In its KSR v. Teleflex decision, the Supreme Court acknowledged that nearly all innovations rely upon building blocks discovered long ago but ruled that patentability requires more than predictable combinations of prior art. The court opined that if a prior art combination merely yields results expected by those of ordinarily skill in the art, then the combination is not deserving of a patent--even if innovative. Furthermore, disqualifying prior art can come from any field--and reviews of prior art elements require consideration of "functionality." The "Teaching, Suggestion, or Motivation" test for obviousness was further constrained when the Federal Circuit was chided for stating "obvious to try" is not the same as Sec. 103 obviousness.