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UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE
`
`
`
`UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
`United States Patent and Trademark Office
`Address: COMMISSIONER FOR PATENTS
`PO. Box 1450
`Alexandria, Virginia 2231371450
`www.uspto.gov
`
`16/088,004
`
`09/24/2018
`
`Prateek BASU MALLICK
`
`736456.467USPC
`
`6707
`
`Seed IP Law Group LLP/Panason1e (PIPCA)
`701 5th Avenue, Suite 5400
`Seattle, WA 98104
`
`SAMS' MATTHEW C
`
`ART UNIT
`
`2646
`
`PAPER NUMBER
`
`NOTIFICATION DATE
`
`DELIVERY MODE
`
`08/06/2019
`
`ELECTRONIC
`
`Please find below and/or attached an Office communication concerning this application or proceeding.
`
`The time period for reply, if any, is set in the attached communication.
`
`Notice of the Office communication was sent electronically on above—indicated "Notification Date" to the
`
`following e—mail address(es):
`US PTOeACtion @ SeedIP .Com
`
`pairlinkdktg @ seedip .eom
`
`PTOL-90A (Rev. 04/07)
`
`

`

`0/7709 A0170” Summary
`
`Application No.
`16/088,004
`Examiner
`MATTH EW 0 SAMS
`
`Applicant(s)
`BASU MALLICK et al.
`Art Unit
`AIA (FITF) Status
`2646
`Yes
`
`- The MAILING DA TE of this communication appears on the cover sheet wit/7 the correspondence address -
`Period for Reply
`
`A SHORTENED STATUTORY PERIOD FOR REPLY IS SET TO EXPIRE g MONTHS FROM THE MAILING
`DATE OF THIS COMMUNICATION.
`Extensions of time may be available under the provisions of 37 CFR 1.136(a). In no event, however, may a reply be timely filed after SIX (6) MONTHS from the mailing
`date of this communication.
`|f NO period for reply is specified above, the maximum statutory period will apply and will expire SIX (6) MONTHS from the mailing date of this communication.
`-
`- Failure to reply within the set or extended period for reply will, by statute, cause the application to become ABANDONED (35 U.S.C. § 133).
`Any reply received by the Office later than three months after the mailing date of this communication, even if timely filed, may reduce any earned patent term
`adjustment. See 37 CFR 1.704(b).
`
`Status
`
`1). Responsive to communication(s) filed on 7/1/2019.
`[:1 A declaration(s)/affidavit(s) under 37 CFR 1.130(b) was/were filed on
`
`2a). This action is FINAL.
`
`2b) C] This action is non-final.
`
`3)[:] An election was made by the applicant in response to a restriction requirement set forth during the interview on
`; the restriction requirement and election have been incorporated into this action.
`
`4)[:] Since this application is in condition for allowance except for formal matters, prosecution as to the merits is
`closed in accordance with the practice under Expat/7e Quay/e, 1935 CD. 11, 453 O.G. 213.
`
`Disposition of Claims*
`5)
`Claim(s)
`
`1,5—13 and 20—29 is/are pending in the application.
`
`5a) Of the above claim(s)
`
`is/are withdrawn from consideration.
`
`E] Claim(s)
`
`is/are allowed.
`
`Claim(s) 1,5—13 and 20—29 is/are rejected.
`
`[:1 Claim(s)
`
`is/are objected to.
`
`) ) ) )
`
`6 7
`
`8
`
`
`
`are subject to restriction and/or election requirement
`[j Claim(s)
`9
`* If any claims have been determined aflowabie. you may be eligible to benefit from the Patent Prosecution Highway program at a
`
`participating intellectual property office for the corresponding application. For more information, please see
`
`http://www.uspto.gov/patents/init events/pph/index.jsp or send an inquiry to PPeredback@uspto.gov.
`
`Application Papers
`10)[:] The specification is objected to by the Examiner.
`
`11)[:] The drawing(s) filed on
`
`is/are: a)D accepted or b)l:] objected to by the Examiner.
`
`Applicant may not request that any objection to the drawing(s) be held in abeyance. See 37 CFR 1.85(a).
`Replacement drawing sheet(s) including the correction is required if the drawing(s) is objected to. See 37 CFR 1.121 (d).
`
`Priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119
`12):] Acknowledgment is made of a claim for foreign priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(a)-(d) or (f).
`Certified copies:
`
`a)D All
`
`b)I:l Some**
`
`c)C] None of the:
`
`1.[:] Certified copies of the priority documents have been received.
`
`2.[:] Certified copies of the priority documents have been received in Application No.
`
`3.[:] Copies of the certified copies of the priority documents have been received in this National Stage
`application from the International Bureau (PCT Rule 17.2(a)).
`
`** See the attached detailed Office action for a list of the certified copies not received.
`
`Attachment(s)
`
`1)
`
`Notice of References Cited (PTO-892)
`
`2) D Information Disclosure Statement(s) (PTO/SB/08a and/or PTO/SB/08b)
`Paper No(s)/Mail Date_
`U.S. Patent and Trademark Office
`
`3) C] Interview Summary (PTO-413)
`Paper No(s)/Mail Date
`4) CI Other-
`
`PTOL-326 (Rev. 11-13)
`
`Office Action Summary
`
`Part of Paper No./Mai| Date 20190723
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 2
`
`DETAILED ACTION
`
`Notice of Pre-AIA or AIA Status
`
`1.
`
`The present application, filed on or after March 16, 2013, is being examined under
`
`the first inventor to file provisions of the AIA.
`
`Response to Amendment
`
`2.
`
`3.
`
`4.
`
`This office action is in response to the amendment filed on 7/1/2019.
`
`Claims 1 and 5-13 have been amended. Claims 20-29 have been newly added.
`
`Claims 2-4 and 14-19 are cancelled.
`
`Response to Arguments
`
`5.
`
`Applicant's arguments filed 7/1/2019 have been fully considered but they are not
`
`persuasive.
`
`6.
`
`In response to the Applicant’s argument that “Soret is silent as to use of explicit
`
`parameters to signal the section/subsection configuration to a terminal” (Pages 11-12),
`
`the Examiner respectfully disagrees.
`
`Soret inherently provides the explicit parameters signals for the section/subsection
`
`configuration to a terminal through the transmission of a map as seen in Figs. 2-3B.
`
`Specifically, Soret provides the grid (see Fig. 3A) over a 2 lane road, which includes a
`
`length and width (before resources must be reused, i.e. Fig. 3A [0-7], see also [0046]),
`
`with the length divided into 4 sections (0-3 & 4-7 [0048]) and the width divided into 2
`
`sections (4/0, 5/1, 6/2 & 7/3 [0048-0049]). See Soret Fig. 3A and Pages 4-5 [0046-0052].
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 3
`
`Claim Rejections - 35 USC § 1 12
`
`7.
`
`The following is a quotation of 35 U.S.C. 112(b):
`(b) CONCLUSION—The specification shall conclude with one or more claims particularly
`pointing out and distinctly claiming the subject matter which the inventor or a joint inventor
`regards as the invention.
`
`The following is a quotation of 35 U.S.C. 112 (pre-AIA), second paragraph:
`The specification shall conclude with one or more claims particularly pointing out and distinctly
`claiming the subject matter which the applicant regards as his invention.
`
`8.
`
`Claims 8 and 9 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. 112(b) or 35 U.S.C. 112 (pre-AIA),
`
`second paragraph, as being incomplete for omitting essential elements, such omission
`
`amounting to a gap between the elements. See MPEP § 2172.01. The omitted elements
`
`are: “sensing capability” as described in the specification (Page 35 lines 11-15). Without
`
`any description of the “sensing capability”, the processor has no way to determine radio
`
`resources may be used by another mobile terminal. Claim 9 is rejected for being
`
`dependent upon claim 8 and failing to add the essential element.
`
`9.
`
`Claims 24 and 25 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. 112(b) or 35 U.S.C. 112 (pre-AIA),
`
`second paragraph, as being incomplete for omitting essential steps, such omission
`
`amounting to a gap between the steps. See MPEP § 2172.01. The omitted steps are: a
`
`“sensing capability” as described in the specification (Page 35 lines 11-15). Without any
`
`description of the “sensing capability”, the processor has no way to determine radio
`
`resources may be used by another mobile terminal. Claim 25 is rejected for being
`
`dependent upon claim 24 and failing to add the essential steps of collecting the sensing
`
`information.
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 4
`
`Claim Rejections - 35 USC § 102
`
`10.
`
`In the event the determination of the status of the application as subject to AIA 35
`
`U.S.C. 102 and 103 (or as subject to pre-AIA 35 U.S.C. 102 and 103) is incorrect, any
`
`correction of the statutory basis for the rejection will not be considered a new ground of
`
`rejection if the prior art relied upon, and the rationale supporting the rejection, would be
`
`the same under either status.
`
`11.
`
`The following is a quotation of the appropriate paragraphs of 35 U.S.C. 102 that
`
`form the basis for the rejections under this section made in this Office action:
`
`A person shall be entitled to a patent unless —
`
`(a)(2) the claimed invention was described in a patent issued under section 151, or in an
`application for patent published or deemed published under section 122(b), in which the patent
`or application, as the case may be, names another inventor and was effectively filed before the
`effective filing date of the claimed invention.
`
`12.
`
`Claims 1, 5, 6, 10, 11, 13, 17, 21, 22, 26, 27 and 29 are rejected under 35 U.S.C.
`
`102(a)(2) as being anticipated by Soret et al. (U.S. Patent Application Publication No.
`
`2017/0041916), henceforth referred to as Soret.
`
`Regarding claim 1, Soret teaches a vehicular mobile terminal
`
`(Fig. 7 [10E]),
`
`comprising: (see [0015] “a method for operating a mobile radio device, comprising:
`
`sending a transmission from the mobile radio device on a wireless shared radio access
`
`channel using the selected radio access resource”)
`
`a receiver (Fig. 7 [10D]), which, in operation, receives parameter information as
`
`part of system information (Page 4 [0040-0041] “the association of radio access
`
`resources to the different
`
`location areas of
`
`the access region,
`
`for example by
`
`broadcasting it in System Information if the association is specific to individual cells”), the
`
`system information being broadcast by a radio base station in a cell in which the vehicular
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 5
`
`mobile terminal is located (Page 4 [0040] “the association of radio access resources to
`
`the different location areas of the access region, for example by broadcasting it in System
`
`Information if the association is specific to individual cells” and Page 5 [0058]), wherein
`
`the parameter information indicates whether to use radio resources which correspond to
`
`a geographical location of the vehicular mobile terminal; (Page 5 [0059] “These are non-
`
`limiting embodiments in which the teachings herein are deployed specifically to
`
`advantage vehicle communications and so the specific location areas to which are
`
`associated access resources are sections of the busiest roads in the cell. Other portions
`
`of the cell, including some less-travelled roads, may use conventional random access
`
`procedures side by side with these”) and
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`a processor (Fig. 7 [1 0C]) which is coupled to the receiver (Fig. 7 [1 0D]) and which,
`
`in operation, determines based on the parameter information whether to use radio
`
`resources which correspond to a geographical location of the vehicular mobile terminal
`
`based on the parameter information (Page 4 [0040] and Page 5 [0059] “These are non-
`
`limiting embodiments in which the teachings herein are deployed specifically to
`
`advantage vehicle communications and so the specific location areas to which are
`
`associated access resources are sections of the busiest roads in the cell. Other portions
`
`of the cell, including some less-travelled roads, may use conventional random access
`
`procedures side by side with these”),
`
`wherein, responsive to the parameter information indicating to use radio resources
`
`which correspond to a geographical
`
`location of
`
`the vehicular mobile terminal,
`
`the
`
`processor determines the geographical location of the vehicular mobile terminal (Page 4
`
`[0038] “The location/position information can be obtained by the mobile radio device
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 6
`
`(either completely itself or with an assistance information received from the network)” and
`
`Page 4 [0046 through Page 5 [0052]),
`
`identifies a location subsection in which the vehicular mobile terminal
`
`is
`
`geographically located based on the parameter information (Page 6 [0062]), wherein the
`
`parameter information includes a first parameter indicative of a length of the location
`
`subsection (Figs. 2 & 3A i.e.
`
`inherent to the information provided in the map, see
`
`additionally Page 6 [0062]) and a second parameter indicative of a width of the location
`
`subsection (Figs. 2 & 3A i.e.
`
`inherent to the information provided in the map, see
`
`additionally Page 6 [0062]), a third parameter indicative of a number of
`
`location
`
`subsections along the width into which a location section is divided (Figs. 2 & 3A i.e.
`
`inherent to the information provided in the map, see additionally Page 6 [0062]), and a
`
`fourth parameter indicative of a number of location subsections along with length into
`
`which a location section is divided, (Pages 4-5 [0046-0052], Page 6 [0062], Pages 7-8
`
`[0076], Figs. 2 and 3A and see additionally, response to arguments above)
`
`determines radio resources which correspond to the identified location subsection
`
`in which the vehicular mobile terminal is geographically located, (Figs. 2-3A, Fig. 6 [602]
`
`and Page 6 [0061-0062] “The mobile radio device would then use its location/position
`
`information to determine a sector/location area and use the algorithm or map to find the
`
`radio access resource associated with that sector/location area of the overall access
`
`region.”) and
`
`performs communication in a vehicular communication system using the
`
`determined radio resources.
`
`(Page 6 [0063] and Fig. 6 [604])
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 7
`
`Regarding claim 5, Soret teaches wherein the determination of the radio resources
`
`which correspond to the identified location subsection includes determining radio
`
`resources in a radio resource pool which is associated with the identified location
`
`subsection.
`
`(Fig. 6 [602 & 604] and Fig. 3A)
`
`Regarding claim 6, Soret teaches the vehicular mobile terminal is configured with
`
`a plurality of
`
`radio resource pools, each of which is associated with a different
`
`geographical location in which the vehicular mobile terminal can be located, wherein the
`
`configuration of the radio resource pools is transmitted to the vehicular mobile terminal
`
`as part of the system information or within a message dedicated to the vehicular mobile
`
`terminal (Page 3 [0032] “By assigning to a radio device a specific access resource from
`
`the available set of orthogonal access resources by taking into account the radio device's
`
`position/location information”, Page 4 [0040-0041] and Page 5 [0052]),
`
`wherein the plurality of radio resource pools are configured in the vehicular mobile
`
`terminal either based on explicit
`
`information on the radio resource pools and the
`
`respective radio resources in each radio resource pool or based on rules defining how
`
`radio resources are divided into the radio resource pools (Page 4 [0037] “The access by
`
`these multiple devices is such that in certain example embodiments below the association
`
`of the radio access resources with different discrete location areas of a given access
`
`region is distributed among the mobile radio devices in the given access region who each
`
`store it in their own local memories; in this way the mobile radio devices can select the
`
`access resource corresponding to their own position” and Pages 4-5 [0046-0052]).
`
`Regarding claim 10, Soret teaches the vehicular mobile terminal according to claim
`
`1, wherein the geographical location of the vehicular mobile terminal is based on a grid
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 8
`
`overlaying a road on which the vehicular mobile terminal is located, wherein a portion of
`
`the road on which the vehicular mobile terminal is geographically located is divided into
`
`a plurality of location sections, wherein each of the plurality of location sections covers all
`
`lanes of the road, (Figs. 2, 3A)
`
`wherein all of the plurality of sections are subdivided into the same plurality of non-
`
`overlapping location subsections, wherein each of the plurality of subsections covers at
`
`least one of the lanes of the road, (Figs. 2, 3A) and
`
`wherein each of the plurality of subsections is associated with a radio resource
`
`pool (Fig. 2, 3A, and Page 6 [0064] “there are N=8 total access resources available for
`
`geographic location areas defined by the illustrated two-lane road. Each number 0
`
`through 8 may be considered an index to one of those unique access resources, and the
`
`associated geographic location area is the lane of the road between the two dotted lines
`
`where the index lies.”).
`
`Regarding claim 11,Soret teaches the vehicular mobile terminal according to claim
`
`10, wherein the radio resources associated with the plurality of location subsections are
`
`orthogonal to each other (Pages 2-3 [0030]) so as to mitigate interference therebetween.
`
`(Fig. 2 and Page 6 [0063] “The access resource selection algorithm, when designed with
`
`the access resource reuse considerations and the closeness of the location areas
`
`mentioned above, would ensure that the mobile radio devices in vehicles closest to one
`
`but in different location areas another will always be using different access resources. 80
`
`for example if a vehicle 1 within geographic region 202 of FIG. 2 were attempting to
`
`access the radio access channel at the same instant as a vehicle 2 within geographic
`
`region 204 of FIG. 2, they would both be using AR1 but since the geographic location
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 9
`
`areas are beyond their V2X radio transmission range their transmissions may not collide
`
`in fact.”).
`
`Regarding claim 13, Soret teaches the vehicular mobile terminal according to claim
`
`1, wherein the processor, in operation, determines whether the vehicular mobile terminal
`
`is in coverage or out of coverage of the radio base station, and in case of out-of-coverage,
`
`the processor determines that the radio resources are not to be selected based on the
`
`geographic location of the vehicular mobile terminal. (Pages 5-6 [0060] “the UE seeking
`
`to access the radio access channel would first check its position/location to determine
`
`which access protocol/procedure to utilize.
`
`If the check shows the UE is on the road (or
`
`is within some otherwise defined first-designated portion of the cell) it would select the
`
`random access procedure which uses the UE's position/location as an input as described
`
`herein to select an access resource, and if the check shows the UE is not on the road (or
`
`is within some different second-designated portion of the cell) it would select a different
`
`random access procedure that selects the access resource independently of the UE's
`
`location within the cell” and Page 8 [0080] “In such a hybrid deployment the mobile radio
`
`device's implementation of the flow diagram of FIG. 6 may be conditional on the mobile
`
`radio device checking that its location/position information is within any of the discrete
`
`location areas within the access region/cell.”)
`
`Regarding claims 20, 21, 22, 26, 27 and 29, the limitations of claims 20, 21, 22,
`
`26, 27 and 29 are rejected as being the same reasons set forth above in claims 1, 5, 6,
`
`10,11 and13.
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 10
`
`Claim Rejections - 35 USC § 103
`
`13.
`
`The following is a quotation of 35 U.S.C. 103 which forms the basis for all
`
`obviousness rejections set forth in this Office action:
`
`A patent for a claimed invention may not be obtained, notwithstanding that the claimed invention
`is not identically disclosed as set forth in section 102,
`if the differences between the claimed
`invention and the prior art are such that the claimed invention as a whole would have been
`obvious before the effective filing date of the claimed invention to a person having ordinary skill
`in the art to which the claimed invention pertains. Patentability shall not be negated by the
`manner in which the invention was made.
`
`14.
`
`Claims 7, 12, 23 and 28 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. 103 as being unpatentable
`
`over Soret in view of Zheng (US-2013/0288645).
`
`Regarding claim 7, Soret teaches the limitations of claim 1 above, but differs from
`
`the claimed invention by not explicitly reciting wherein the determination of the radio
`
`resources includes requesting radio resources from the radio base station that controls
`
`the cell in which the vehicular mobile terminal is located, transmitting information on the
`
`determined geographical
`
`location of the vehicular mobile terminal
`
`to the radio base
`
`station, wherein the information on the determined geographical location is geographical
`
`coordinates or an identifier of a location section of a road in which the vehicular mobile
`
`terminal is geographically located, and receiving from the radio base station an indication
`
`of radio resources to be used for communication.
`
`In an analogous art, Zheng teaches a resource management method and
`
`apparatus for device to device communications (Abstract) that includes requesting radio
`
`resources from the radio base station that controls the cell in which the vehicular mobile
`
`terminal is located, (Fig. 5A [8501])
`
`transmitting information on the determined geographical location of the vehicular
`
`mobile terminal to the radio base station, wherein the information on the determined
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 11
`
`geographical location is geographical coordinates or an identifier of a location section of
`
`a road in which the vehicular mobile terminal is geographically located (Page 4 [0055] &
`
`Page 7 [0087]), and
`
`receiving from the radio base station an indication of radio resources to be used
`
`for communication.
`
`(Fig. 11 [82002] and Page 8 [0096])
`
`Before the effective filing date of the invention, it would have been obvious to one
`
`of ordinary skill
`
`in the art to be motivated to implement the invention of Soret after
`
`modifying it to incorporate the ability to receive radio resources from the radio base station
`
`of Zheng since having the radio base station provide resources for communication
`
`eliminates the need to store resource selection algorithms at each mobile device and
`
`significantly reduces the chance the same resource will be distributed twice in the same
`
`area.
`
`Regarding claim 23, the limitations of claim 23 are rejected as being the same
`
`reasons set forth above in claim 7.
`
`Regarding claim 12, Soret in view of Zheng teaches wherein the determination of
`
`the geographic location of the vehicular mobile terminal includes determining an identifier
`
`of the location section and/or an identifier of the location subsection in which the vehicular
`
`mobile terminal is geographically located (Soret Fig. 3A [nAR]), and
`
`the vehicular mobile terminal comprises a transmitter (Soret Fig. 7 [10D] and
`
`Zheng Fig. 1C [113]), which, in operation, transmits the determined geographic location
`
`of the vehicular mobile terminal to the radio base station by transmitting the identifier of
`
`the location section and/or the identifier of the location subsection.
`
`(substituting the
`
`transmission of the location/relative location in Zheng Fig. 5A [8502] with the nAR value
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 12
`
`within Soret Fig. 3A for the proper radio resources to be returned to the mobile terminal
`
`in Zheng Fig.11 [S2002], Page 4 [0055], Page 7 [0087] and Page 8 [0096] which would
`
`be a predictable result of using the stored radio resources for the particular location being
`
`sent to the mobile terminal for communications, with the same reasoning, not having to
`
`store all the different resources at each mobile terminal but rather provide them from a
`
`central location)
`
`Regarding claim 28, the limitations of claim 28 are rejected as being the same
`
`reasons set forth above in claim 12.
`
`15.
`
`Claims 8, 9, 24 and 25 are rejected under 35 U.S.C. 103 as being unpatentable
`
`over Soret in view of Nikopour et al. (US-2016/0295589 hereinafter, Nikopour).
`
`Regarding claim 8, Soret teaches the limitations of claim 1 above, but differs from
`
`the claimed invention by not explicitly reciting wherein the processor,
`
`in operation,
`
`determines whether potential radio resources are or will be used by another mobile
`
`terminal, and responsive to determining the potential radio resources are or will be used
`
`by another mobile terminal, determines not to use the potential radio resources and
`
`determines to use different radio resources.
`
`In an analogous art, Nikopour teaches a method and system for distributed
`
`resource management in vehicular networks (Abstract) that includes determining whether
`
`potential radio resources are or will be used by another mobile terminal, and responsive
`
`to determining the potential radio resources are or will be used by another mobile terminal,
`
`determines not to use the potential radio resources and determines to use different radio
`
`resources. (Page 2 [0037] “CSMA/CA” and Page 11 [0134 & 0137])
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 13
`
`Before the effective filing date of the invention, it would have been obvious to one
`
`of ordinary skill
`
`in the art to be motivated to implement the invention of Soret after
`
`modifying it to incorporate the ability to avoid using a communication resource that is
`
`being used by another device of Nikopour since avoiding transmission collisions reduces
`
`transmission latency within the wireless network.
`
`(Nikopour Page 2 [0037])
`
`Regarding claim 9, Soret in view of Nikopour teaches wherein the determination
`
`of the radio resources which correspond to the geographical location of the vehicular
`
`mobile terminal includes determining radio resources in a radio resource pool which is
`
`associated with the geographical location of the vehicular mobile terminal (Soret Page 6
`
`[0060] through Page 7 [0061]), and
`
`responsive to determining that potential radio resources in the radio resource pool
`
`are or will be used by another mobile terminal the processor determines radio resources
`
`from another radio resource pool which is associated with another geographical location
`
`different from the geographical location of the vehicular mobile terminal, wherein the
`
`another geographical location is adjacent to the geographical location of the vehicular
`
`mobile terminal.
`
`(Nikopour Fig. 9 [910] see additionally, Fig. 9 and related discussion)
`
`Regarding claims 24 and 25, the limitations of claim 24 and 25 are rejected as
`
`being the same reasons set forth above in claims 8 and 9.
`
`Conclusion
`
`16.
`
`Applicant's amendment necessitated the new ground(s) of rejection presented in
`
`this Office action. Accordingly, THIS ACTION IS MADE FINAL. See MPEP § 706.07(a).
`
`Applicant is reminded of the extension of time policy as set forth in 37 CFR 1.136(a).
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 14
`
`A shortened statutory period for reply to this final action is set to expire THREE
`
`MONTHS from the mailing date of this action.
`
`In the event a first reply is filed within TWO
`
`MONTHS of the mailing date of this final action and the advisory action is not mailed until
`
`after the end of the THREE-MONTH shortened statutory period, then the shortened
`
`statutory period will expire on the date the advisory action is mailed, and any extension
`
`fee pursuant to 37 CFR 1.136(a) will be calculated from the mailing date of the advisory
`
`action.
`
`In no event, however, will the statutory period for reply expire later than SIX
`
`MONTHS from the date of this final action.
`
`17.
`
`Any inquiry concerning this communication or earlier communications from the
`
`examiner should be directed to MATTHEW C SAMS whose telephone number is
`
`(571)272-8099. The examiner can normally be reached on M-F 8:30-5 EST.
`
`Examiner
`
`interviews
`
`are
`
`available
`
`via
`
`telephone,
`
`in-person,
`
`and video
`
`conferencing using a USPTO supplied web-based collaboration tool. To schedule an
`
`interview, applicant is encouraged to use the USPTO Automated Interview Request (AIR)
`
`at http://www.uspto.gov/interviewpractice.
`
`If attempts to reach the examiner by telephone are unsuccessful, the examiner’s
`
`supervisor, Lester Kincaid can be reached on (571 )272—7922. The fax phone number for
`
`the organization where this application or proceeding is assigned is 571-273-8300.
`
`Information regarding the status of an application may be obtained from the Patent
`
`Application Information Retrieval
`
`(PAIR) system.
`
`Status information for published
`
`applications may be obtained from either Private PAIR or Public PAIR. Status information
`
`for unpublished applications is available through Private PAIR only. For more information
`
`about the PAIR system, see http://pair-direct.uspto.gov. Should you have questions on
`
`

`

`Application/Control Number: 16/088,004
`Art Unit: 2646
`
`Page 15
`
`access to the Private PAIR system, contact the Electronic Business Center (EBC) at 866-
`
`217-9197 (toll-free).
`
`If you would like assistance from a USPTO Customer Service
`
`Representative or access to the automated information system, call 800-786-9199 (IN
`
`USA OR CANADA) or 571 -272—1 000.
`
`/Matthew C Sams/
`
`Primary Examiner, Art Unit 2646
`
`

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