Sunday, March 1, 2015

Patent and Patent Applications Personal Response


For this post, I will be discussing the below patent in terms of their obviousness and anticipation.  My previous post discusses these patents in detail, and can be used to reference specific logistics. 

US 6343735 B1 Insulating sleeve

US 2661889 A  Thermal coffee cup

US 8,251,277 B1 Thermal Sleeve, Method for Manufacturing a thermal sleeve and combination cup container
US 7,922,031 B1  Insulator sleeve for a beverage container
US 8118189 B1  Temperature-indicating sleeve and related container
US 6152363 Sleeve construction for improved paperboard cup insulation

US 20080078824 A1 Beverage cup sleeving system and method

US 20100019023 A1  Protective sleeve

US 20140151385 A1 Hot and Cold Cup Sleeve

In terms of obviousness, these patents seem to be repetitive and very obvious in some cases; however, each patent has a specific feature that makes it novel to the rest.  For instance, the thermal coffee cup was proprietary by its description of the cap’s mechanism, though still referencing prior art.  The temperature-indicating sleeve built upon a previous sleeve but added a component that had yet to be introduced.  The patent dealing with sleeve construction for improved insulation displayed tangible improvements to the air gaps therefore improving the product as a whole.  Each one of these patents was approved because they were novel and useful; so although they overlap and seem identical, they expand on previous inventions that make it proprietary. 

In terms of anticipation, the ones that stick out the most to me are the temperature-indicating sleeve and the hot and cold cup sleeve.  In general, the patents seemed to be very basic and dealing with slide modifications to increase functionality.  Prior patents in particular most likely anticipated these two patents, because a hot and cold sleeve would bring a multi-use product that can save related businesses money.  The temperature-indicating sleeve must have had anticipation because a key property of the sleeve is dealing with temperature-induced discomfort.  In my opinion, it would only make sense to have an indicator that would protect your mouth from the same heat that would be painful to the hand.   



6 comments:

  1. Hey Matthew,
    I appreciate that you split the blog into obviousness and anticipations allowing the reader to be clear as to what part of the patent you were referring to. I liked your idea of having an indicator to protect yourself from scalding and burns. Nice Work

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  2. Hey Matt! This is a great post. Thank you! I learned a lot about the 9 different patents from your blog post. I especially like how you showed the 9 patents first of what you will go over, and then further dove into analyzing them into paragraphs. Great post!

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    1. I like that you noticed the organizational aspects, it made me want to keep my thoughts succinct and organized this week.

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    2. He Won,

      Great comment! noting not only the content, but the layout as well. It is great that Matt agreed as well and appreciated your feedback! My only suggestion could be to add some more specifics about the content that you liked or disliked. But apart from that, good work!

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  3. Hi, I liked your explanation of anticipation and obviousness! Really good and detailed explanations. I also talked about the temperature indicating sleeve, which I think is definitely one of the more novel patents out of all of these.

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    Replies
    1. Very positive feedback! I like how you pointed out what you liked particularly about the post. It would be good to give suggestions too.

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