Some Xfinity wifi hotspots now available to all for free

It is fascinating to see the various things that companies and organizations are doing in the face of the Covid-19 problems. As one example, my firm’s favorite voice-over-IP telephone company, VOIP.MS, has expanded its tech support hours to 24 by 7 (blog article). And now Comcast says it has reconfigured some of its Xfinity wifi hotspots so that they are available to everyone for free. Continue reading “Some Xfinity wifi hotspots now available to all for free”

Requesting EUIPO to join the WIPO DAS system

Would you like it if EUIPO were to become a participating Office in the WIPO Digital Access Service (DAS) system?

For example, suppose you have obtained a Registered Community Design (RCD) in the EUIPO, and now you wish to file a US design patent application claiming priority from that RCD.  To perfect the priority claim at the USPTO, you need to somehow obtain a certified copy of the RCD application and you need to file it at the USPTO.  It is not easy to obtain a paper certified copy of the RCD application.  If only EUIPO were to become a participating Office in the DAS system, then you could easily use DAS as the way to get a certified copy from EUIPO to USPTO.

Here is your opportunity to join others in a request to EUIPO that it join the DAS system.  A letter will get sent to the EUIPO asking it to join the DAS system.  If you wish, you can become a signer of that letter.  To read the letter and to see how to sign, click here.

A long and rambling story about learning to write

What follows is a reminiscence about how I learned to write.  Be advised that this blog article rambles.  Set this article aside for some time when you are having trouble getting to sleep. 

The main point of the article, I suppose, is that in general we take too long to think of saying “thank you” to those teachers and mentors who invested in us.  And if so, then the only thing we can really do is try to pay it forward and try to be good teachers and mentors for those who come after us. Continue reading “A long and rambling story about learning to write”

Putting your office telephone extension onto your smart phone

In our firm’s work-from-home setup, everything is Voice over IP (VOIP).  This means it is super easy to make it so that a work-from-home employee can have a phone on their desk at home that works exactly like the phone on their desk in the office (blog article).  But what is very interesting to think about is that if you have a VOIP telephone system, any employee who wants it can also have his or her office phone extension operating on his or her smart phone.  Continue reading “Putting your office telephone extension onto your smart phone”

Busy lamp fields

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Before we migrated to our work-from-home arrangement, most people in our office had fairly boring looking desk phones.  But the group of employees whose job it is to answer incoming telephone calls on our main office telephone number each had a fairly fancy phone as shown at right.  Such a phone has what phone geeks call a “busy lamp field”.  (In our office we call it a “sidecar”.)  When we migrated to our work-from-home arrangement, we decided to splurge and give each employee a phone with a sidecar.  Why did we do this?  Continue reading “Busy lamp fields”

Who is in and who is out?

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At Oppedahl Patent Law Firm LLC our work-from-home setup is a work in progress.  Yes each person has a phone extension at home that works exactly like the phone extension that is on the person’s desk in the office (blog article).  Yes each person has a VPN giving them access to all of the office resources (blog article).  But how about some way that each work-at-home person can let the others in the office know of that person’s status?  Is there a way that at a glance I can see who is “on duty” and who is “off duty” right now?  Is there a way that I can see at a glance whether the best way to reach a person just now is by dialing their office telephone extension or by dialing their cell phone?  We managed to work out a free-of-charge way to make this possible. Continue reading “Who is in and who is out?”

Printing to a printer at a work-at-home location

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Recently at Oppedahl Patent Law Firm LLC we shifted to a work-from-home setup.  Everybody is working at home.  When we were setting up the work-from-home systems, we had several goals:

  • a recurring cost of zero for the work-from-home systems
  • a very small up-front cost for the work-from-home systems
  • replicating at home the functions and systems from the office

Good luck smiled on us.  We managed to get our office phones working at home without having to spend any money up front or incur any recurring cost (blog article).  We managed to set up VPN access to all of the office resources with no recurring cost and an up-front cost of only about $82 per home location (blog article).  These happy results were mostly due to our employees being smart and resilient, along with generous helpings of good luck.

One office function remained, however, to be implemented.  We needed to have a setup by which anybody in the office could remotely print a document onto a printer located in the home of anybody else in the office.  (So much for our saying that we run a paperless office!)  To give one example, if an accounts-receivable person generates a bill to be reviewed by an attorney, what we hope for is that the AR person could with one or two mouse clicks print that draft bill on a printer at the home of that attorney.

Of course what we would hope is that implementation of this function would be cost-free just like the previous two implementations.  We would hope to incur no up-front cost beyond the cost of the printer itself (typically about $90 per home for a nice duplex-printing monochrome laser printer), and no recurring cost.

Here’s what turned out to work for us.  Continue reading “Printing to a printer at a work-at-home location”

Fake specimens of use in US trademark applications

Two academics at NYU Law School have released a fascinating paper about fake specimens of use in US trademark applications. The article says:

… with respect to use-based applications originating in China that were filed at the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office in 2017 solely for apparel goods, we estimate that 66.9% of such applications included fraudulent specimens. Yet 59.8% of these fraudulent applications proceeded to publication and then 38.9% proceeded to registration.

The reason that I learned about this paper is that (a) I am subscribed to the e-Trademarks listserv and (b) alert listserv member John L. Welch posted a link to this paper on that listserv.  Thank you John!

Mountain Dew Zero Sugar redux

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Hello dear readers. What a relief it is, when so many things that are happening around us clamor for our attention, that we can sometimes return to pleasant and diverting discussions of some of the more important things in life. A chief example for today being the ingredient lists for two beverages that I discussed the other day in this blog article, namely Diet Mountain Dew and Mountain Dew Zero Sugar. Continue reading “Mountain Dew Zero Sugar redux”