor/pressreleases/pr032307.pdf Palomar Receives Positive Ruling in Markman Hearing in Patent Infringement Action Against Cutera http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/...s.pl?ACCT=104&STORY=… MIPS Technologies Receives Favorable Ruling in Markman Hearing Of Patent Infringement Case Against Lexra http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_2001_Sept_18/… |
von Jay aus w.o.
#87108 von jay68 17.06.07 00:20:23 Beitrag Nr.: 29.961.085 Dieses Posting: versenden | melden | drucken | Antwort schreiben | | ||
Folgende Antwort bezieht sich auf Beitrag Nr.: 29.960.978 von US336 am 17.06.07 00:12:14 Mr. Mac Leckrone: We always say, “By not purchasing a license, you’re making a decision that the higher price is okay with you.” That’s not a threat. It’s just a reality. http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/apr07/4989 |
ist einfach zu interessant als das ich den nachfolgenden Kommentar ausbelenden möchte:
#87109 von US336 17.06.07 00:24:39 Beitrag Nr.: 29.961.141 Dieses Posting: versenden | melden | drucken | Antwort schreiben | | ||
Folgende Antwort bezieht sich auf Beitrag Nr.: 29.960.978 von US336 am 17.06.07 00:12:14 Ah ja das hier ist von 09.05.2007.... Alliacense has held licensing discussions with Kodak and many other companies regarding a portfolio of patents directed to microprocessors. Allegedly, these patents would implicate products in all of Kodak’s businesses, including the Health Group. Kodak does not make its own microprocessors, so is seeking indemnification from its suppliers.Several of these patents are being re-examined by the USPTO. http://phx.corporate-ir.net/...x.zhtml?c=115911&p=irol-SE… __________________________________________________ Und das hier von 24.04.2007: Alliacense (Cases TA443, TA486, TA13621 and TA13864) • Several assertions have been made relating to alleged infringement of U.S. patent No. 5,440,749 and related dependent patents (the so-called Moore Patent Portfolio) relating to microprocessor technology and co-owned by Technology Properties and Patriot Scientific (now joined in the new company Alliacense). Because of sales by Philips of TriMedia microprocessors in the U.S., Technology Properties and Patriot Scientific in the past offered to settle for USD 22 million but did not want to substantiate their case. Philips refused the offer and is of the opinion that its microprocessors did not infringe the patents involved. • Patriot Scientific approached a number of Japanese PC companies, such as Sony, Matsushita, Fujitsu, NEC and Toshiba. Intel, as supplier of Pentium chips, came to their defense. In 2004, Sanyo asked Philips for assistance in their defense. Philips explained that it does not believe that the Philips microprocessors infringe. Recently, Intel, which produces similar microprocessors to those that Philips does, took a license from Technology Properties and Patriot Scientific for an amount of USD 10 to 25 million. In addition, Bosch and Agfa Gevaert recently sent a letter to Philips indicating that they had been approached by Alliacense for alleged infringement by products incorporating Philips microprocessors and asking for indemnification. Philips Semiconductors is receiving questions from more customers about the Moore patents. Recently, Alliacense approached Philips Consumer Electronics again to present their claim against microprocessors used in products from both Philips Consumer Electronics and Philips Medical Systems. Because the patents pertain to microprocessor technology, Philips Consumer Electronics and Philips Medical Systems are requesting indemnification from their suppliers, including Philips Semiconductors. • Alliacense primarily approaches companies such as Sanyo, Bosch, Agfa Gevaert, and Philips Consumer Electronics that manufacture finished products incorporating microprocessors, relying on patent claims that allegedly cover the combination of microprocessors with other components. Although Philips Semiconductors is generally not liable for infringement by the combinations, Philips Semiconductors could be liable in case their products implement all features of one or more of the Moore patent claims. Besides from indemnification requests by customers, liability could also arise from Alliacense directly if they would decide to approach Philips Semiconductors (risking exhaustion of their patents. However, Alliacense like their predecessors declined to discuss a license on the chip level, keeping their focus on higher value products. • Several manufacturers have recently entered into license agreements with Alliacense, including Fujitsu, HP, Sony, apparently not protected by their customer status of Intel and AMD. Go,go Alliacense...... |
#87110 von US336 17.06.07 00:30:37 Beitrag Nr.: 29.961.219 Dieses Posting: versenden | melden | drucken | Antwort schreiben | | ||
Folgende Antwort bezieht sich auf Beitrag Nr.: 29.961.085 von jay68 am 17.06.07 00:20:23 Nicht mehr " to settle for USD 22 million " ab jetzt " Must Pay USD 62 million"... Chance verpasst. |
ansonsten die longies etwas teurer gekauft, aber wenn der plan aufgeht, wird auch damit geld verdient.
schöne grüße an alle ptsc´ler und speziell aus lübeck nach flensburg
http://www.agoracom.com/ir/patriot/message/558758
This is just a breakdown of the points and the win/loss - the next step is assigning weight to each of the points in the overall argument of the patent -
Regards
B. Disputed Constructions
1. ‘336 Patent
a. “central processing unit” – TPL Win
The first term for construction is “central processing unit.” The plaintiffs propose “an electronic circuit that controls the interpretation and execution of programmed instructions.”
The defendants propose “the central electronic circuit in a computer that controls the interpretation and execution of programmed instructions.”
The Court construes the term to mean “an electronic circuit on an integrated circuit that controls the interpretation and execution of programmed instructions.”
b. “microprocessor” – Appears to lean towards Matsushita
The plaintiffs propose “an electronic circuit that executes programmed instructions and is capable of interfacing with input/output circuitry and/or memory circuitry.” The defendants propose “an electronic circuit that uses a central processing unit to interpret and execute programmed instructions.” The main disputes are whether the microprocessor must be capable of interfacing with input/output circuitry and/or memory circuitry, and whether the microprocessor needs to use a central processing unit.
The Court is not persuaded that the additional limitations proposed by the plaintiffs or the defendants are appropriate. The input/output interface and the central processing unit limitations are included in other portions of the claims and, therefore, adding those limitations to the construction would be superfluous. See, e.g., ‘336 patent, 32:12-13, 25-26. The Court construes “microprocessor” to mean “an electronic circuit that interprets and executes programmed instructions.”
c. “ring oscillator” – TPL Win
The plaintiffs contend that this term means “an oscillator having a multiple, odd number of inversions arranged in a loop.” The defendants propose “an [oscillator] having an odd number of inverting logic stages connected in a loop.” The main dispute is whether a ring oscillator is required to have multiple inverters or whether it can have just one. The plaintiffs argue that a single inverter would not be appropriate because it could not maintain an oscillating output. The defendants, on the other hand, rely on extrinsic evidence to support their proposed construction. Specifically, the defendants cite to a semiconductor textbook depicting a ring oscillator with only one inverter.
The plaintiffs have the better argument. The extrinsic evidence cited by the defendants also supports the plaintiffs’ construction. It states that timers are built as “chains of inverters,” not just one inverter. Defendants’ Claim Construction Brief, Ex. U, MEAD & CONWAY, INTRODUCTION TO VLSI SYSTEMS (1980), at 234. Accordingly, the Court adopts the plaintiffs’ proposed construction.
d. “an entire ring oscillator variable speed system clock in said integrated circuit” – Matsushita Win
The plaintiffs argue that this term means “a ring oscillator that generates the signal(s) used for timing the operation of the CPU, capable of operating at speeds that can change, where the ring oscillator is located entirely on the same semiconductor substrate as the CPU.” The defendants’ proposed construction is “a [ring oscillator variable speed system clock] that is completely on-chip and does not rely on a control signal or an external crystal/clock generator.” The dispute is whether the ring oscillator may rely on a control signal or an external crystal/clock generator.
In support of their construction, the defendants argue that the applicant disclaimed use of a control signal and a external crystal/clock generator in order to distinguish over prior art. The plaintiffs contend that it did not disclaim all types of control signals, such as voltage and current controlled oscillators; there was only a disclaimer of the more narrow “command input.” In addition, the plaintiffs argue that, although an external crystal is not directly used to generate a system clock signal, the external crystal can be used as a reference signal to account for delay across certain circuit elements.
The Court agrees with the defendants that the applicant disclaimed the use of an input control signal and an external crystal/clock generator to generate a clock signal. See Response to Office Action, April 11, 1996, at 8; Response to Office Action, January 13, 1997, at 4; Response to Office Action, July 7, 1997, at 3-4. Accordingly, the Court construes the term to mean “a ring oscillator variable speed system clock that is located entirely on the same semiconductor substrate as the CPU and does not directly rely on a command input control signal or an external crystal/clock generator to generate a clock signal.”
e. “variable speed” – Unclear to me who wins here
The plaintiffs’ proposed construction is “capable of operating at speeds that can change.” The defendants argue that the term means “a speed (frequency) that is not tightly controlled and varies more than minimally.”
The plaintiffs contend that the specification discloses a ring oscillator that is capable of operating at various speeds based on variations in operating conditions. ‘336 patent, 16:59-63. The plaintiffs also argue that the defendants’ proposed construction is too restrictive. The defendants, on the other hand, point to the prosecution where the applicant describes fixed-frequency as a speed that is “tightly controlled” and “var[ies] minimally.” Amendment, July 7, 1997, at 3-4. According
1 The parties appear to agree that these two terms should have the same construction.
to the defendants, “variable speed” is the opposite of fixed-frequency.
Notwithstanding the defendants’ arguments, one of ordinary skill in the art would understand “variable speed” to describe a component capable of operating at different speeds. Accordingly, the Court construes the term to mean “capable of operating at different speeds.”
f. “system clock” and “variable speed clock”1 – TPL Win
The plaintiffs propose “a circuit that generates the signal(s) used for timing the operation of the CPU.” The defendants contend that the term means “a circuit that is itself responsible for determining the frequency of the signal(s) used for timing the operation of the CPU.” The dispute is whether the circuit alone is responsible for determining the frequency of the signal.
A system clock does not generate the signal alone because the timing can be derived from the ring oscillator. ‘336 patent, 16:63-67. Accordingly, the Court adopts the plaintiffs’ proposed construction.
g. “oscillator . . . clocking” – Appears to be TPL win
The plaintiffs contend that no construction is necessary, but if a construction is required, they propose “the oscillator generates the signal(s) used for timing the operation of the CPU.” The defendants propose “an oscillator that is itself determining the frequency of the signal(s) used for timing.”
The Court agrees that the term requires construction. The Court construes the term to mean “an oscillator that generates the signal(s) used for timing the operation of the CPU.”
h. “processing frequency”
The plaintiffs propose “the speed at which the CPU operates.” The defendants propose “fastest safe operating speed.” The issue is whether the term refers to the “fastest safe operating speed.”
Accordingly, the Court adopts the plaintiffs’ proposed construction.
i. “processing frequency capability” – TPL Win
The plaintiffs propose “the range of speeds at which the CPU can operate.” The defendants propose “fastest safe operating speed at which the CPU can operate.”
As discussed in the previous section, “processing frequency” is not limited to the “fastest safe operating speed.” In addition, “capability” is not limited to a range or to the fastest speed.
Accordingly, the Court construes the term to mean “the speeds at which the CPU can operate.”
j. “varying together”2 – Unclear to me who the winner is
The plaintiffs contend that the term means “both increase or both decrease.” The defendants’ proposed construction is “increasing and decreasing by the same amount.” The dispute is whether this term is limited to “the same amount.” The defendants claim that the only way for the invention to work is to match the clock speed to the CPU’s processing speed capability
There is no limitation in the intrinsic evidence requiring the variation between the frequency capability and the clock to match exactly. The Court construes the term to mean “increasing and decreasing proportionally.”
k. “second clock” – PUSH/DRAW
The plaintiffs’ proposed construction is “a clock not derived from the first clock.” The defendants contend that no construction is necessary, but if construction is necessary, then they propose “another clock.” The plaintiffs argue that the claims state that the second clock is independent of the first clock. According to the plaintiffs, a second clock derived from the first clock would not be independent as required by the claims.
The defendants appear to agree that the first clock is independent of the second clock. In any event, the independence of the second clock is required by the claim language. Accordingly, the Court declines to construe this term.
l. “external clock” – Matsushita win
The plaintiffs propose “a clock not derived from the first clock, and which is not originated on the same semiconductor substrate upon which the entire variable speed clock is located.” The defendants contend that no construction is necessary, but if a construction is necessary, then they propose “a clock not on the integrated circuit substrate.”
As discussed previously, the defendants appear to agree that, like the second clock, the external clock is independent of the first clock. The plaintiffs’ proposed construction includes limitations already in the claims. The Court construes “external clock” to mean “a clock not on the integrated circuit substrate.”
m. “second clock independent of said ring oscillator . . . system clock” and “second clock independent of the ring oscillator system clock” – Matsushita win
The plaintiffs propose “a change in the frequency of the ring oscillator does not affect the frequency of the second clock.” The defendants propose “a second clock wherein a change in the frequency of one of the second clock or the ring oscillator system clock does not affect the frequency of the other.” The dispute is whether the term “independent” means “one-way independence” or “two-way independence.”
The defendants have the better argument. One of ordinary skill in the art would understand the term “independence” to mean “two-way independence.” Accordingly, the Court construes the term to mean “a second clock wherein a change in the frequency of either the second clock or ring oscillator system clock does not affect the frequency of the other.”
n. “external clock is operative at a frequency independent of a clock frequency of said oscillator” – Matsushita Win
The plaintiffs propose “a change in the frequency of the oscillator (claims 6-9) or the variable speed clock (claim 10) does not affect the frequency of the external clock.” The defendants propose “an external clock wherein a change in the frequency of one of the external clock or oscillator does not affect the frequency of the other (claim 6).”
The Court construes the term to mean “an external clock wherein a change in the frequency of either the external clock or oscillator does not affect the frequency of the other.”
o. “fixed frequency” – PUSH/DRAW
The plaintiffs contend that no construction is necessary, but if the court determines that a construction is needed, then they propose “a non-variable frequency.” The defendants propose “having a speed that is tightly controlled and varies minimally.” This term is not a technical term and can be understood according to its plain and ordinary meaning. Accordingly, the Court declines to construe this term.
http://www.tplgroup.net/ruling/index.php