USPTO Pilots Program to Accelerate the Patent Process for Small Entity Inventors, USPTO Press Release, 09-26

Backlog Reduction for Small Entity Inventors Pilot Will Allow Small Entities to Gain Advancement for a Pending Application In Exchange for Abandoning Another Application.

Now isn’t this interesting. If a small inventor (presumably this means someone who can legitimately click “SMALL ENTITY” on the patent application forms) abandons one application, they can get another application moved up in the system.

I’m not quite sure how abandoning one invention in favor of another protects an inventor, but it’s certainly an option worth discussing with your patent attorney. It’ll save you the cost of a double patent prosecution, if nothing else, but it doesn’t sound like it will protect the abandoned invention at all, so I intend to advise my clients to consider this very carefully before proceeding.

The USPTO is always trying to come up with ways to diminish their backlog of patent applications that await first office actions. Certainly getting an inventor to abandon an application would do that, but at what cost to the inventor?

Clearly, this option is not for everyone. Maybe for some, yes, but not for everyone.

The other thing they’re doing may work better for the reduction of the backlog in the long run: they’ve got a hiring frenzy going on right now. They’re looking for warm bodies to throw at the backlog (not always a good thing, but not always a bad thing, either). If you have any sort of technical expertise at all, and you like the idea of living in the DC/northern Virginia area, visit their website at www.uspto.gov to apply for the position of Patent Examiner. They have many open slots.

2008 National Medal of Technology and Innovation Awardees Announced

Click here for the story …

“The 2008 National Medal of Technology and Innovation winners are:

•Dr. Forrest M. Bird for his pioneering work in the field of respiratory and cardiopulmonary care including the revolutionary BABYBird®. This device dramatically reduced the infant respiratory failure mortality rate from approximately 70 percent to 10 percent. His more recent medical invention of Intrapulmonary Percussive Ventilation (IPV) ® concepts have reduced pulmonary failure in the most critically injured military and civilian burn patients from about 75 percent to 5 percent. Dr. Bird’s innovations have saved millions of lives.

•Dr. Esther S. Takeuchi for the development of the silver vanadium oxide battery technology which powers the majority of today’s implantable cardiac defibrillators and innovations related to other enabling medical battery technologies that power implantable pacemakers, implantable neurostimulators and left ventricular assist devices. Dr. Takeuchi’s innovations have saved and dramatically improved the quality of hundreds of thousands of human lives.

•Dr. John E. Warnock and Dr. Charles M. Geschke for their pioneering contributions that spurred the desktop publishing revolution and for changing the way people create and engage with information and entertainment across multiple mediums including print, Web and video.

•International Business Machines Corporation for the IBM Blue Gene supercomputer, which re-established United States leadership in high performance computing. Blue Gene’s systems architecture, design and software have delivered fundamental new science, unsurpassed speed and unparalleled energy efficiency, which have had a profound impact on the worldwide high-performance computing industry.”

On a personal note, Dr. Bird’s invention, taken to a new level, saved my daughter’s life about five years ago, so I’m delighted he won this prestigious award. Congratulations are due all around, so congratulations to the 2008 National Medal of Technology and Innovation!