New PDF based Electronic Filing System

The USPTO’s pdf based Electronic Filing System (EFS-Web) will go live on March 17. EFS-Web promises to greatly simplify and streamline the filing of patent applications, enabling applicants to file documents as pdf files twenty-four hours a day.

Links: EFS-Web help.

Posted: 2/22/2006 in:

USPTO To Hold Live On-Line Chat for Independent Inventors

Senior officials of the United States Patent and Trademark Office will be available live on-line on Wednesday, February 22, from 2 to 3 pm (ET). They will be answering questions and offering tips for independent inventors. Instructions for taking part in the on-line chat will be posted on the home page of the USPTO website at 10:30 am (ET) on Wednesday. Inventors can begin logging on at 1:30 pm.

Links: transcripts and index from previous on-line chats.

USPTO Issues Seven Millionth Patent

It took 75 years to get from patent No.1 to patent 1 million. It has taken less than one tenth of that time to go from 6 million to 7 million patents.

* Patent No. 1 was issued in 1836. Earlier patents were not numbered, although the first U.S. patent was issued in 1790. Approximately 10,000 patents were issued between 1790 and 1836.

* Patent No. 1 million was issued on August 8, 1911, for a tubeless vehicle tire.

* Twenty-four years later, on April 30, 1935, patent No. 2 million issued for a vehicle wheel to increase the safety and longevity of pneumatic tires.

* Patent No. 3 million issued 26 years later on September 12, 1961, to an inventor at the General Electric Co., for an automated system that translated letters, numbers and symbols to data processing code.

* Patent No. 4 million issued 15 years later on December 28, 1976 for a process for recycling asphalt aggregate compositions.

* Fifteen years later, on March 19, 1991, Patent No. 5 million issued to a University of Florida inventor, for a more efficient way to produce fuel ethanol.

* Only eight years later, patent No. 6 million issued on December 7, 1999, to 3Com Corporation’s Palm Computing for its HotSync technology.

* And now just a little more than six years later, patent No. 7 million issues to DuPont researcher John P. O’Brien for “polysaccharide fibers” and a process for their production.

Link: USPTO Press Release.

Posted: 2/15/2006 in: