Patents Assigned to Keystone Technology Solutions, LLC
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Publication number: 20090273448Abstract: Methods and apparatus, including computer program products, for a computer with a radio frequency identification (RFID) reader. A system includes a processor, a store of codes representing goods and services cross-referenced to supplemental information, a radio frequency identification (RFID) interrogator, an input/output tag (IO), and a memory including a process that matches a received code from the RFID interrogator to a code in the store of codes and to display supplemental information of a good or service on the IO tag.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 5, 2008Publication date: November 5, 2009Applicant: KEYSTONE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLCInventor: Mark E. Tuttle
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Publication number: 20090273449Abstract: A radio frequency identification (RFID) interrogator housed in a portable platform that includes at least one antenna, a transceiver for transmitting and receiving a radio frequency (RF) signal through the antenna, and a controller in communication with the transceiver for adjusting power and direction of the transmitted RF signal. The controller can be configured to adjust the antenna orientation, and can also selectively activate and deactivate one or more antennas.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 5, 2008Publication date: November 5, 2009Applicant: KEYSTONE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLCInventor: Mark E. Tuttle
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Publication number: 20090273473Abstract: Methods and apparatus, including computer program products, for a power conserving active RFID label. A system for performing radio frequency (RF) communications includes a radio frequency identification (RFID) tag attached to one or more items to be tracked, the RFID tag configured to receive a request and a time interval indicating a time for determining a temperature and a battery voltage, and to adjust the time interval at a time of determining the temperature and the battery voltage if the detected voltage is less than a predetermined voltage, and an interrogator communicatively coupled to one or more antennas to transmit one or more requests to the RFID tag and to receive one or more responses, at least one response including a time, temperature and battery voltage.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 5, 2008Publication date: November 5, 2009Applicant: KEYSTONE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLCInventor: Mark E. Tuttle
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Publication number: 20090273453Abstract: Methods and apparatus, including computer program products, for item identification using RFID. A system includes a radio frequency identification (RFID) interrogator, and a computer coupled to the RFID interrogator, the computer including a database comprising RFID identification codes and items associated with the RFID identification codes, two or more the RFID identification codes associated with a single item.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 5, 2008Publication date: November 5, 2009Applicant: KEYSTONE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLCInventor: Mark E. Tuttle
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Publication number: 20090266896Abstract: Methods and systems of attaching a radio transceiver to an antenna. At least some of the illustrative embodiments are systems comprising an antenna and an integrated circuit configured to operate as a radio transceiver. The antenna comprises a ground plane having a first edge surface, and an active element having a second edge surface. The ground plane and the active element are retained together such that the first and second edge surfaces are substantially coplanar and form an antenna edge. The integrated circuit is configured to operate as a radio transceiver, and the integrated circuit is mechanically coupled to the edge of the antenna and electrically coupled to the active element.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 2, 2009Publication date: October 29, 2009Applicant: KEYSTONE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLCInventor: John R. TUTTLE
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Publication number: 20090257473Abstract: Methods and apparatus, including computer program products, for RFID fast hop frequency hopping. A method including transmitting from a radio frequency identification (RFID) interrogator a continuous wave un-modulated radio frequency (RF) signal from a frequency synthesizer based on digital waveform reconstruction with Direct Memory Access (DMA), the continuous wave un-modulated RF signal conforming to a fast hop frequency hopping protocol in which each hop of a plurality of hops spans at least one bit but less than the totality of bits to be sent from a single RFID device data in a single communications session.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 15, 2008Publication date: October 15, 2009Applicant: KEYSTONE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLCInventor: John R. Tuttle
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Publication number: 20090257474Abstract: Methods and apparatus, including computer program products, for a fast hop frequency hopping protocol. A method includes transmitting from a radio frequency identification (RFID) interrogator a continuous wave un-modulated radio frequency (RF) signal conforming to a fast hop frequency hopping protocol in which each hop of a plurality of hops spans at least one bit but less than the totality of bits to be sent from a single RFID device data in a single communications session.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 15, 2008Publication date: October 15, 2009Applicant: KEYSTONE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLCInventor: John R. Tuttle
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Patent number: 7602287Abstract: The present invention provides radio frequency identification devices, remote communication devices, identification systems, communication methods, and identification methods. A radio frequency identification device according to one aspect includes a substrate; communication circuitry coupled with the substrate and configured to receive a wireless signal including an identifier, to process the identifier of the wireless signal and to output a control signal responsive to the processing of the identifier; and indication circuitry coupled with the communication circuitry and configured to receive the control signal and to indicate presence of the radio frequency identification device responsive to the control signal.Type: GrantFiled: August 30, 2007Date of Patent: October 13, 2009Assignee: Keystone Technology Solutions, LLCInventor: Scott T. Trosper
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Patent number: 7593708Abstract: Some embodiments include a method disposing an integrated circuit die within a housing, the integrated circuit die having integrated circuitry formed thereon, the integrated circuitry including first transponder circuitry configured to transmit and receive radio frequency signals, wherein the integrated circuit die is void of external electrical connections for anything except power supply external connections; and disposing second transponder circuitry, discrete from the first transponder circuitry, within the housing, the second transponder circuitry being configured to transmit and receive radio frequency signals, wherein the first and second transponder circuitry are configured to establish wireless communication between one another within the housing, the second transponder circuitry being disposed within 24 inches of the first transponder circuitry within the housing.Type: GrantFiled: August 29, 2006Date of Patent: September 22, 2009Assignee: Keystone Technology Solutions, LLCInventor: Patrick W. Tandy
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Patent number: 7592898Abstract: A wireless communication system includes an interrogator including a housing including circuitry configured to generate a forward link communication signal; communication circuitry configured to communicate the forward link communication signal; and a communication station remotely located with respect to the housing and configured to receive the forward link communication signal from the communication circuitry and to radiate a forward link wireless signal corresponding to the forward link communication signal; and at least one remote communication device configured to receive the forward link wireless signal.Type: GrantFiled: March 9, 1999Date of Patent: September 22, 2009Assignee: Keystone Technology Solutions, LLCInventors: David K. Ovard, Roy Greeff
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Publication number: 20090224884Abstract: Methods and apparatuses to secure data transmission in a radio frequency identification (RFID) system against eavesdropping, using multiple communication channels. In one embodiment, a method includes communicating key information and cipher text generated based on the key information, or plain text, using a plurality of different, distinct and separate communication channels connected to an RFID tag.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 6, 2008Publication date: September 10, 2009Applicant: KEYSTONE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLCInventor: John R. TUTTLE
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Patent number: 7583192Abstract: The present invention teaches a method of manufacturing an enclosed transceiver, such as a radio frequency identification (“RFID”) tag. Structurally, in one embodiment, the tag comprises an integrated circuit (IC) chip, and an RF antenna mounted on a thin film substrate powered by a thin film battery. A variety of antenna geometries are compatible with the above tag construction. These include monopole antennas, dipole antennas, dual dipole antennas, a combination of dipole and loop antennas. Further, in another embodiment, the antennas are positioned either within the plane of the thin film battery or superjacent to the thin film battery.Type: GrantFiled: December 11, 2006Date of Patent: September 1, 2009Assignee: Keystone Technology Solutions, LLCInventor: John R. Tuttle
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Publication number: 20090214037Abstract: Methods and apparatuses to secure data transmission in a radio frequency identification (RFID) system and other Vernam-cipher based cryptography methods against eavesdropping. In one embodiment, a method implemented in an RFID system includes generating an encryption key using previously shared information and random information received in a current communication session and securing a communication in the current session using the encryption key.Type: ApplicationFiled: February 26, 2008Publication date: August 27, 2009Applicant: KEYSTONE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLCInventor: John R. TUTTLE
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Patent number: 7570151Abstract: A reservation system includes a database configured to store information identifying customers who have purchased tickets for an event, information about the scheduled time for the event, and information identifying customers who have arrived; a controller configured to operate on the database; and an interrogator in communication with the controller, and an antenna coupled to the interrogator, the interrogator being configured to send wireless commands requesting wireless responses from portable identification devices, the portable identification devices being configured to transmit identifying data in response to receiving a command, the interrogator having a predetermined communications range and being configured to communicate with portable identification devices within the predetermined communications range, the controller being configured to modify the database to indicate that one of the customers who purchased a ticket has arrived, responsive to the interrogator receiving a response from the portableType: GrantFiled: November 10, 2005Date of Patent: August 4, 2009Assignee: Keystone Technology Solutions, LLCInventor: John R. Tuttle
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Patent number: 7545256Abstract: To identify an RFID tag in a field of RFID tags, an interrogator sends a series of commands to implement an arbitration scheme. The commands include differentiation, selection, and modulation information. The tag uses the differentiation information to differentiate commands sent by the interrogator from commands sent by other interrogators that may be within communication range of the tag. The selection information is used by the tag to determine if the tag is a member of a group selected by the interrogator for response to the interrogator. If the tag is a member of the selected group, the tag may send a reply that is modulated using a modulation type selected by the modulation information. In accordance with one of the modulation types, one of three different pulse waveforms is selected by the interrogator via the modulation information to multiply with the baseband waveform of the reply from the tag.Type: GrantFiled: November 28, 2006Date of Patent: June 9, 2009Assignee: Keystone Technology Solutions, LLCInventors: James E. O'Toole, John R. Tuttle, Mark E. Tuttle, Tyler A. Lowrey, Kevin M. Devereaux, George E. Pax, Brian P. Higgins, Shu-Sun Yu, David K. Ovard, Robert R. Rotzoll
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Patent number: 7532121Abstract: The present invention provides radio frequency identification devices, remote communication devices, identification systems, communication methods, and identification methods. A radio frequency identification device according to one aspect includes a substrate; communication circuitry coupled with the substrate and configured to receive a wireless signal including an identifier, to process the identifier of the wireless signal and to output a control signal responsive to the processing of the identifier; and indication circuitry coupled with the communication circuitry and configured to receive the control signal and to indicate presence of the radio frequency identification device responsive to the control signal.Type: GrantFiled: August 30, 2007Date of Patent: May 12, 2009Assignee: Keystone Technology Solutions, LLCInventor: Scott T. Trosper
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Publication number: 20090109041Abstract: Methods and apparatus, including computer program products, for radio frequency identification (RFID) label time synchronization. A method includes, in a radio frequency identification (RFID) interrogator having an antenna, transceiver, a clock, a memory and a central processing unit (CPU), initializing a RFID tag with a label start time and a time to record data, the label start time representing an actual start time indicated by the clock, receiving a label stop time, a label time and logged data from an interrogation of the RFID tag, and compensating the label time for a drift between the label stop time and an actual stop time.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 26, 2007Publication date: April 30, 2009Applicant: KEYSTONE TECHNOLOGY SOLUTIONS, LLCInventor: Roy Edgar Greeff
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Patent number: 7518515Abstract: In one embodiment a method, which may be implemented on a system, is provided to have RFID tags provide a human perceptible signal when identified by an interrogator.Type: GrantFiled: October 16, 2006Date of Patent: April 14, 2009Assignee: Keystone Technology Solutions, LLCInventor: Scott T. Trosper
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Publication number: 20090091428Abstract: A method and system to determine physical parameters as between an RFID tag and a reader. At least some of the illustrative embodiments are methods comprising generating an antenna feed signal, and transmitting a first electromagnetic wave to a radio frequency device (by coupling the antenna feed signal to a reading antenna), receiving a backscattered electromagnetic wave from the radio frequency device to create a received signal, calculating a combined signal based on the antenna feed signal and received signal, and determining relative velocity between the radio frequency device and the reading antenna based on the combined signal.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 7, 2008Publication date: April 9, 2009Applicant: Keystone Technology Solutions, LLCInventor: John R. Tuttle
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Patent number: RE40686Abstract: A method of establishing wireless communications between an interrogator and individual ones of multiple wireless identification devices, the method comprising utilizing a tree search method to attempt to identify individual ones of the multiple wireless identification devices so as to be able to perform communications, without collision, between the interrogator and individual ones of the multiple wireless identification devices, a search tree being defined for the tree search method, the tree having multiple nodes respectively representing subgroups of the multiple wireless identification devices, wherein the interrogator transmits a command at a node, requesting that devices within the subgroup represented by the node respond, wherein the interrogator determines if a collision occurs in response to the command and, if not, repeats the command at the same node.Type: GrantFiled: August 28, 2003Date of Patent: March 31, 2009Assignee: Keystone Technology Solutions, LLCInventor: Clifton W. Wood, Jr.