4 Years
First and foremost, today is Travis's birthday. My oldest little guy is 4 years old today. Seriously...4 years. Just like that. I'm amazed it's already been that long and though it's cliched to say, it's stunning how quickly time passes. We were just at the hospital, feeding the little cone-headed dude. Like it was yesterday.
But alas, we celebrated his time in style. We had a handful of our closest friends and family over on Saturday and just did a simple little party. Considering how exhausted both Laura and I are with the arrival of Jake, it was the best we could do.
I think he had fun, though.
So, it's kind of weird to have a party and then 4 days later, it's your real birthday. Of course, I had to work and Laura is still at home with Big Jake on maternity leave. Travis got to spend the day with my folks in good ol' St. Anthony. They did all sorts of fun crap together:
- Went to the Eagle's Nest (indoor park)
- Made Valentine's Day cookies
- Got to eat lots of French Toast (my mom makes KILLER French Toast, y'all)
While at work, I was struck with the idea that I had to get Travis something else for his birthday. We got him a bunch of stuff for his party on Saturday, but something just didn't sit right, you know? TODAY is his birthday and though he never asked or expected anything, I had to get him a little something else.
When I went looking around, I saw the PERFECT thing.
Let me set it up a little. I'm a big fan of the movie A Christmas Story and I love the part where the dad tricks the kid and says: "Hey, what's that back there?" knowing full well it's the bb gun Ralphie wanted.
I did it at Christmas with Rock Band 2 and I couldn't resist repeating the magic. Wecovertly wrapped the thing (well, Laura did...I suck at wrapping gifts) and we put it where the pile of presents were stacked during his party back on Saturday.
After he came out of the kitchen when he was done eating, he saw the present lying there. I said: "Dude. Did you forget to open a present on Saturday?"
The rest is, as they say, history.
Okay, so the audio is horrible, but it cracks me up. The kid does not fall for my shenanigans. When I tell him it's probably for some other kid, he points out that his name was on the card. When I get all smart-mouth on his and tell him that we can't play with it and we need to keep it in the box, he just sees right through my ruse.

And I wonder why people call him Mini-TKT.
4 WeeksAs if seeing Travis turn 4 wasn't enough, today also marks the 4 week mark for Big Jake. On Valentine's Day, it'll be one whole month.
V Day
Thankfully, Laura and I get to spend some time together on Saturday as my folks are taking both of the boys for the night. We had big plans...
"Let's go see a movie!""Yeah, and then we'll go out to dinner!""It'll be awesome!"The reality? We will probably do something uber mellow like go to Boston's, eat and come home and go to sleep. Eh...maybe we'll watch a little 24 and try desperately to get caught up. Might sound sort of lame, but we're looking forward to it like a kid anticipates Christmas morning.
"Let's stay home and get some sleep!"It'll be awesome.
Mark Simon Davies is a counsel at O’Melveny & Myers LLP, where he works on appellate matters in one of the top Supreme Court and Appellate practices in the country. Davies is the author of Patent Appeals: The Elements of Effective Advocacy in the Federal Circuit.
Yesterday, the Supreme Court issued another significant opinion in patent law. In a unanimous opinion authored by Justice Thomas, the Court held that a patent owner who licenses the sale of components has “exhausted” patent rights even where the components must be combined with additional components to practice the patent. In so deciding, the Court reasoned that the exhaustion doctrine applies to sales of products that include only the “inventive aspect” of the patent. This unanticipated focus of the Court’s decision reflects the Court’s apparent continuing interest in refocusing patent law on protecting the “inventive” contribution.
The question before the Court was whether the patent rights of LG Electronics, Inc. were “exhausted” by its
license agreement with Intel Corporation. Under the exhaustion (or first sale) doctrine, “the initial authorized sale of a patented item terminates all patent rights to that item.” Here, LGE owns patents covering various methods of managing main computer memory. LGE licensed Intel to manufacture and sell microprocessors and chipsets that practice the LGE patents. Intel sold the parts to Quanta Computer, a group of computer manufacturers, who made computers using the LGE/Intel microprocessors and chipsets in combination with non-LGE/Intel computer parts. LGE filed a complaint against Quanta, asserting that the combination of the LGE/Intel products with other computer parts infringed its patents. Quanta defended on the ground that LGE’s license to Intel “exhausted” and thus terminated its patent rights.
In siding with Quanta to find that LGE had exhausted its patent rights, the Supreme Court’s opinion proceeds in three steps. The Court begins by rejecting LGE’s argument that the exhaustion doctrine does not apply to “method” claims (i.e., claims that are not linked to a tangible article). The Court was wary that “[e]liminating exhaustion for method patents would seriously undermine the exhaustion doctrine” because patentees “could simply draft their patent claims to describe a method rather than an apparatus.” Next, the Court considered the “extent to which a product must embody a patent in order to trigger exhaustion.” On that question, the Court found that United States v. Univis Lens Co., 316 U.S. 241 (1942), “governs this case.” Just as the product in Univis “embodie[d] essential features of [the] patented invention,” so too Intel’s products embody “[e]verything inventive about each patent” and thus triggered patent exhaustion. “The Intel Products embody the essential features of the LGE Patents because they carry out all the inventive processes when combined, according to their design, with standard components.” Last, the Court determined that LGE’s contract with Intel “authorized” the sale of the products that practiced LGE’s patents (“Intel’s authority to sell its products embodying the LGE Patents was not conditioned on the notice”), and the Court expressed “no opinion on whether contract damages might be available even though exhaustion operates to eliminate patent damages.”
In various procedural respects, today’s decision resembles the Supreme Court’s patent law decisions of the past few terms. As it did most prominently in KSR Intn’l v. Teleflex Inc., 127 S. Ct. 1727 (2007), the Court has once again unanimously reversed a lower court decision based on a long-settled Federal Circuit rule favoring patent owners. As the briefing before the Court had emphasized, the Federal Circuit’s decision in Mallinckrodt, Inc. v. Medipart, Inc., 976 F.2d 700 (Fed. Cir. 1992), held that the patent-exhaustion doctrine does not apply to an “expressly conditional sale.” As in KSR, the Supreme Court declined to endorse the Federal Circuit’s “conditional sale” test. Instead, the Supreme Court again emphasized the abiding relevance of its older patent law decisions. Thus, here the Court found that Univis “governs this case” much like the KSR Court found that Graham v. John Deere Co. of Kansas City, 383 U.S. 1 (1966), provides the current “framework” for whether a claimed invention is “obvious.” Unlike KSR, however, the Court did not directly fault the Federal Circuit for a “rigid rule” (or even specifically refer to Mallinckrodt).
As is often the case with Supreme Court opinions, the immediate practical consequences of today’s decision may well be limited. The Court’s ruling that the sale here was not in fact conditional arguably leaves parties free to argue that the Federal Circuit’s “conditional sale” bar on exhaustion remains the law. Moreover, the Court expressly declined to consider whether LGE could use contract law to achieve its apparent objective of requiring its patent devices only to be used in computers manufactured with LGE parts.
Nevertheless, today’s Quanta decision provides a strong indication that the Supreme Court intends to continue restricting the enforceable scope of patents. The Solicitor General recommended that the Court hear Quanta. But the Supreme Court went beyond the Solicitor General’s request. Rejecting the advice of the Solicitor General not to reach the question, the Court relied on Univis to hold that the exhaustion doctrine applies to a product that embodies “[e]verything inventive” about the patent even if further “common and noninventive” steps are necessary to practice the patented invention. In this respect, Quanta is in close step with KSR. KSR closed by emphasizing that “the results of ordinary innovation are not the subject of exclusive rights under the patent laws.” So too in Quanta, the Court explained that a patent owner could not avoid the impact of the patent exhaustion doctrine merely because the patent includes “common” steps. In both cases, the Court has refocused patent law on protecting the “inventive aspect” of a patented invention.
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YAHOOOOOOOO!
We really hope everyone has fully recovered from New Year’s Eve, because it’s time to break out another bottle of bubbly!!!
Yes, it’s time to lift our glasses, toast to the very first Class of 2k8 author,
LIZ GALLAGHER!! Liz is a former children’s bookseller and early education teacher. She received her MFA in writing for children from Vermont College and lives in Seattle (if you want to more about Liz--including the story of how this witch costumed inspired her book--come back tomorrow for her author interview).
Or stop by on Wednesday, for the Liz Gallagher tour of Fremont, Washington. Or on Thursday or Friday for other top-secret Liz-related fun.
Why all the fuss?
Because today Liz is stepping over the threshold, taking the plunge, (and mixing just about every other metaphor you can think up) as she becomes an AUTHOR.
A real live author.
For everyone out there who isn’t an unpublished author, let us take a moment to say that this is HUGE. This is the day Liz has dreamed of for years and years. It's like having a baby, making a million dollars, waking up to find herself a movie star. Just imagine what it would feel like to find your childhood dreams had come true.
Just like that.
Her book will be shelved in libraries everyone, beloved by teenagers all across the country. And so it seems only appropriate that we find some way to create a fuss.
So... without further ado... YAY! HURRAH! WOOOOOO HOOOOO!
It's time you ran out and got yourself a copy of her awesome book, The Opposite of Invisible!
It looks like this:
Hot, right?
It's really really good. You want the official scoop?
Alice and Jewel have been best friends since grade school. Together, they don’t need anyone else, and together they blend into the background of high school. Invisible. To Alice, Jewel is the opposite of invisible. Jewel is her best friend who goes to Indie concerts and art shows with her. Jewel scoffs at school dances with her. Alice is so comfortable around Jewel that she can talk to him about almost anything. But she can’t tell him that she likes the cool, popular Simon. And then Simon asks her to the school dance the same day that Jewel kisses her for the first time. Still, she can’t say no to Simon. He seems like the easy choice, the one she’s attracted to, the one she’s ready for. But will it mean losing Jewel? In a bright debut novel set against the lively backdrop of Seattle, Alice must learn the difference between love and a crush, and what it means to be yourself when you’re not sure who that is yet.
Now you'll have to read it. How could you not run out and get one right now?
Or, if you're too lazy to run you can order the book
here!And if you want to meet her in person, you can catch her Friday, January 12, at 1 pm, at the Chester County Book Company, in West Chester PA.
Now, show Liz some serious love, folks! She's an author now. She's all growed up! Leave a comment in the box, and let her know how proud you are of her.
That way, when she's uber famous, you'll have proof you knew her when.
HAPPY BIRTHDAY, TRAVIS.
Great idea to do the Christmas Story gift giving thing, TKT. Happy Birthday to both young Troupes!
HAPPY BELATED BIRTHDAY, TRAVIS!
And Jake is no longer four weeks! He's even older now! Time flies.
I have been thinking of you and yours during my revision-related internet blackout. It looks like things are good, if not hectic, & I'm glad to read that. :)
The video was adorbs!