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https://ipo.blog.gov.uk/2015/11/18/i-remember-when-this-was-all-fields/

I remember when this was all fields

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Patents

“I remember when I joined the office, there were paper specifications as far as the eye could see.”

Welcoming new patent examiner trainees into the office each year is fun, nerve-wracking and also guaranteed to make you feel old. Fundamentally, the job we do is still the same. But the environment, the pressures and the tools for doing the job have changed wildly in the sixteen years since I was in their shoes.

Back in the late 90s the senior examiners talked nostalgically about the days when the office was based in London. There was a theatre in the basement and the support staff used to come around to add coal to the fires dotted around the offices.

Old Patent Office image.

Now I’m telling the new guys, some of whom were born in the 90s and yet still have doctorates, about how we used to search paper files mounted on endless tracks of mobile racking as well as doing database searching. Those were dangerous times, when you were always at risk of getting a paper cut or being crushed in the files because you hadn’t locked the shelving. Nowadays the files are long gone.  We have the new challenge of having around a day to sift through over 160 million documents in the technical and patent databases to try to find the nearest handful to the application we’re searching. It’s tricky.

Filing-units

The office had its fair share of characters in those days too. There were those who made mini forts in their office out of case files which callow trainees would need to edge around if they wanted to ask for classification advice. Others logged out every lunch time for their daily power nap (although it hadn’t been branded as such back then). If you ever asked them about their hobbies outside of work you were treated to eclectic tales of holidays on commercial container vessels, competing at archery in the Olympics and beekeeping. However we do still have a master beekeeper in the house.

The trainees look wide eyed at mention of the canteen’s brief but enthusiastic embrace of fusion cuisine in the early noughties. This brought us the delights of jalfrezi cottage pie, rogan josh lasagne and the promisingly titled Chinese sausage stir-fry (until you realised that they were making it with the leftover sausages from the breakfast shift).

There used to be a bar on site too. Through the shifting clouds of cigarette smoke you’d occasionally be able to spot your Principal examiner sat with their peers discussing the days when they’d written and performed a Patent Office themed opera in the London theatre. Now the bar is a Costa coffee shop, and where the pool table used to be is where the charity cake sales set up. We bump into a couple of the other group heads and I check with one how his shed-based German expressionist-style stop motion film is progressing. The other is looking chuffed that she and her horse won the fancy dress competition at the weekend dressed as minions from the Despicable Me movies.

We stroll back through the open plan offices filled with industrious bright sparks all poring through the specifications trying to tease out the crux of the inventions that we’ve been sent. When we get to our desks I turn back and sigh with a rueful smile.

“The trouble is that we just don’t have the characters here anymore...!”

If being a patent examiner at the diverse and entertaining IPO appeals to you, then find out more information on our patent examiner vacancies.

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6 comments

  1. Comment by Steve Dempsey posted on

    I used to use the PO Library in Chancery Lane for research on Fluid Dynamics, and a lovely place it was too. Such as shame to see it redeveloped as mere office space https://www.gryphonpropertypartners.com/Property-Details/Central-Court-25-Southampton-Buildings-WC2A-1AL/174.html

  2. Comment by Fiona posted on

    Hilarious! I remember working in the Patent Office for a short time as a temp whilst on a "Working Holiday" in late 1998, can't remember what section. Strongest memory is of stacks and stacks of files - so much paper! Being scared of the rows and rows of file shelving and enjoying 'escaping' from the cramped office when I occassionally had to go through to the libriary - what a beautiful space. Lovely people in the office too.

  3. Comment by Mark Sexton posted on

    Thanks Charles - I'm always left wondering what anecdotes will stick with the people joining now (and that they'll look back on with fondness when they're in our shoes).

  4. Comment by Stuart Fox posted on

    Earlier this year I wanted to visit the UKIPO office and was STOPPED at the gate house ... later I inquired why + a suggestion that visiting arrangements / conditions be posted on the website ...I received a reply with an undertaking to explain why security rejected me after such a long drive ... ' heard no more.

    Stuart

    • Replies to Stuart Fox>

      Comment by Kirsty Edwards posted on

      Hi Stuart,

      Sorry to read you experienced problems that day. I am just contacting you via email so that we can look in to what happened.

      Thanks,
      Kirsty

  5. Comment by Charles Oppenheim posted on

    Thanks for these fabulous memories. I applied to become a patent examiner in 1970, and was accepted, but ducked the job to become a patent searcher at Glaxo instead. (The reason: I had a PhD in chemistry, but they offered me a job as a trainee examiner in electrical engineering). This involved me visiting the Patent Office Library in Southampton Buildings once or twice a week, using the Patent Office search room regularly and sometimes meeting examiners to discuss cases. There were some real eccentrics, and one very dodgy character amongst the patent searching community as well.......