In Re Bilski - Transcript of Today's Oral Argument at the US Supreme Court - Updated 2Xs

 
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Old 11-10-2009
In Re Bilski - Transcript of Today's Oral Argument at the US Supreme Court - Updated 2Xs

I know you are dying to know what happened today in oral argument in In Re Bilski before the US Supreme Court. Here is the transcript [PDF] so you can read it for yourself and not have to depend on me or any journalist.
For sure the questions from the court to Bilski's attorney, J. Michael Jakes, and to the attorney for the government, Deputy Solicitor General Malcolm L. Stewart, are interesting. I conclude that the justices are way ahead of them on just how crazy the current patent system has become. Thank heaven there were so many amicus briefs, because reasonable, logical arguments were few and far between from either attorney, in my view, in that they each seemed to argue very much for the status quo, or in the case of Bilski's lawyer for an even broader free-for-all in patentability.

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PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Filter(3pm)			User Contributed Perl Documentation			PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Filter(3pm)

NAME
PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Filter - Abstract superclass for PDF stream filters SYNOPSIS
$f = PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Filter->new; $str = $f->outfilt($str, 1); print OUTFILE $str; while (read(INFILE, $dat, 4096)) { $store .= $f->infilt($dat, 0); } $store .= $f->infilt("", 1); DESCRIPTION
A Filter object contains state information for the process of outputting and inputting data through the filter. The precise state information stored is up to the particular filter and may range from nothing to whole objects created and destroyed. Each filter stores different state information for input and output and thus may handle one input filtering process and one output filtering process at the same time. METHODS
PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Filter->new Creates a new filter object with empty state information ready for processing data both input and output. $dat = $f->infilt($str, $isend) Filters from output to input the data. Notice that $isend == 0 implies that there is more data to come and so following it $f may contain state information (usually due to the break-off point of $str not being tidy). Subsequent calls will incorporate this stored state information. $isend == 1 implies that there is no more data to follow. The final state of $f will be that the state information is empty. Error messages are most likely to occur here since if there is required state information to be stored following this data, then that would imply an error in the data. $str = $f->outfilt($dat, $isend) Filter stored data ready for output. Parallels "infilt". NAME
PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::ASCII85Decode - Ascii85 filter for PDF streams. Inherits from PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Filter NAME
PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::RunLengthDecode - Run Length encoding filter for PDF streams. Inherits from PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Filter NAME
PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::ASCIIHexDecode - Ascii Hex encoding (very inefficient) for PDF streams. Inherits from PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Filter perl v5.14.2 2011-03-10 PDF::API2::Basic::PDF::Filter(3pm)