Interference No. 103,587 printed on that date. An enlargement was made from the original image, which enlargement is identified as LX-15. Raphael had received a U.S. patent for an invention in another field and attempts were made to license that earlier patent. In September 1989 Raphael licensed the earlier patent to a large U.S. corporation. Using the money from the license, he filed his patent application on Dot 2. Levien’s Position It is urged that Raphael Levien established corroborated conception of the invention on November 8, 1987 when he told his father about Dot 2. The junior party asserts that the computer program WAVY.BAS is compelling evidence of a reduction to practice on November 12, 1987 because this Dot 2 program was actually used to print an image on that date. It is argued that evidence that the program worked for its intended purpose is that a C program (LX-14), which is equivalent to the WAVY.BAS program, produced viewable images with a novel specialty effect of “wavy lines” (LX-13). Furthermore, an actual image which was screened using the WAVY.BAS algorithm is shown in LX-12, which establishes that WAVY.BAS was capable of working for its intended purpose. It is alleged that the linking of a proven date of existence of the WAVY.BAS program and testimony that the inventor always printed out screened images as he finished writing a screening program in order to see the results proves that an actual reduction to practice is more likely than not to have occurred at the time. Further reason to believe that WAVY.BAS was used to print actual images on November 12, 1987 is the name of the computer file itself. The 18Page: Previous 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 NextLast modified: November 3, 2007