Full opinion text
OPINION AND ORDER CRABB, District Judge. Plaintiffs Garmin Ltd. and Garmin Corporation and defendant TomTom, Inc. are competitors in the manufacturing and selling of global positioning systems. After plaintiffs initiated this suit for patent infringement, defendant TomTom, along with Dutch company Baldivi B.V., asserted several counterclaims against plaintiffs as well as Garmin International, Inc. Both sides own the rights to multiple patents relating to navigation devices, both are alleging that the other side has infringed its patents, both are alleging that the other’s patents are invalid and both have moved for summary judgment on these grounds. (For the remainder of the opinion, I will refer to Garmin Ltd., Garmin Corporation and Garmin International collectively as “Garmin” and to TomTom, Inc. and Baldivi B.V. collectively as “Tom-Tom.”) Both sides’ motions will be denied in part and granted in part. With respect to the five patents being asserted by Garmin, I find as a matter of law that TomTom’s products do not infringe claim 1 of the '485 patent, claim 9 of the '615 patent or claims 1, 7, 8 and 9 of the '873 patent. I conclude that the remainder of Garmin’s asserted claims are invalid because they were anticipated by prior art: claim 15 of the '956 patent, claim 10 of the '873 patent and claims 9-11 of the '330 patent. Summary judgment will be granted to Garmin on each of the claims asserted by TomTom because I conclude as a matter of law that Garmin’s products do not infringe the asserted claims. Three other motions are before the court. First, TomTom has filed a motion to amend its answer, which will be denied as unnecessary. TomTom seeks to amend its answer to include a defense of inequitable conduct with respect to the '330 patent. Because I conclude that the claims Garmin asserted under the '330 patent were anticipated by prior art, I need not consider whether there might be other reasons for invalidating those claims. Second, Garmin has filed a motion to strike particular pieces of evidence submitted by TomTom. The motion is largely moot as well because it was unnecessary to consider the validity of most of the disputed evidence in order to resolve the parties’ motions for summary judgment. In situations in which it was necessary to address one of the objections, I have done so in the context of the opinion, so I will deny the motion as unnecessary. Finally, I will grant TomTom’s unopposed motion to supplement several of its proposed findings of fact with citations that were omitted from the original filings. I address briefly several other preliminary matters. First, for the purpose of readability, I have structured the opinion by patent, with a separate statement of undisputed facts for each one. Further, to limit the size of an already lengthy opinion, I have not included facts that are not related to issues in dispute. For example, in many situations, the party claiming infringement set forth evidence and argument relating to all of the elements of a patent, but the other side responded with respect to one element only. In those situations, I have construed the failure to respond as a concession that the other elements are present and have limited discussion of the facts accordingly. All facts are taken from the parties’ proposed findings of fact and portions of the record cited in those proposed findings. I did not consider evidence that was cited in a brief but not included in the proposed findings of fact unless it was otherwise clear that the fact was undisputed. Procedure to be Followed on Motions for Summary Judgment, I.B.4. Second, both sides raised infringement and validity arguments with respect to each of the patents. Generally, I addressed a patent’s validity only after concluding that an accused device infringed. Fonar Corp. v. Johnson & Johnson, 821 F.2d 627 (Fed.Cir.1987) (vacating finding related to validity when it was unnecessary to decide issue because accused products did not infringe); Unette Corp. v. Unit Pack Co., 785 F.2d 1026, 1029 (Fed.Cir.1986) (when there is no infringement, question of validity is moot). Third, both sides often asserted arguments for the first time in a reply brief. Needless to say, I have disregarded all such arguments. Fuji Photo Film Co. v. Jazz Photo Corp., 394 F.3d 1368, 1375 n. 4 (Fed.Cir.2005). GARMIN’S PATENTS I. U.S. PATENT NO. 6,188,956 Invention: A GPS device that selects which roads to display on a screen Asserted claim: 15 Accused devices: Tom Tom Go, Tom-Tom Go 300, TomTom Go 510, Tom-Tom Go 700, TomTom 910, TomTom Rider, TomTom One (infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(a)); TomTom Navigator 5, TomTom Navigator 6 (infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(b) and (c)) UNDISPUTED FACTS A.The Claims Claim 15 of the '956 patent discloses: A navigation device for navigating a vehicle on a thoroughfare, in a first direction, said device comprising: a memory containing cartographic data indicative of a plurality of thoroughfares, including said thoroughfare upon which said vehicle is being navigated, and wherein each said thoroughfare has an associated name stored in memory; a processor connected to said memory; a display, connected to said processor, for displaying said cartographic data, wherein said display displays the name of selected thoroughfares that are oriented in a direction other than the direction said vehicle is being navigated. B.Operation of the Accused Devices The accused devices contain the limitations disclosed in all but the last subpart of claim 15. The accused devices will label the name of a road when the following conditions are satisfied: (a) the road is connected to the one being navigated; (b) a section of the road is “sufficiently horizontal” in the current screen; (c) the road does not overlap a previous name; and (d) the road does not overlap an instruction area arrow. The Navigator 5 and Navigator 6 are exceptions to this rule because they are software products and do not include a display. The Navigator 5 and Navigator 6 are intended to be installed and used on a PDA. TomTom sells the Navigator 5 and Navigator 6 software to consumers with instructions to combine the software with a PDA or mobile phone. When these products are used with a PDA, they operate in the same manner as the other accused devices. C.Prior Art The Etak Navigator is an electronic navigation device for use in vehicles. It was available for sale in the United States beginning inl985; the application for the '956 patent was filed in 1998. The Etak Navigator displays the names of roads that are oriented in a direction other than the direction of the road on which the vehicle is traveling: The arrow indicates the vehicle and the direction in which it is headed. (Garmin argues in its motion to strike that the screen shots are not admissible, but I do not find its arguments persuasive. In any event, the developer of the Etak Navigator system provided deposition testimony that was consistent with the information in the screen shots. Garmin has not objected to the admissibility of that testimony.) OPINION A. Infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(a) With respect to most of the accused products, Gai’min argues that TomTom is liable for infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(a), which prohibits the unauthorized making or selling of a patented invention. (Garmin does not say explicitly that it is relying on § 271(a), but I have inferred this from its arguments. In general, neither side was diligent in identifying the statutory provision that supported a claim of infringement or invalidity. Where it was not clear, I applied the provision that followed logically from the structure of the argument presented in the briefs. To the extent that the parties intended to rely on other provisions, they have waived their opportunity to do so by failing to adequately articulate their claim.) Garmin must show that the accused devices include each element of the claimed portion of the patent, either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents. Telemac Cellular Corp. v. Topp Telecom, Inc., 247 F.3d 1316, 1330 (Fed.Cir.2001). It is undisputed that the accused devices include each of the limitations of claim 15, with the exception of one in the claim’s last subpart: “wherein said display displays the name of selected thoroughfares that are oriented in a direction other than the direction said vehicle is being navigated.” Thus, this dispute is about the way in which the devices choose to label displayed roads. TomTom advances several arguments why its products are not covered by this element. First, it argues generally that its devices “do not use the concept of road alignment to determine whether to display a road name.” TomTom’s Br., dkt. # 102, at 5. Presumably, TomTom means to argue that its devices do not display road names on the basis of the way the road is “oriented,” as required by claim 15, but this is clearly wrong. The undisputed facts show that defendant’s devices display the names of roads that include a section that is “sufficiently horizontal” to the road being navigated. This is displaying the road’s name on the basis of its orientation. TomTom emphasizes that its devices will display a road’s name only if a particular section of the road is sufficiently horizontal to the road being navigated and that the reason for the display rule is only to insure that the name of the road will be displayed so as not to require the user to tilt his or her head. Neither of these arguments has force. The first argument presupposes that a “thoroughfare” cannot be “oriented” in a particular direction unless every section of the road is oriented in that same direction. Under this view, the invention disclosed in claim 15 would not display a road’s name without considering the direction of the entire road, no matter how long the road was and even if the road continued well beyond the area encompassed by the display. Further, the claimed device would be unable to determine the direction of any road that changed course along any portion because that would mean the “road” had multiple, conflicting directions. This is an absurd result that is not required by the language of claim 15. Rather, because claim 15 discloses “a display,” it follows that the devices disclosed in claim 15 consider the section of the road that is included in the display. In any event, common sense requires a conclusion that a device that displays a road’s name because of any portion of the road’s orientation has used “the road’s” orientation to make a selection. Defendant’s second argument is even less persuasive. Claim 15 says nothing about the reason for using a road’s orientation to determine whether to display the road’s name. Thus, it is irrelevant whether defendant’s devices use their “sufficiently horizontal” rule for driver convenience or because TomTom believed that displaying names of vertical roads brought bad luck. In any case, the reason behind the rule does not provide a ground for claiming noninfringement. TomTom argues next that, unlike the invention disclosed in claim 15, its products do not prohibit the naming of roads that are oriented in the same direction. However, as Garmin points out, I rejected this interpretation of claim 15 in the claim construction opinion and order, dkt. # 65, at 53-54. Claim 15 discloses the road names that it will display; the claim is silent with respect to the names that it will not display. It is a basic tenet of logic that one cannot infer the exclusion of one thing from the inclusion of another. It is true that the device in claim 15 “displays the name of selected thoroughfares,” which suggests that some roads are not selected for display. But the term “selected” in claim 15 modifies “thoroughfares that are oriented in a” different direction, meaning only that not all such roads’ names are displayed, not that the display is limited to those road names. It is also true that the purpose of the invention is to limit the names of roads displayed to those “that are most likely of interest without cluttering the display.” Abstract. And certainly, the patent says that it “preferís],” id., or “favors,” col. 5, Ins. 25-29, 40-44, the naming of roads that are oriented in a different direction. But the patent does not bar other road names from being displayed, even if the disclosed device would be most useful if that were the case. TomTom advances other arguments, but none is persuasive. For example, Tom-Tom emphasizes that its products use a different algorithm from that used in plaintiffs devices. But this argument is a nonstarter because claim 15 is not a patent for an algorithm and TomTom offers no basis for reading one into it. I conclude as a matter of law that the accused devices, with the exception of the Navigator 5 and the Navigator 6, infringe claim 15 of the '956 patent under 35 U.S.C. § 271(a). B. Infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(b) and (c) Garmin contends that TomTom is liable for “indirect infringement,” with respect to the TomTom Navigator 5 and the TomTom Navigator 6, which are software products, because they meet every limitation of claim 15 when combined with a PDA or a mobile phone. It is undisputed that TomTom sells its software products with instructions to combine them with a PDA or mobile phone. Garmin cites 35 U.S.C. § 271(b) and (c), but these provisions do not use the term “indirect infringement.” Rather, § 271(b) prohibits anyone from “actively inducing]” infringement and § 271(c) prohibits “contributory” infringement, which is selling a “component” of a patented device when the seller knows that the component is especially designed “for use in an infringement” of the patent. Section 271(b) requires “proof of actual intent to cause the acts which constitute the infringement.” Hewlett-Packard Co. v. Bausch & Lomb Inc. 909 F.2d 1464, 1469 (Fed.Cir.1990). Section 271(c) requires “a showing that the alleged contributory in-fringer knew that the combination for which his component was especially designed was both patented and infringing.” Aro Mfg. Co. v. Convertible Top Replacement Co., 377 U.S. 476, 488-89, 84 S.Ct. 1526, 12 L.Ed.2d 457 (1964). Garmin does not develop its argument of infringement under § 271(b) and (c) beyond stating that TomTom is “inducing and contributing to direct infringement” because the products are sold with instructions to combine the software with a PDA or mobile phone. Garmin’s Br., dkt. # 74, at 10 (Garmin does not refer to this document as a brief but rather uniquely as “Suggestions in Support of [Garmin’s] Motion for Summary Judgment.” Although I appreciate the deferential tack, I will cite this document as a “brief’ for purposes of clarity and simplicity.) However, the case law is clear that a party may induce infringement by providing instructions to use a device in a manner that would infringe the patent. E.g., Mentor H/S, Inc. v. Medical Device Alliance, Inc., 244 F.3d 1365, 1379 (Fed.Cir.2001); Chiuminatta Concrete Concepts, Inc. v. Cardinal Industries, Inc., 145 F.3d 1303, 1312 (Fed.Cir.1998). Further, because TomTom’s response brief is silent on the issue of indirect infringement, it appears that TomTom has conceded that its Navigator 5 and 6 violate § 271(b) if its other products violate § 271(a). Third Wave Technologies, Inc. v. Stratagene Corp., 405 F.Supp.2d 991, 1009 (W.D.Wis.2005) (upholding jury verdict finding infringement when defendant supplied kits with manuals encouraging infringing uses); Vesture Corp. v. Thermal Solutions, Inc., 284 F.Supp.2d 290, 317 (M.D.N.C.2003) (finding inducement to infringe under § 271(b) when plaintiff alleged that defendant “provides user manuals that specifically instruct the user how to perform infringing methods” and defendant did not dispute that fact). Accordingly, I conclude that TomTom is liable for infringement under § 271(b) with respect to its Navigator 5 and Navigator 6 software products. B. Validity Under 35 U.S.C. § 102(b), a patent is not valid if the invention it discloses was either “described in a printed publication” or “in public use” more than one year before the patent application. A party challenging the validity of a patent has the burden to show this by clear and convincing evidence. Monsanto Co. v. Scruggs, 459 F.3d 1328, 1336-37 (Fed.Cir.2006). The parties’ arguments relating to the validity of claim 15 focus on the same subpart I addressed in determining validity. The question is whether the Etak Navigator anticipated a device that “displays the name of selected thoroughfares that are oriented in the direction other than the direction said vehicle is being navigated.” To support its claim of invalidity, TomTom submitted several screen shots from the Etak Navigator, displaying the names of roads that are perpendicular to the road on which the vehicle is traveling. In response, Garmin argues only that the Etak Navigator “does not factor thoroughfare alignment into its priority algorithm for selectively labeling thoroughfares.” Garmin’s Br., dkt. # 95 at 41. However, as I noted with respect to defendant’s noninfringement arguments, claim 15 places no limitations on the type of algorithm that the device must use. In fact, claim 15 does not even say that it will display road names because they are “oriented in the direction other than the direction other than the direction said vehicle is being navigated.” It says only that it displays names of selected roads that are oriented that way. Garmin’s argument would be much stronger if claim 15 included a limitation that the device would not display a road’s name unless the road was oriented in a different direction or, in other words, if it prohibited the labeling of other types of roads. If the patented device displayed only those roads that are oriented in a different direction, it would follow that the disclosed invention must have a method for determining how the road was oriented before labeling it. However, as plaintiff argued and I agreed with respect to the issue of infringement, claim 15 includes no such limitation. Thus, it makes no difference why the device labels those roads, so long as they are labeled. The screen shots provided by Tom-Tom show the display of names of roads that are perpendicular to the road being navigated, or in the language of the claim, “the name of selected thoroughfares that are oriented in a direction other than the direction said vehicle is being navigated.” It is telling that, in arguing that the prior art did not anticipate claim 15, Garmin does not point to any language in claim 15 that is not covered by the Etak Navigator. Further, although plaintiff says in its brief that it is reserving any arguments that other elements of claim 15 were not anticipated, Garmin has waived these arguments by failing to respond to defendant’s arguments with respect to these other claims. A party opposing a motion for summary judgment must show its whole hand; it may not simply tell a court that other reasons for denying the motion are lurking somewhere in the record. Hammel v. Eau Galle Cheese Factory, 407 F.3d 852, 859 (7th Cir.2005) (“Summary judgment is not a dress rehearsal or practice run; it ‘is the put up or shut up moment in a lawsuit, when a party must show what evidence it has that would convince a trier of fact to accept its version of the events.’ ”) (quoting Schacht v. Wisconsin Dept. of Corrections, 175 F.3d 497, 504 (7th Cir.1999); DeSilva v. DiLeonardi, 181 F.3d 865, 867 (7th Cir.1999)) (“a brief must make all arguments accessible to the judges, rather than ask them to play archaeologist with the record”). I conclude as a matter of law that claim 15 of the '956 patent is invalid because it was anticipated by the Etak Navigator. II. U.S. PATENT NO. 6,222,485 Invention: A GPS device that orients the display based in part on the current direction of travel Asserted claim: 1 Accused devices: TomTom Go 300, Tom-Tom Go 510, TomTom Go 700, Tom-Tom 910, TomTom Rider, TomTom One (infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(a)); TomTom Navigator 5, TomTom Navigator 6 (infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(b) and (c)) UNDISPUTED FACTS A. The Claim Claim 1 discloses: An electronic navigation device for a vehicle, said device comprising: a processor; a memory in communication with said processor, said memory having cartographic data, wherein said cartographic data includes one or more thoroughfares; and a display, wherein said display displays said cartographic data, wherein said processor retrieves from said memory, data corresponding to one or more thoroughfares and determines a desired orientation for display of said cartographic data based upon a current location of said vehicle, a direction of travel of said vehicle, and a direction of at least one of said one or more thoroughfares corresponding to said current vehicle location, wherein said direction of said at least one of said one or more thoroughfares is determined from said retrieved cartographic data. B. Operation of the Accused Devices The accused devices contain the limitations disclosed in all but the last subpart of claim 1. The accused devices receive the current vehicle location, current vehicle heading and current vehicle speed from the GPS signal each second. Upon receiving the current vehicle location from the GPS signal, the products estimate a future location of the vehicle and the orientation of the road at that location. Using the direction of the road at this estimated position, the current vehicle heading and the current vehicle speed, the accused devices generate a heading for the display, such as “East.” However, the accused devices do not display this future orientation immediately, but wait until the moment that the device has predicted the vehicle would reach that location. In other words, the direction of the road is calculated ahead of the vehicle, in the hope that the vehicle will be at that projected location at the time the device orients the screen. However, the accused devices do not determine whether the predicted location later matches the actual current location. In orienting the display, the devices rely solely on the estimate. OPINION The primary dispute with- respect to infringement of the '485 patent focuses on the last subpart of claim 1, which discloses a processor that determines the orientation of the display on the basis of “a direction of at least one of said- one or more thoroughfares corresponding to said current vehicle location.” (Before claim construction, the parties proposed a further construction of this clause, but I do not find the gloss they put on it to be particularly helpful in resolving this dispute, so I will consider the claim language directly.) Thus, this element relates to the point of the road the device uses to determine how to orient the display. The threshold question concerns the phrase “current vehicle location” and an issue of claim construction that somehow was omitted from the parties’ claim construction briefs, despite the inclusion in those briefs of numerous disputed terms that are not raised or relied on in either side’s motion for summary judgment. The question is this: does the phrase “corresponding to said current vehicle location” modify “thoroughfare” only or both “thoroughfare” and “direction”? TomTom argues that “current vehicle location” modifies “direction” and “thoroughfare,” meaning that the direction of the road is determined at the vehicle’s current location rather than at some other point on the road. Garmin argues that “current vehicle location” modifies “thoroughfare” only, meaning that the direction of the road could be determined at any point on the road that the vehicle is on or near. Neither side suggests how the claim language itself resolves this dispute. Although the phrase “current vehicle location” is closest in the clause to “thoroughfare,” the sentence is written in a way that would allow a reader to infer reasonably that the phrase modifies “direction” as well. “Direction” is separated from “current vehicle location” by prepositional phrases only, some of which appear redundant and serve no purpose but to make the claim more confusing. Further, the clause makes more sense if “current vehicle location” modifies “direction.” The direction of the road has to be determined- at some particular point. As discussed in the context of the '956 patent, in many circumstances, the direction of the road as a whole cannot be determined because it changes from one point to another. Thus, if the direction is not determined at the vehicle’s current location, the claim simply leaves that question open, which makes little sense given the question’s importance. Any ambiguity in the claim language is resolved by examining the rest of the patent. Abbott Laboratories v. Andrx Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 452 F.3d 1331, 1336 (Fed.Cir.2006) (“Where claim terms are ambiguous or disputed, then we turn to the specification as the specification is always highly relevant to the claim construction analysis. Usually, it is dispositive; it is the single best guide to the meaning of a disputed term.”) (internal quotations omitted). In numerous instances, the specification makes clear that the direction of the road “eorrespond[s] to” the vehicle’s current location. Col. 2, Ins. 14-27 (processor uses “adjacent points” to vehicle’s current location to determine road’s direction); col. 4, Ins. 10-15 (describing fig. 5, processor “calculates the direction of the thoroughfare corresponding to the calculated coordinates” of vehicle’s current location). See also col. 5, Ins. 5-10, 21-24. Garmin cites one part of the specification that shows that the processor uses the vehicle’s current location to determine the closest road when the vehicle is not on one that is recognized by the device, Garmin’s Br., dkt. # 125, at 21 n. 9 (citing col. 2, Ins. 28-31), but this does not advance Garmin’s position. TomTom does not argue that the vehicle’s current position is not used to determine the closest road, but rather that it is used to determine both the closest road and the direction of that road. Gar-min’s citation does not contradict that interpretation. The remaining question is whether the accused devices contain this element or its equivalent. TomTom says that they do not because they do not determine the direction of the road at the -vehicle’s current location, but instead at a predicted future location. Garmin does not deny that defendant’s products use a future location, but argue that the products still “orient” the display “based on” the vehicle’s current location because the predicted location is stored and used to orient the display at the time the vehicle should he at the predicted point. The problem with this argument is that it disregards the fact that the prediction is only an estimate. Defendant’s products do not use the actual current location of the vehicle; that location is never determined by defendant’s products for the purpose of determining the direction of the road. Although, as defendant’s expert testified, the hope is that the prediction would be as accurate as possible, it is still just a prediction. Because defendant’s products orient the display on the basis of a predicted location rather than the current location, I conclude as a matter of law that these products do not literally infringe the '485 patent. Further, I cannot conclude that a genuine dispute exists with respect to whether this difference is a substantial one. Ethicon Endo-Surgery, Inc. v. U.S. Surgical Corp., 149 F.3d 1309, 1315 (Fed. Cir.1998) (device infringes under doctrine of equivalents in situations in which it “differs from the claimed limitation only insubstantially”). Garmin offers no evidence and little argument to support a conclusion of infringement under the doctrine of equivalents. It simply states that the device in claim 1 and defendant’s products are equivalent because both employ “a screen oriented to the road being navigated.” This is true, but plaintiff develops no argument why the court should accept a comparison at such a high level of generality. Specifically, plaintiff has not shown that the device in claim 1 and defendant’s products use the same method to obtain the same result. Ahraxis Bioscience, Inc. v. Mayne Pharma (USA) Inc., 467 F.3d 1370, 1379 (Fed.Cir.2006) (“An accused device that ‘performs substantially the same function in substantially the same way to obtain the same result as the patented invention may infringe under [the] doctrine [of equivalents].’ ”) (quoting Graver Tank & Mfg. Co. v. Linde Air Prods. Co., 339 U.S. 605, 608, 70 S.Ct. 854, 94 L.Ed. 1097 (1950)). The evidence appears to be to the contrary. Although the device in claim 1 uses the vehicle’s current location to determine the direction of the road after retrieving particular coordinates in the processor’s memory, TomTom’s products use a predicted location. This is undoubtedly a different “way” to orient the map. As the party bearing the burden to prove that the doctrine of equivalents should apply, Gar-min is required to show why and how the difference is not substantial. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56; Applied Medical Resources Corp. v. U.S. Surgical Corp., 448 F.3d 1324, 1333 (Fed.Cir.2006) (“the party asserting infringement ... ultimately bears the burden of proof’); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322-323, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986) (summary judgment must be granted in favor of moving party when party bearing burden of proof “fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case”). Although neither side has adduced specific evidence as to the results produced by TomTom’s devices, again, a lack of evidence on this point means that Garmin’s claim fails. I conclude that defendant’s motion for summary judgment must be granted with respect to Garmin’ claim that defendant’s products infringe the '485 patent. It is therefore unnecessary to consider Tom-Tom’s defense that claim 1 was anticipated by prior art. III. U.S. PATENT NO. 6, 687,615 Invention: A GPS device that calculates a new route when the original route is unavailable, with a preference for avoiding a particular portion of the original route Asserted claim: 9 Accused devices: Tom Tom Go, Tom-Tom Go 300, TomTom Go 510, Tom-Tom Go 700, TomTom 910, TomTom Rider, TomTom One (infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(a)); TomTom Navigator 5, TomTom Navigator 6 (infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(b) and (c)) UNDISPUTED FACTS A. The Claim Claim 9 of the '615 patent discloses: A navigation aid method for performing a detour route calculation, comprising: dynamically receiving data relating to a portion of a particular thoroughfare in a route; calculating a new route to a desired destination with a preference for avoiding the particular portion of the thoroughfare in the route; and wherein calculating a new route to a desired destination includes calculating a second new route different from a first new route, wherein the first new route is a first detour route, and calculating the second new route includes calculating the second new route with a preference for avoiding a particular portion of a thoroughfare in the first detour route and the particular portion of the thoroughfare in-the route. B. Operation of the Accused Devices The accused devices calculate a new route using an “all-or-nothing” approach. When a user selects a portion of a thoroughfare that it wants to avoid, there is no possibility that the devices will calculate a new route that includes that road. OPINION With respect to Garmin’s claim for infringement of the '615 patent, the focus again is on one element of the last subpart of a claim, in this case claim 9. The question is whether TomTom’s products, when calculating a new route, have a “preference for avoiding” a particular portion of a road in the original route. The operation of TomTom’s products is undisputed with respect to this element. TomTom’s products prohibit the calculation of a new route that includes the portion of the road from the original route. Garmin argues that a device that always avoids a street necessarily possesses a preference for avoiding it. In other words the question is whether an absolute constraint is no more than a very strong preference. Garmin cites no authority for the argument that it is, which is suggestive considering that on most points Garmin has cited multiple cases even when they provide no more than modest support. In my view, it is inaccurate to characterize an absolute prohibition as no more than a strong preference to avoid. The two are categorically different. To “prefer” one thing over another is simply to give something “priority or precedence” or to consider it “more desirable or as having more value.” American Heritage Dictionary 1383 (4th ed.2000). No matter how strong, a “preference” connotes a possibility for another choice, making the term incompatible with a prohibition, which allows no exceptions. This is consistent with the August 24 opinion and order, in which I construed a “preference for avoiding” as a “possibility of avoiding.” Dkt. # 65, at 15. “Sometimes” or even “usually” is not the same as “always.” Adopting Garmin’s argument would give claim 9 a broader scope than its language allows. With respect to the doctrine of equivalents, Garmin again develops virtually no argument. It simply lists the elements of claim 9 and state that differences between the element and TomTom’s products are “insubstantial.” This not sufficient to show that there is a genuine issue of material fact. I conclude as a matter of law that TomTom’s products do not infringe the '615 patent, either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents. It is therefore unnecessary to consider TomTom’s defenses that claim 9 was both anticipated and rendered obvious by prior art. Summary judgment in favor of TomTom is appropriate on this claim. IV. U.S. PATENT NO. 6,999,873 Invention: A GPS device that calculates a new route when original route is unavailable; the user inputs the portion of the original route that should be avoided Asserted claims: 1 (independent claim), 7-9 (dependent claims), 10 (independent claim) Accused devices: Tom Tom Go, Tom-Tom Go 300, TomTom Go 510, Tom-Tom Go 700, TomTom 910, TomTom Rider, TomTom One (infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(a)); TomTom Navigator 5, TomTom Navigator 6 (infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(b) and (c)) UNDISPUTED FACTS A. The Claims Claim 1 of the '873 patent discloses: An electronic navigational aid device with detour route calculation capabilities, comprising: a processor; a memory adapted to communicate with the processor, the memory having cartographic data and a desired destination, the cartographic data including data indicative of thoroughfares of a plurality of types; a display connected to the processor and capable of displaying the cartographic data; wherein the device is adapted to process the device’s location and travel along a route; wherein the device is adapted to calculate a new route to the desired destination with a preference for avoiding a particular portion of a thoroughfare or one or more different thoroughfares in a previous route; and wherein the device is adapted to select a distance to avoid in a current route from among a number of user input options in a detour route menu. Claim 7 discloses: The device of claim 1, wherein the device includes a portable electronic navigational aid device. Claim 8 discloses: The device of claim 7, wherein the portable electronic navigational aid device includes a personal digital assistant (PDA). Claim 9 discloses: The device of claim 7 which is dependent from claim 1, wherein the portable electronic navigational aid device includes a wireless communications device. Claim 10 discloses: An electronic navigational aid device with route calculation capabilities, comprising: a processor; a memory in communication with the processor, the memory having cartographic data, the cartographic data including data indicative of thoroughfares of a plurality of types; wherein the device is adapted to calculate a route to navigate to a desired destination; a display in communication with the processor and capable of displaying the cartographic data, the route, and the device’s position; and wherein the device is adapted to calculate a new route including determining a distance to avoid from a number of integral distances. B. Operation of the Accused Devices The accused devices include a feature called the “Avoid Roadblock” option. Using this feature, the user can select from a group of preset distances to avoid a particular preset distance along a route. C. Prior Art The Visteon NavMate 2.0 navigation system includes a computer with a CD-ROM drive, an external GPS antenna to be mounted on the roof of the vehicle and a display unit to be mounted. It receives power from the vehicle when the ignition is on and from an internal battery when the ignition is off. Visteon began selling, offering for sale, and disclosing to the public the NavMate 2.0 navigation system in 1999; the application for the '615 patent was filed on December 21, 2001. (Although Garmin attempts to dispute TomTom’s proposed finding of fact showing when the NavMate went on sale, the dispute is not a genuine one. The documents TomTom cites show sales beginning in 1999 and Garmin cites no evidence contradicting this.) OPINION A. Infringement of Claims 1, 7-9 Claims 1, 7, 8 and 9 of the '873 patent included the same “preference for avoiding” element from the '615 patent. Because I have already concluded as a matter of law that TomTom does not infringe that element either literally or under the doctrine of equivalents, I conclude that Tom-Tom does not infringe these claims. B. Infringement of Claim 10 With respect to claim 10, TomTom cites little evidence regarding the way its products operate. Instead, it argues, as it is entitled to do, Celotex, 477 U.S. at 323, 106 S.Ct. 2548, that Garmin have failed to meet its burden of proof with respect to the claim limitations that (1) the “device is adapted” to “determine” the distance to avoid (TomTom argues that Garmin’s evidence shows only that the user determines the distance to avoid); and (2) the device calculates a distance from “a number of integral distances,” as opposed to just one. I agree with TomTom that Garmin does not cite any evidence showing that the accused devices determine a distance to avoid without user input or that they allow a user to choose multiple distances to be determined. I agree with Garmin, however, that neither of these alleged deficiencies is relevant because neither is required by claim 10. “Determining a distance to avoid” does not mean that the device itself must choose the distance, as TomTom asserts. Such an interpretation would conflict with the basic purpose of the invention, which is to give drivers greater control in avoiding portions of a road that they know is obstructed. Col. 2, Ins. 46A18 (“the present invention offer[s] an improved navigational route planning device which provides a user with more dynamic route calculation capabilities”). Further, the specification makes clear that “determining a distance to avoid” can “in-clud[e] a user selecting a distance to avoid in a current route from among a number of options in a detour route menu” or “a user inputting a distance.” Col. 11, Ins. 17-19, 22-23; Fig. 7. Because the accused devices allow a user to select a distance that is then calculated by the device, this limitation is met by the accused devices. TomTom’s second argument has little merit. Claim 10 does not require that the device allow calculation of multiple “distances to avoid,” as TomTom suggests. Rather, the claim language is unambiguous that a distance is determined from multiple options. Because it is undisputed that the accused devices provide multiple distances from which the user may choose one to avoid, this limitation is met. I conclude as a matter of law that the accused devices infringe claim 10 of the '873 patent. B. Anticipation Garmin does not deny that the NavMate includes all the elements of claim 10 of the ’873, save one: that the product be an electronic navigation “device” as opposed to a “system,” which is what Garmin says the NavMate is. To begin with, Garmin offers no definition of “device” within the context of the '873 patent. It provides only a conclusory allegation that the NavMate is not one because it “is an aggregation of multiple, separate components that must be installed as a system within a vehicle.” Garmin’s Add. PFOF, dkt. # 96, at ¶ 251. However, the meaning of “device” cannot be limited to exclude “separate components” because the '873 patent discloses embodiments with multiple components as well. Col. 5, Ins. 48-50 (“It will be understood that the antenna and receiver, designated by reference numeral 450, are combined schematically for illustration, but that the antenna and receiver may be separately located components.”) It is true that the manual for the Nav-Mate refers to the product consistently as a “system” rather than a “device,” but as TomTom points out, this does little to help Garmin because the '873 patent explains repeatedly that the disclosed invention includes “systems.” Abstract, col. 2, Ins. 41-48, col. 3, Ins. 48^9, col. 13, Ins. 15-25. Because the inventors did not exclude a “system” from the meaning of “device,” I see no reason to do so here. I conclude as a matter of law that the NavMate anticipated claim 10 of the '873 patent. V. U.S. PATENT NO. 6,901,330 Invention: A GPS device that provides voice guidance when the user requests it Asserted claims: 9 (dependent from claim 1, which is not asserted), 10-11 (dependent from claim 1) Accused devices: Tom Tom Go, Tom-Tom Go 300, TomTom Go 510, Tom-Tom Go 700, TomTom 910, TomTom Rider, TomTom One (infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(a)); TomTom Navigator 5, TomTom Navigator 6 (infringement under 35 U.S.C. § 271(b) and (c)) (Claim 10 is asserted against the Navigator 5 and Navigator 6 only) UNDISPUTED FACTS A. The Claims Claim 1 of the '330 patent discloses: An electronic navigational aid device with voice guidance, comprising: a processor; a memory adapted to communicate to the processor, the memory being adapted to store cartographic data and a route to a desired destination; wherein the device is adapted to process travel along the route, wherein the device is adapted to recognize when the device is approaching a decision point in the route, and wherein the device is adapted to provide voice guidance for the decision point and to recognize a user-requested prompt for voice guidance. Claim 9 discloses: The device of claim 1, wherein the electronic navigational aid device with voice guidance comprises a portable electronic navigational aid device. Claim 10 discloses: The device of claim 9, wherein the portable electronic navigational aid device includes a personal digital assistant (PDA). Claim 11 discloses: The device of claim 9, wherein the portable electronic navigational aid device includes a wireless communication device. A. Operation of the Accused Devices Tom Tom Go, TomTom Go 300, Tom-Tom Go 510, TomTom Go 700, TomTom 910, TomTom Rider and TomTom One contain each of the elements in claim 9. When combined with a PDA, TomTom Navigator 5 and TomTom Navigator 6 include each of the elements of claim 10. TomTom Go 300, TomTom Go 510, Tom-Tom Go 700, TomTom 910, TomTom Rider and TomTom One contain each of the elements in claims 11. B. Prior Art 1. Yilin Zhao textbook In 1997, Yilin Zhao published what he referred to as “the first book to provide a detailed description of both the principles and practices of modem vehicle location and navigation systems in a single source.” “[C]ombin[ing] information scattered among many different engineering fields into a single volume,” the book covers some of the building blocks of a navigation system and explains how each of these separate modules are developed and integrated. Zhao discusses a range of electronic navigational aid devices, varying from “simple systems that detect the location of a vehicle or mobile device with human intervention,” to “complex systems that navigate the vehicle automatically through the road network, assisted by real-time traffic information provided over a wireless communications network.” a. User requested voice guidance With respect to voice guidance, Zhao explains that “[t]he most popular method in current navigation systems is to provide one or a series of voice announcements to warn the driver of the approaching maneuver.” He provides several examples of voice guidance: messages having information including the distance to a maneuver point, the location of a maneuver point, and the action that must be taken at a maneuver point. Some of these include: “Drive 5 miles to Main Street,” “Right turn half a mile ahead, bear right” and “Turn right at the traffic light onto Main Street.” In the context of that discussion, Zhao further explains a “Verbal Guidance” switch. If the driver presses that switch, a message containing turning information for the next maneuver is announced. b. Personal Digital Assistants and other portable devices Zhao dedicates a section of his book to addressing speech recognition technology and its use in “providing] hands-free control of location and navigation systems.” Zhao writes that with the performance capacity of digital signal processing (DSP) chips doubling every 3 years, there has been a trend to port speech recognition technology to specialized DSPs for products such as personal digital assistant (PDA) and other hand-held or mobile platforms. Because there are so many speech recognition products available, one might consider integrating these products into various vehicle location and navigation systems. Further, “GPS/PDA, and various other technologies (terrestrial radio-based) might soon become available on a much larger scale for hand-held devices.” Zhao cites an article by another expert who predicts that hand-held portable systems will be “the navigation systems of the future.” Finally, Zhao notes that “early versions of portable systems have already reached the market, with limited functionality.” c. Wireless communication Zhao describes wireless communication with “mobile devices” and “wireless portable information devices”: “Vehicle communications require a seamless, wireless infrastructure for voice and data that can reliably and efficiently deliver real-time traffic and other information.” He summarizes technology advancements toward “more advanced hand-held location and navigation systems” and then states that “[a]s wireless communications technologies rapidly advance, various new wireless networks may become integrated with [Automatic Vehicle Location] AVL systems.” In chapter 8 of his book, Zhao discusses the integration of navigation systems with wireless communications such as cellular technology, radio data networks, paging systems and satellite communications. 2. Visteon’s NavMate System The NavMate System enables a user to “repeat voice prompts at any time by pressing the VOICE soft key.” Examples of these responses include: “In about 0.3 miles, right turn ahead,” “In about 2.3 miles, freeway exit on the right, followed by slight left turn,” “In about 1.7 miles, freeway exit on the right, followed by slight left turn.” OPINION A. Infringement TomTom makes virtually no attempt to deny that its products infringe the '330 patent. Although Garmin offers evidence and argument to support its claim that the accused devices meet each element of claims 9, 10 and 11, TomTom’s argument with respect to noninfringement is not really about infringement at all. Instead, TomTom says that Garmin’s arguments in favor of infringement support a finding of invalidity. TomTom argues repeatedly throughout its briefs that Garmin’s failure to adequately refute a fact or argument is a concession of that point. I agree, and apply the rule equally to TomTom. Accordingly, I conclude that TomTom has conceded infringement, with one small exception. With respect to claim 10, TomTom argues in its brief that the Navigator 5 and Navigator 6 do not infringe because they “may be used with organizers that do not provide voice guidance.” TomTom’s Br., dkt. # 102, at 44 (citing TomTom’s Add. PFOF, dkt. # 104, ¶ 213). However, the proposed finding of fact on which TomTom relies cites no evidence to support the allegation. Thus, there is no genuine dispute and I conclude that the Navigator 5 and Navigator 6 infringe claim 10. Procedure, I.B.2 (“Each factual proposition must be followed by a reference to evidence supporting the proposed fact.”). I turn to TomTom’s arguments regarding invalidity. B. Anticipation TomTom cites two references in the prior art that it believes anticipate claims 9, 10 and 11 of the '330 patent: Yilin Zhao’s textbook and Visteon’s Nav-Mate GPS device. Although Garmin’s claim for infringement was limited to claims 9, 10 and 11, because those claims are dependent from claim 1, Garmin may defeat a claim that prior art anticipated the dependent claims if any of the elements of claim 1 were not anticipated. With respect to both references, Garmin points to the fifth subpart of claim 1, which discloses a device that “recognize[s] a user-requested prompt for voice guidance.” I construed “voice guidance” to mean “spoken words that give accurate directions about how to navigate at a particular position.” Dkt. # 65, at 26. 1. Zhao textbook a. Claim 1 Although Garmin acknowledges that the Yilin Zhao book discloses the concept of voice guidance generally, it argues that Zhao does not disclose a user requested system of voice guidance. It is undisputed that Zhao discloses a device that (1) provides accurate voice guidance and (2) includes a “Verbal Guidance” switch, which, if pressed by the user, causes’ the device to announce “turning information for the next maneuver.” Garmin’s argument appears to be that, despite these disclosures, Zhao does not “link” the two. In other words, Zhao does not teach his readers that pressing the “Verbal Guidance” switch will trigger accurate guidance tied to the vehicle’s current location rather than a repeat of the guidance previously given. I agree with TomTom that, read in context, the Zhao reference is clear that the Verbal Guidance switch does not simply trigger the device to announce previous instructions. The quotation in the preceding paragraph shows that the device announces turning information “for the next maneuver.” Because this statement is made in the context of a larger discussion of providing accurate voice guidance information, there can be no doubt that Zhao teaches a “user-request prompt for voice guidance.” Helifix Ltd. v. Blok-Lok, Ltd., 208 F.3d 1339, 1347 (Fed.Cir.2000) (publication that “does not expressly disclose in words” claim elements “might nevertheless be anticipating if a person of ordinary skill in the art would understand” that publication disclosed those elements). b. Claims 9-10 Garmin identifies additional potential differences that apply individually to claims 9, 10 and 11. With respect to claim 9, the question is whether Zhao teaches a “portable” electronic navigation device. Again, the underlying facts are not in dispute. Zhao includes references to portable navigation devices, but the parties dispute whether these references are sufficiently concrete to qualify as anticipatory. Surprisingly, neither side cites any authority that might help define how specific a reference must be. To adequately describe an invention, the prior art must allow one of ordinary skill in the art to “make the claimed invention without undue experimentation.” In re Eisner, 381 F.3d 1125, 1128 (Fed.Cir.2004). In other words, the test is “whether one skilled in the art to which the invention pertains could take the description of the invention in the printed publication and combine it with his own knowledge of the particular art and from this combination be put in possession of the invention on which a patent is sought.” Id. In the context of claim 9, this test is not very difficult to meet. Claim 9 does not disclose the technology that would be needed to make a portable navigation device; it simply discloses the idea of having such a device. Zhao discusses portable navigation devices in various instances in his textbook. It is not clear why it is relevant whether Zhao discussed devices that were then in existence or could be made in the future. He disclosed the idea of having this invention, which is all that seems to matter for the purpose of claim 9. In any event, Zhao also discloses portable devices that were in use at the time. Although these devices may have had “limited functionality,” Garmin does not explain why that matters. A person reading Zhao more than one year before Garmin filed its application for the '330 patent would have known he could use the technology described in Zhao on a portable device. Claim 9 discloses a portable device; there is no additional limitation that the device must be perfect. Accordingly, I conclude as a matter of law that Zhao anticipated claim 9, rendering it invalid. This conclusion applies also with respect to claim 10, which discloses use of an electronic navigation device with a “personal digital assistant.” Zhao discloses multiple references to PDAs. He notes that: (1) “one might consider integrating” products such as personal digital assistants into navigation devices; (2) navigation devices using personal digital assistants “have already reached the market, with limited functionality”; (3) “GPS/PDA ... might soon become available on a much larger scale for hand-held devices.” Again, Zhao both discloses the idea of combining a PDA with an electronic navigation device and discusses examples of such devices that are already in existence. This was sufficient to enable someone with ordinary skill in the art to make the claimed invention. I conclude the Zhao anticipated this claim as well. c. Claim 11 Claim 11 adds the limitation of a “wireless communication device.” It is undisputed that Zhao discloses the use of navigation devices with “mobile devices” and “wireless portable information devices,” such as paging systems, radio data networks and satellite communications. Garmin seeks to avoid the effect of Zhao’s disclosure of such devices by arguing for the first time that the meaning of “wireless communication device” in claim 11 is limited to devices that are “necessarily local to the user.” Garmiris Br., dkt. # 95, at 62. It points to an example of a cellular phone, discussed in Figures 4A and 4B. As Garmin has pointed out countless times in other contexts, limitations in the specification may not be read into the claim itself. Arlington Indus., Inc. v. Bridgeport Fittings, Inc., 345 F.3d 1318, 1327 (Fed.Cir.2003). Stated another way, “claims will not be read restrictively unless the patentee has demonstrated a clear intention to limit the claim scope using words or expressions of manifest exclusion or restriction.” Innova/Pure Water, Inc. v. Safari Water Filtration Systems, Inc., 381 F.3d 1111, 1117 (Fed.Cir.2004) (internal quotations omitted). Thus, Garmin may not restrict the construction of a term simply by referring to one use of it in the specification. During claim construction, Garmin agreed to define “wireless communication device” without any reference to whether the device was “local to the user.” The construction provided by both sides was “a device that communicates with another device without a wired connection.” Dkt. # 61, Exh. # 6, at 4. I see no reason to further restrict a definition that satisfied all parties until one side realized that its interests would no longer be served by it. Accordingly, I conclude as a matter of law that Zhao anticipated claim 11 of the '330 patent when he disclosed using navigation devices with mobile devices and wireless portable information systems. Because I have concluded that the three asserted claims under the '330 patent are invalid under Zhao, it is unnecessary to decide whether the claims were anticipated by the NavMate system. It is also unnecessary to consider TomTom’s untimely motion to amend its answer to include the defense of inequitable conduct. That proposed defense relates to the '330 patent only. Because each of the asserted claims under that patent are invalid, any additional defenses are moot. TOMTOM’S PATENTS I. STANDING In its answer to the counterclaim, Garmin raised an “affirmative defense” that TomTom lacks standing to sue. However, Garmin did not raise this issue in its motion for summary judgment, which was limited to arguments relating to nonin-fringement and invalidity. It was left to TomTom to argue (in the very last section of its motion for summary judgment, dkt. # 80, at 67-70) that Garmin “cannot prove” that TomTom lacks standing. In its response, Garmin does not argue that TomTom actually lacks standing, only that its “affirmative defense” should not be dismissed because there is a “significant factual issue” with respect to the ownership of the '042, '412 and '538 patents. Garmin does not suggest that the court should refrain from deciding the merits until the standing issue is resolved. The parties’ treatment of this issue raises numerous problems. First, standing is not an affirmative defense and Garmin does not have to prove that Tom-Tom lacks it. Standing is a question of subject matter jurisdiction, which means the party bringing the claim has the burden to prove that it has standing to do so. Discovery House, Inc. v. Consolidated City of Indianapolis, 319 F.3d 277, 279 (7th Cir.2003). More important, because standing is jurisdictional, it is not an issue that can be argued in the alternative in the event that Garmin’s arguments on the merits of TomTom’s claims are unsuccessful. Rather, it is a threshold question that must be answered in the affirmative before a court may consider a claim’s merits. Vermont Agency of Natural Resources v. United States ex rel. Stevens, 529 U.S. 765, 778, 120 S.Ct. 1858, 146 L.Ed.2d 836 (2000) (“Questions of jurisdiction, of course, should be given priority — since if there is no jurisdiction there is no authority to sit in judgment of anything else.”). In other words, I must determine whether TomTom has standing to bring its claims before I can determine whether Garmin infringed the patents identified in those claims. These are well established principles of which counsel are undoubtedly aware. I fault counsel for both sides for burying this issue in the back of a brief rather than giving it priority as they are required to do. Garmin should have brought a motion to dismiss long ago if it believed that Tom-Tom did not have standing to sue. If TomTom does not have standing, this court lacked authority to issue an opinion construing the meaning of the '042, ’412 and '538 patents. I am persuaded, however, that there is no genuine dispute on the question whether TomTom has standing to sue. Under 35 U.S.C. § 271, “patentees” are granted the right to sue for infringement. A “pat-entee” is defined in 35 U.S.C. § 100(d) as “not only the patentee to whom the patent was issued but also the successors in title to the patentee.” TomTom has proposed as a fact that “Baldivi B.V. is the owner by assignment” of the ’412 patent, the '042 patent and the '538 patent and that Baldivi has granted TomTom, Inc. an exclusive license under those patents. TomTom’s PFOF ¶¶ 6, 19-21, 33-35 and 47-48, dkt. # 75 (citing Exhs. 20 and 22 attached to aff. of Melody Habecker, dkt. # 86). Garmin does not dispute these proposed findings with any evidence, but only cites several of its own proposed findings, none of which has any relation to the question of patent ownership. Garmin’s Resp. to TomTom’s PFOF ¶¶ 6, 19-21, 33-35 and 47-48, dkt. #98 (citin