题目内容

2008年5月,乔某和占某合作共同研制出一种太阳能集热器。同年7月中旬,占某到美国攻读博士学位。2008年8月2日,乔某以10万元的价格将该太阳能集热器专利申请权转让给王某。同月12日,王某以邮寄的方式向中国知识产权局提出了该太阳能集热器实用新型专利申请,该局于王某寄出申请的第4日收到其申请。2010年3月11日,该项实用新型太阳能集热器被授予专利权,王某取得专利权后即缴纳了年费。2011年1月10日,王某发现广东省S有限公司生产的太阳能热水器的产品和包装上标注了其太阳能集热器的专利号,于是以S有限公司侵犯其专利权为由向法院提起诉讼,要求停止侵权,赔偿损失。 根据上述事实和专利法及相关法律的规定。回答下列问题:1.该太阳能集热器的专利申请权属于谁并说明理由。

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Visitors to St. Paul Cathedral are sometimes astonished as they walk round the space under the arch to come up a statue which would appear to be that of a retired armed man meditating upon a wasted life. They are still more astonished when they see under it an inscription indicating that it represents the English writer, Samuel Johnson. The statue is by Bacon, but it is not one of his best works. The figure is, as often in eighteenth-century sculpture, clothed only in a loose robe that leaves arms, legs and one shoulder hare. But the strangeness for us is not one of costume only. If we know anything of Johnson, we know that he was constantly ill all through his life; and whether we know anything of him or not we are apt to think of a literary man as a delicate, weakly, nervous sort of person. Nothing can be further from that than the muscular statue. And in this matter the statue is perfectly right. And the fact which it reports is far from being unimportant. The body and the mind are closely interwoven in all of us, and certainly in Johnson’s case the influence of the body was extremely oblivious. His melancholy, his constantly repeated conviction of the general un-happiness of human life, was certainly the result of his constitutional infirmities. On the other hand, his courage, and his entire indifference to pain, was partly due to his great bodily strength. Perhaps the vein of rudeness, almost of fierceness, which sometimes showed itself in his conversation, was the natural tem-per of an invalid and suffering giant. That at any rate is what he was. He was the victim from childhood of a disease that resembled St. Vitus’s dance. He never knew the natural joy of a free and vigorous use of his limbs; when he walked it was like the struggling walk of one in irons. All accounts agree that his strange gestures and contortions were painful for his friends to witness and attracted crows of starters in the streets. But Reynolds says that he could sit still for his portrait to be taken, and that when his mind was engaged by a conversation the convulsions ceased. In any case, it is certain that neither this perpetual misery, nor his constant fear of losing his reason, nor his many grave attacks of illness, ever induced him to surrender the privileges that belonged to his physical strength. He justly thought no character so disagreeable as that of a chronic invalid, and was determined not to be one himself. He had known what it was to live on four pence a day and scorned the life of sofa cushions and tea into which well-attended old gentle-men so easily slip. According to the passage, which is NOT true to Johnson

A. He once did not have enough money to live on.
B. He lived singly in the past.
C. He was a little cynical.
D. He received little care from his friends.

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