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patent_law
gregh 2007-10-12 16:29 classes Law_School outlines patent_law
Someone came by here via the above Google search. Twice, in fact. It probably took a while to figure out why, because the page it serves up from me is not very useful. Let me just say this, though. I definitely recommend an outline, even though it was, for us, a 7-day take home. Why? Well, I didn't make an outline. I figured with all of my notes (marked up versions of the class notes he gave us for each class), my casebook, and my Schechter mini-treatise (which was a lifesaver) that the exam wouldn't be a problem. Oh, was I wrong. With each of the 25 multiple choice questions averaging around 30 minutes to "confidently" answer, I was already way beyond the 7-hour estimate he gave in class. But I still had three essay questions to respond to. I still did alright, if not great, but man... An ounce of prevention would have been great.
gregh 2007-01-24 11:50 final_exams Law_School patent_law waiting_for_grades
Patent Law grade came today. It's a satisfactory grade (my sister Emily will say my expectations/stanndards are too high.) On the plus side, my GPA climbed just a touch bit higher, which should keep me in the top 15%. On the downside, it didn't climb enough to bump me into the top 10% or to comfortably keep me in the top 15% at the end of 2008. One issue with this exam, of course, is that it was a week-long take-home. I got a little complacent and did little to no prep before getting it. That meant that while I put a huge amount of time into it, it was pretty inefficient time, because I was reviewing the material at the same time. That's certainly a pattern I will have to avoid in the future. The other problem, of course, is that I was doing that on a shortened schedule. I had to pick up the exam on Wednesday, December 6. My Evidence exam was on Saturday, December 9. I didn't start looking at Patent Law until around 5 PM on December 9, with the exam to be turned in on December 13. I didn't start working on it in earnest until after I got moving on Sunday, December 10, after my Evidence final hangover. In short, I didn't play it well. I think I'll accept the grade. Pass and move on, as Stan likes to say.
gregh 2006-11-28 13:10 ayc KSR_v._Teleflex Law_School patent_law Supreme_Court
People have been hot and heavy talking about the KSR oral arguments today. It's a big case, because the Supreme Court may determine whether the Federal Circuit has been too generous in its determination of the obviousness requirement. However, I was perusing the transcript, when I came across this bit that reminded me, again, of my complaints from the AYC competition this year. So, here, from pages 15-17 of the transcript of today's oral arguments, we have counsel not answering a question because it's not at issue, explaining why it's not relevant to the discussion. MR. DABNEY: ... But we are not here talking about the patentability of the figures of the patent. We are not talking about the patentability of claims 1, 2 or 3 of the patent; we are talking about claim 4 in which these respondents got a little greedy. Claim 4 describes almost nothing - |
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