Slot Speaker Technologies, Inc. v. Apple Inc.

680 F. App'x 932
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 2017
Docket2015-2038; 2015-2039
StatusUnpublished

This text of 680 F. App'x 932 (Slot Speaker Technologies, Inc. v. Apple Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slot Speaker Technologies, Inc. v. Apple Inc., 680 F. App'x 932 (Fed. Cir. 2017).

Opinion

O’malley, Circuit Judge.

Appellee/Cross-Appellant Apple Inc. (“Apple”) filed a petition for inter partes review of various claims of U.S. Patent No. 7,433,483 (“the ’483 patent”), assigned to Appellant/Cross-Appellee Slot Speaker Technologies, Inc. 1 (“Slot Speaker”). The Patent Trial and Appeal Board (“the Board”) instituted review on claims 1-3 of the ’483 patent, and concluded that claims 1 and 2 would have been obvious over prior art, but claim 3 would not have been obvious. Apple Inc. v. THX Ltd., IPR2014-00235, 2015 WL 3638275 (P.T.A.B. June 9, 2015) {“Board Decision”). Slot Speaker appeals the Board’s decision on claims 1 and 2; Apple cross-appeals the Board’s decision on claim 3. We conclude that substantial evidence supports the Board’s finding that claims 1 and 2 of the ’483 patent would have been obvious. We conclude that the Board erred, however, in ruling that claim 3 of the ’483 patent would not have been *934 obvious. We therefore affinn-in-part and reverse-in-part.

I. Background

A. The ’483 Patent

The ’483 patent is directed to a sound reproduction system with a speaker configuration providing a “relatively narrow sound output region in relation to the size of the speaker face(s) utilized in the sound reproduction system.” ’483 patent, col. 3 11. 22-26. Figures 1 and 2B of the ’483 patent, shown below, depict the configuration of the speaker and sound duct walls. The speaker 107 is mounted perpendicular to the sound duct 115, such that sound is redirected from the speaker, through the sound duct, and exits an output aperture 106. The duct wall 103 opposite the speaker has a sound reflecting surface, while sound damping material is added to the sidewalls 104 and 105 and the back wall 112.

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Id. figs. 1-2.

The sound damping material reduces standing waves inside the duct. Standing waves occur when sound is trapped between opposite reflecting walls, at frequencies where the distance between the walls is an integer number of half-wavelengths. These unwanted resonances diminish the quality of the projected sound. Because the speaker is narrow vertically, standing waves do not form in the vertical direction and, thus, sound damping material is not required on the top and bottom surfaces. The ’483 patent teaches the elimination of standing waves in the horizontal direction by placing sound damping material on the sidewalls and back wall of the sound duct. Id. col. 8,11.17-28.

The Board instituted review on claims 1-3 of the ’483 patent. Claim 1 of the ’483 patent recites:

A narrow profile sound system, comprising:
a drive unit disposed on a mounting surface, said mounting surface forming a barrier acoustically isolating the drive unit’s forward radiation from its rearward radiation;
a sound reflecting surface facing the drive unit and substantially parallel with the mounting surface; and
sound damping material disposed between said sound reflecting surface and the mounting surface, the sound reflecting surface and the mounting surface defining a bottom and top of a narrow sound duct terminating in an elongate output slot, with the sound damping material forming the sides of the sound duct, whereby forward radiation from the drive unit is turned at a substantially right angle and channeled along a straight path towards the output slot; wherein the sound damping material forms an outer shape of the sound duct which reduces sound reflections at the end of the sound duct opposite the out *935 put slot and thereby mitigates standing waves.

Id. col. 29,1. 62-col. 30,1.13.

Claim 2 depends from claim 1, adding the limitation that “sound emanating from the output slot is characterized by a wide horizontal dispersion angle and a narrow vertical dispersion angle, as a result of the elongate shape of the output slot.” Id. col. 30,11.14-19.

Claim 3 depends from claim 1 and includes the additional limitation that the “sound damping material forms a back wall of the sound duct, said back wall substantially following a curved contour of a portion of a drive unit cone farthest opposite from the output slot.” Id. col. 30, 11. 20-33.

B. Prior Art

The Board instituted based on three pri- or art references; two are relevant to this appeal. 2

1. Tomonori

Tomonori et al., EP 0744880 A1 (“Tomo-nori”), discloses a speaker mounted perpendicular to a sound duct, such that sound from the speaker is directed through the duct and exits a narrow.aperture positioned along the side of the television screen, as shown below.

Tomonori, figs. 1, 7. Tomonori recognizes that one of the problems of directing sound through a duct is the presence of “standing waves.” Id. col. 2, 11. 12-18. Tomonori describes that standing waves are produced when “some of the sound waves are reflected owing to a marked change in the acoustic impedance at the tube open end and return toward the speaker 12 to produce standing waves.” Id. col. 2, 11. 46-49. Standing waves create resonant frequencies that interfere with other soundwaves and degrade the . quality of sound leaving the sound duct.

To eliminate the formation of standing waves, Tomonori provides two solutions. First, Tomonori locates the speaker at an “anti-node,” one-third to one-fifth of the *936 distance of the total length of the sound tube from its closed back end. Id. col. 2⅛ 11. 45-50. Figure 16 illustrates this configuration.

Id. fíg. 16. Second, Tomonori teaches that the duct should be “internally provided with a sound absorbing material ... adapted to absorb standing waves.” Id. col. 1, 1. 57-col. 2, 1, 5. To this end, Tomonori discloses adding sound absorbing material to the back wall of the sound duet. By absorbing and eliminating the standing waves, Tomonori teaches that the sound quality is improved. Id. col. 8, II. 19-25.

2. Sadaie

Sadaie et ah, WO Pub. No. 00/52958 (“Sadaie”), discloses a small-sized speaker system with a narrow-profile configuration and a speaker driver positioned perpendicular to a sound duct. Sadaie’s speaker system is designed to enhance speaker response at the low end of the frequency spectrum. Sadaie teaches that the sidewalls and back wall of the sound duct may be lined with two different layers, “pressure absorbing material” and “acoustic material,” which both shapes the path through which sound travels and regulates pressure and unwanted noise inside the duct. J.A. 581-82.

As depicted in Figure 17 (side view, below left), the speaker driver 11 is mounted inside an enclosure 10.

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Bluebook (online)
680 F. App'x 932, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slot-speaker-technologies-inc-v-apple-inc-cafc-2017.