T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2812.1 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Fri Dec 03 1993 14:59 | 5 |
| Patents are not generally awarded for features but for implementation
of features. I would assume that it is specific algorithms that are
patented not the features themselves.
Alfred
|
2812.2 | | TUXEDO::WRAY | John Wray, Distributed Processing Engineering | Fri Dec 03 1993 15:04 | 18 |
| For something to be patentable it has to be:
i) Useful
ii) Not obvious to someone who knows the field
iii) Demonstrable
One of the problems with the way patents (especially software patents)
are currently issued is that someone who isn't familiar with the field
(ie the US patents office) has to make a judgement call on (ii) above.
You _are_ allowed to build on prior work, in which case the patent
should be on the "improvements" over the previous design, not the whole
thing. Part of the application process should be to identify such
"prior art" (ie previously published material on related issues).
John
|
2812.3 | patent disclosures and patent claims | WRKSYS::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Fri Dec 03 1993 16:02 | 25 |
| In my experience, the patent examiner does a key word search on
existing patents, and if something looks similar to what you've
done, rejects your patent. It's up to you to prove that the
patent examiner doesn't have a clue. If you can't do that (or
if there really is relevant prior art), then you have to reword
your patent claims to limit yourself to something that is
distinguishable from the earlier patents.
Anyway, this leads to a couple of results. First, it leads to
incredibly impressive patent disclosures that are linked with
extremely narrow claims. Second, it leads to patents that are
(or at least seem) carefully designed to not look like anything
that went before, even though the ideas really aren't especially
new or even very well thought out. I've read a couple of patent
disclosures that look like they were developed from cocktail napkins
somebody picked up after some engineers had a party.
Anyway, the fact that we have three patents on volume shadowing, or
even the text of the disclosures, tells nothing about what we
really got patent protection on. Only the claims tell us that,.
Did I mention that claims are written in a special language of
their own? Hard to understand, even if you wrote the disclosure!
Enjoy,
Larry
|
2812.4 | LIVEWIRE article for the record | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Tue Dec 07 1993 13:35 | 40 |
| Worldwide News LIVE WIRE
Digital awarded three patents for Volume Shadowing technology
Digital today announced that it has been awarded three U.S.
patents for technology that provides customers with very high levels
of data availability in open client/server and time-share environments.
The patented technology is key to providing the level of data availability
and recovery performance needed by customers in business-critical
environments.
The three patents (U.S. Patent Nos. 5,210,865, 5,239,637 and
5,247,618) cover specific algorithms and techniques that ensure data
availability and data consistency while maximizing I/O performance
in the event of system disruption or the replacement of a disk. The
patents are for Volume Shadowing, which offers Digital customers a
proven implementation of RAID technology for the OpenVMS Alpha AXP
and VAX platforms.
Under the patented technology, when a disk is replaced or added
to a shadow set, application access to data and copy operations
occur concurrently but with no extra synchronization. Copy operations
can transparently utilize disk controllers to make a new shadow set
member identical to other members, as quickly and efficiently as possible.
Use of host system resources is also minimized.
A merge algorithm is also covered under the patents. If data
is being written to disk at the time a system disruption occurs, the
merge operations algorithm ensures that all shadow set members are
consistent. During merge operations, data remains accessible with
maximum application I/O performance.
The technology under U.S. patent #5,210,865 and #5,247,618 has
been issued in Australia; that under U.S. patent #5,239,637 has been
issued in Australia and Taiwan. Patents are pending in other countries.
"The patents highlight the world-class proven functionality
that the OpenVMS operating system brings to open client/server
computing," said Don Harbert, vice president of Operating Systems
Engineering. "As customers implement business-critical open client/
server applications they need the combination of functionality, price/
performance leadership, and support for multivendor computing and open
standards that the OpenVMS operating system provides."
Volume Shadowing is currently available for OpenVMS VAX and
OpenVMS AXP systems.
|
2812.5 | Shadowing patents | LJSRV1::DAVIS | Scott H. Davis - Windows NT Clusters | Fri Dec 10 1993 18:55 | 40 |
| Someone pointed me at this discussion. I was the project leader/architect of
Volume Shadowing and a co-inventor on all 3 claims.
(As well as other claims pending in the area of raid). For those really
interested in the
gory details, these patents are for techniques
described in the
Digital Technical Journal article I did on Shadowing's design in the summer 91
issue.
The first 2 patents are not on the concept of Merge and full copy operations.
They are for the unique algorithms we designed that allow
simultaneous updates by shadowing software (merge and copy threads) and
application access thru all normal VMS mechanisms to the virtual unit with no
extra synchronization and which guarantees the correctness of both. This is a
hard problem, especially when clustering is factored in, and the solutions
meets the novel and unique criteria.
The third patent is for the mini-merge technology. This is combined shadowing
and storage controller technology that "piggy-backs" log and log control
information on WRITE commands. The controllers utilize internal memory to
store these logs under host control. This combination allows merge operations
to take seconds instead of hours with no extra steady state I/O operations. It
is state of the art in the industry, especially when coupled with a distributed
host based shadowing implementation. Other implementations in the industry
either 1) ignore the merge problem, 2) perform full merges across the whole disk
or 3) incur extra writes to ondisk data structures during steady state.
There is a fourth patent pending on the combined shadowing/controller technology
for direct disk to disk transfers for shadow copies, also with no extra
sybnchronization and correctness semantics.
Lastly, patents are written with many claims. The initial claims are very broad
and then narrow as you go on in the application. This is so that if a broad
claim is
invalidated in court, the narrower claims can still be valid. So, for example,
the disk to disk copy patent starts out broadly claiming device to device
techniques and later claims narrow it to disks, and still later claims narrow it
to shadowing.
Scott
|
2812.6 | Congratulations for a job well done | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT, Unix a future page from history | Sat Dec 11 1993 12:41 | 11 |
| Re .-1
Congratulations on being awarded these patents. I think it is a shame
that the LIVEWIRE people didn't include your name in the article. I
think it is important to give credit where credit is due.
I guess your personal name gives broad hints as to where your next set
of patents will be coming from. I hope NT clusters are as successful as
VMS clusters were in the 80s.
Dave
|
2812.7 | | BSS::CODE3::BANKS | Not in SYNC -> SUNK | Mon Dec 13 1993 15:44 | 16 |
| Re:<<< Note 2812.5 by LJSRV1::DAVIS "Scott H. Davis - Windows NT Clusters" >>>
>The first 2 patents are not on the concept of Merge and full copy operations.
>They are for the unique algorithms we designed...
> ...and the solutions
>meets the novel and unique criteria.
Thanks for the clarification, Scott (I was the one who asked the question in
the basenote). Having only once been involved in a patent filing back in the
late 70's I wasn't fully aware of what's required today. And back when I wrote
software, patenting any of it was not a possibility... :-) :-)
I'll look forward to reading "the gory details" and must add my congratulations
on your accomplishments.
- David
|
2812.8 | | LJSRV1::DAVIS | Scott H. Davis - Windows NT Clusters | Fri Dec 17 1993 20:10 | 17 |
| Thanks for the congratulations. I and my other partners in crime were also
disappointed that our names were not mentioned. It isn't everyday that patents
are awarded... :-( Sigh...
The other inventors, in addition to myself, on all the Shadowing patents are:
Bill Goleman
Dave Thiel
And on the 2 patents with storage controller functionality (one granted, one
pending) add:
Bob Bean
Jim Zahrobsky
|