Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Different Interpretation of Buffalo, CSIRO Patent Appeal

A few days ago, I wrote that CSIRO had come out on top in an appeal by Buffalo of a district court decision: CSIRO, the Australian technology agent, has a broad patent that appears to cover aspects of OFDM, a technique for improving throughput in multi-path (reflective) signal environments. OFDM is used in 802.11a, g, and n, as well as in WiMax, and other wireless technologies. CSIRO has Cisco signed as a licensee, as Cisco bought an Australian firm a few years ago (this covers Linksys as well), but other makers are fighting. Buffalo lost a district court decision and has an injunction preventing the import of Wi-Fi gear, which has likely cost them tens of millions of dollars. They’re a leading seller in their founding country of Japan.

A few weeks ago, I picked up an item from ZDnet’s Australian branch stating that CSIRO had won an appeal.

It appears that’s inaccurate. While extremely technical in only a way that a court decision about patents can be, Buffalo won the appeal on a very narrow argument about the obviousness of the combination of two IEEE papers related to the CSIRO patent. Another issue, about how the original patent application covered 10 GHz and higher but was amended to covers the entire range of radio frequencies, appears to be set aside. Buffalo issued a press release.




Taylor puts his spin on classic tunes in “Covers”
(Reuters)

Wee-Fi: CSIRO Wins Patent Appeal; Zune-Fi in SF; Kodak ESP 9