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#41
posted to rec.boats
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"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 |
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#42
posted to rec.boats
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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? |
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#43
posted to rec.boats
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"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'! |
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#44
posted to rec.boats
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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? |
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#45
posted to rec.boats
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"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 |
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#46
posted to rec.boats
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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, itactually 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. |
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#47
posted to rec.boats
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"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. |
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#48
posted to rec.boats
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"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, itactually 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 |
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#49
posted to rec.boats
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"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 |
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#50
posted to rec.boats
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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. |
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