![]() |
Not global warm caused.
"nom=de=plume" wrote in message
... "Bill McKee" wrote in message ... "nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "Rob" wrote in message ... nom=de=plume wrote: I see from your statement, that if you did graduate college, it was not in the hard science disciplines. I see you're mistaken. I was a double major... biology and English lit. The former is one of the requirements for being a patent attorney. I also see that you have no logical argument, thus your pathetic attempt to put me down. Man up Bill. You said nothing about degrees. So a patent attorney needs only a biology degree? You need to have a bs in order to become a patent agent. Biology qualifies. There are very specific requirements. I also have a JD/MBA also if that makes you feel better. Thus, I'm a patent attorney, not just an agent. The pass rate for the exam is about 40%. Here's a link that'll boil it down for you in steps even you can comprehend.. http://inventors.about.com/od/patent...t_Attorney.htm I was category A with a bio degree. http://patbar.com/FAQ-patent-bar-exam.shtml#data-18 -- Nom=de=Plume When I was dealing with the patent attorney for my patent, I came to the conclusion that patent attorney has to be one of the most boring, least mentally stimulating endeavors a JD can get involved in. Yes, I'm sure you came to that conclusion. :) All kidding aside, it actually can be festinating work. Some patents are pretty mundane, not to diminish them too much, but they can "solve" a problem that's a pretty small problem. Some others, however, are really interesting, and I had an opportunity to really use my bio degree to delve into the subject. In some cases, I was able (as many patent professionals are capable of doing) to influence the idea itself and certainly influence the time/effort required to get the patent granted. As I said somewhere else, I don't/won't work with corps any more. It wasn't so much boring as frustrating. -- Nom=de=Plume Ummm. that would fascinating work. :) Here comes Rob!!! -- Nom=de=Plume |
Not global warm caused.
nom=de=plume wrote:
wrote in message ... nom=de=plume wrote: I see from your statement, that if you did graduate college, it was not in the hard science disciplines. I see you're mistaken. I was a double major... biology and English lit. The former is one of the requirements for being a patent attorney. I also see that you have no logical argument, thus your pathetic attempt to put me down. Man up Bill. You said nothing about degrees. So a patent attorney needs only a biology degree? You need to have a bs in order to become a patent agent. Biology qualifies. There are very specific requirements. I also have a JD/MBA also if that makes you feel better. Thus, I'm a patent attorney, not just an agent. The pass rate for the exam is about 40%. Here's a link that'll boil it down for you in steps even you can comprehend.. http://inventors.about.com/od/patent...t_Attorney.htm I was category A with a bio degree. http://patbar.com/FAQ-patent-bar-exam.shtml#data-18 Impressive! And you do *what* now? |
Not global warm caused.
"nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "Bill McKee" wrote in message ... "nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "Rob" wrote in message ... nom=de=plume wrote: I see from your statement, that if you did graduate college, it was not in the hard science disciplines. I see you're mistaken. I was a double major... biology and English lit. The former is one of the requirements for being a patent attorney. I also see that you have no logical argument, thus your pathetic attempt to put me down. Man up Bill. You said nothing about degrees. So a patent attorney needs only a biology degree? You need to have a bs in order to become a patent agent. Biology qualifies. There are very specific requirements. I also have a JD/MBA also if that makes you feel better. Thus, I'm a patent attorney, not just an agent. The pass rate for the exam is about 40%. Here's a link that'll boil it down for you in steps even you can comprehend.. http://inventors.about.com/od/patent...t_Attorney.htm I was category A with a bio degree. http://patbar.com/FAQ-patent-bar-exam.shtml#data-18 -- Nom=de=Plume When I was dealing with the patent attorney for my patent, I came to the conclusion that patent attorney has to be one of the most boring, least mentally stimulating endeavors a JD can get involved in. Yes, I'm sure you came to that conclusion. :) All kidding aside, it actually can be festinating work. Some patents are pretty mundane, not to diminish them too much, but they can "solve" a problem that's a pretty small problem. Some others, however, are really interesting, and I had an opportunity to really use my bio degree to delve into the subject. In some cases, I was able (as many patent professionals are capable of doing) to influence the idea itself and certainly influence the time/effort required to get the patent granted. As I said somewhere else, I don't/won't work with corps any more. It wasn't so much boring as frustrating. -- Nom=de=Plume Ummm. that would fascinating work. :) Here comes Rob!!! -- Nom=de=Plume Ditzy Dan is the definition of 'boring'! |
Not global warm caused.
Bill McKee wrote:
"nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "Rob" wrote in message ... nom=de=plume wrote: I see from your statement, that if you did graduate college, it was not in the hard science disciplines. I see you're mistaken. I was a double major... biology and English lit. The former is one of the requirements for being a patent attorney. I also see that you have no logical argument, thus your pathetic attempt to put me down. Man up Bill. You said nothing about degrees. So a patent attorney needs only a biology degree? You need to have a bs in order to become a patent agent. Biology qualifies. There are very specific requirements. I also have a JD/MBA also if that makes you feel better. Thus, I'm a patent attorney, not just an agent. The pass rate for the exam is about 40%. Here's a link that'll boil it down for you in steps even you can comprehend.. http://inventors.about.com/od/patent...t_Attorney.htm I was category A with a bio degree. http://patbar.com/FAQ-patent-bar-exam.shtml#data-18 -- Nom=de=Plume When I was dealing with the patent attorney for my patent, I came to the conclusion that patent attorney has to be one of the most boring, least mentally stimulating endeavors a JD can get involved in. Do you really believe she has a JD? |
Not global warm caused.
"Rob" wrote in message
... nom=de=plume wrote: wrote in message ... nom=de=plume wrote: I see from your statement, that if you did graduate college, it was not in the hard science disciplines. I see you're mistaken. I was a double major... biology and English lit. The former is one of the requirements for being a patent attorney. I also see that you have no logical argument, thus your pathetic attempt to put me down. Man up Bill. You said nothing about degrees. So a patent attorney needs only a biology degree? You need to have a bs in order to become a patent agent. Biology qualifies. There are very specific requirements. I also have a JD/MBA also if that makes you feel better. Thus, I'm a patent attorney, not just an agent. The pass rate for the exam is about 40%. Here's a link that'll boil it down for you in steps even you can comprehend.. http://inventors.about.com/od/patent...t_Attorney.htm I was category A with a bio degree. http://patbar.com/FAQ-patent-bar-exam.shtml#data-18 Impressive! And you do *what* now? Thanks (at face value). I own a small business. Bascially, I sell high-end designer clothes (new and used) to US and foreign customers. I bet *that* sounds boring, but it isn't at all. -- Nom=de=Plume |
Not global warm caused.
On Dec 20, 7:06*pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote:
"nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "Bill McKee" wrote in message ... "nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "Rob" wrote in message news:TrOdnYURssdeD7DWnZ2dnUVZ_t1i4p2d@giganews. com... nom=de=plume wrote: I see from your statement, that if you did graduate college, it was not in the hard science disciplines. I see you're mistaken. I was a double major... biology and English lit. The former is one of the requirements for being a patent attorney. I also see that you have no logical argument, thus your pathetic attempt to put me down. Man up Bill. You said nothing about degrees. *So a patent attorney needs only a biology degree? You need to have a bs in order to become a patent agent. Biology qualifies. There are very specific requirements. I also have a JD/MBA also if that makes you feel better. Thus, I'm a patent attorney, not just an agent. The pass rate for the exam is about 40%. Here's a link that'll boil it down for you in steps even you can comprehend.. http://inventors.about.com/od/patent...t_Attorney.htm I was category A with a bio degree. http://patbar.com/FAQ-patent-bar-exam.shtml#data-18 -- Nom=de=Plume When I was dealing with the patent attorney for my patent, I came to the conclusion that patent attorney has to be one of the most boring, least mentally stimulating endeavors a JD can get involved in. Yes, I'm sure you came to that conclusion. :) All kidding aside, it actually can be festinating work. Some patents are pretty mundane, not to diminish them too much, but they can "solve" a problem that's a pretty small problem. Some others, however, are really interesting, and I had an opportunity to really use my bio degree to delve into the subject. In some cases, I was able (as many patent professionals are capable of doing) to influence the idea itself and certainly influence the time/effort required to get the patent granted. As I said somewhere else, I don't/won't work with corps any more. It wasn't so much boring as frustrating. -- Nom=de=Plume Ummm. that would fascinating work. :) Here comes Rob!!! -- Nom=de=Plume "Festinating" work would not be boring. |
Not global warm caused.
"Jim" wrote in message ... Bill McKee wrote: "nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "Rob" wrote in message ... nom=de=plume wrote: I see from your statement, that if you did graduate college, it was not in the hard science disciplines. I see you're mistaken. I was a double major... biology and English lit. The former is one of the requirements for being a patent attorney. I also see that you have no logical argument, thus your pathetic attempt to put me down. Man up Bill. You said nothing about degrees. So a patent attorney needs only a biology degree? You need to have a bs in order to become a patent agent. Biology qualifies. There are very specific requirements. I also have a JD/MBA also if that makes you feel better. Thus, I'm a patent attorney, not just an agent. The pass rate for the exam is about 40%. Here's a link that'll boil it down for you in steps even you can comprehend.. http://inventors.about.com/od/patent...t_Attorney.htm I was category A with a bio degree. http://patbar.com/FAQ-patent-bar-exam.shtml#data-18 -- Nom=de=Plume When I was dealing with the patent attorney for my patent, I came to the conclusion that patent attorney has to be one of the most boring, least mentally stimulating endeavors a JD can get involved in. Do you really believe she has a JD? Nope. Do not believe she sells high end clothes. May not even be a she. |
Not global warm caused.
"TopBassDog" wrote in message
... On Dec 20, 7:06 pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote: "nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "Bill McKee" wrote in message ... "nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "Rob" wrote in message news:TrOdnYURssdeD7DWnZ2dnUVZ_t1i4p2d@giganews. com... nom=de=plume wrote: I see from your statement, that if you did graduate college, it was not in the hard science disciplines. I see you're mistaken. I was a double major... biology and English lit. The former is one of the requirements for being a patent attorney. I also see that you have no logical argument, thus your pathetic attempt to put me down. Man up Bill. You said nothing about degrees. So a patent attorney needs only a biology degree? You need to have a bs in order to become a patent agent. Biology qualifies. There are very specific requirements. I also have a JD/MBA also if that makes you feel better. Thus, I'm a patent attorney, not just an agent. The pass rate for the exam is about 40%. Here's a link that'll boil it down for you in steps even you can comprehend.. http://inventors.about.com/od/patent...t_Attorney.htm I was category A with a bio degree. http://patbar.com/FAQ-patent-bar-exam.shtml#data-18 -- Nom=de=Plume When I was dealing with the patent attorney for my patent, I came to the conclusion that patent attorney has to be one of the most boring, least mentally stimulating endeavors a JD can get involved in. Yes, I'm sure you came to that conclusion. :) All kidding aside, it actually can be festinating work. Some patents are pretty mundane, not to diminish them too much, but they can "solve" a problem that's a pretty small problem. Some others, however, are really interesting, and I had an opportunity to really use my bio degree to delve into the subject. In some cases, I was able (as many patent professionals are capable of doing) to influence the idea itself and certainly influence the time/effort required to get the patent granted. As I said somewhere else, I don't/won't work with corps any more. It wasn't so much boring as frustrating. -- Nom=de=Plume Ummm. that would fascinating work. :) Here comes Rob!!! -- Nom=de=Plume "Festinating" work would not be boring. Didn't even realize it was an actual word.. -- Nom=de=Plume |
Not global warm caused.
"Bill McKee" wrote in message
... "Jim" wrote in message ... Bill McKee wrote: "nom=de=plume" wrote in message ... "Rob" wrote in message ... nom=de=plume wrote: I see from your statement, that if you did graduate college, it was not in the hard science disciplines. I see you're mistaken. I was a double major... biology and English lit. The former is one of the requirements for being a patent attorney. I also see that you have no logical argument, thus your pathetic attempt to put me down. Man up Bill. You said nothing about degrees. So a patent attorney needs only a biology degree? You need to have a bs in order to become a patent agent. Biology qualifies. There are very specific requirements. I also have a JD/MBA also if that makes you feel better. Thus, I'm a patent attorney, not just an agent. The pass rate for the exam is about 40%. Here's a link that'll boil it down for you in steps even you can comprehend.. http://inventors.about.com/od/patent...t_Attorney.htm I was category A with a bio degree. http://patbar.com/FAQ-patent-bar-exam.shtml#data-18 -- Nom=de=Plume When I was dealing with the patent attorney for my patent, I came to the conclusion that patent attorney has to be one of the most boring, least mentally stimulating endeavors a JD can get involved in. Do you really believe she has a JD? Nope. Do not believe she sells high end clothes. May not even be a she. You're right, I'm really a moron named Bill McKee. -- Nom=de=Plume |
Not global warm caused.
Harry wrote:
On 12/20/09 5:56 PM, Bill McKee wrote: wrote in message ... wrote in message ... nom=de=plume wrote: I see from your statement, that if you did graduate college, it was not in the hard science disciplines. I see you're mistaken. I was a double major... biology and English lit. The former is one of the requirements for being a patent attorney. I also see that you have no logical argument, thus your pathetic attempt to put me down. Man up Bill. You said nothing about degrees. So a patent attorney needs only a biology degree? You need to have a bs in order to become a patent agent. Biology qualifies. There are very specific requirements. I also have a JD/MBA also if that makes you feel better. Thus, I'm a patent attorney, not just an agent. The pass rate for the exam is about 40%. Here's a link that'll boil it down for you in steps even you can comprehend.. http://inventors.about.com/od/patent...t_Attorney.htm I was category A with a bio degree. http://patbar.com/FAQ-patent-bar-exam.shtml#data-18 -- Nom=de=Plume When I was dealing with the patent attorney for my patent, I came to the conclusion that patent attorney has to be one of the most boring, least mentally stimulating endeavors a JD can get involved in. To each his own, Bilious. I feel about the institution of the military the way you feel about patent attorneys. I don't have the patience to be a patent attorney, but I appreciate their worth to those who need them. i really have to be honest, I don't have the patience to leave my basement apartment. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:47 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com