Patents by Inventor Anne S. Kellerman

Anne S. Kellerman has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 4514803
    Abstract: Methods of applying LSI and microprocessors to the design of microprocessor-based LSI implementation of mainframe processors are described. A mainframe instruction set is partitioned into two or more subsets, each of which can be implemented by a microprocessor having special on-chip microcode or by a standard off-the-shelf microprocessor running programs written for that purpose. Alternatively, one or more of the subsets can be implemented by a single microprocessor. In addition, a subset of the partitioned instruction set can be implemented by emulating software, by off-chip vertical or horizontal microcode, or by primitives. But, however partitioning is implemented, the end result thereof is to keep the critical flow paths, associated with the most frequently used instruction subset, as short as possible by constraining them to a single chip.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 26, 1982
    Date of Patent: April 30, 1985
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Palmer W. Agnew, Joseph P. Buonomo, Steven R. Houghtalen, Anne S. Kellerman, Raymond E. Losinger, James W. Valashinas
  • Patent number: 4509122
    Abstract: A method of transferring information between a host data processing system and the private storage media of an interactive text processing system, and the reverse, under control of the host while the text processing system is emulating a host terminal. All information intended to be written to or read from the text processor's diskette and commands therefor, are marked with a unique indicator that is recognized by emulation software and utilized thereby to steer said commands and information to a file transfer program and away from the emulated terminal screen. This is done in a manner that is transparent to the host which handles transferred information as though it were being written to or returned from the emulated screen.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 18, 1982
    Date of Patent: April 2, 1985
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Palmer W. Agnew, John S. Coviello, Linda S. Green, Anne S. Kellerman
  • Patent number: 4503516
    Abstract: A method of transforming a first editable form of a document prepared by an interactive text processing system into a second and incompatible editable form for use in another interactive or batch text processing system through the use of a transform mechanism is described. A significant step of this method requires the identification of a limited number of key state variables, whose values collectively identify the necessary state information for transforming the first document form to the second. After the key state variables have been identified, the actual number of combinations thereof is determined. For each first document form input item encountered by the transform mechanism, and for each combination of key state variables in which that input item can be encountered, one or more output items for the second document form is explicitly defined as the transform thereof. In addition, the state of the transform mechanism after each such transform has occurred, must also be specified.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 18, 1982
    Date of Patent: March 5, 1985
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Palmer W. Agnew, John J. Erhard, Anne S. Kellerman
  • Patent number: 4498147
    Abstract: A method of transforming a first editable form of a document prepared by a batch text processing system into a second and incompatible editable form for use in another batch or an interactive text processing system through the use of a transform mechanism is described. A significant step of this method requires the identification of a limited number of key state variables, whose values reflect information concerning source document controls that have been read in a sequence thereof. The next step requires a definition of control compatibility, which source document controls are compatible with other source controls that set the state variables to their current values in that sequence. After control compatibility has been determined, it will be necessary to define the output items that need to be written for the target document as part of the transformation of any possible input sequence.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 18, 1982
    Date of Patent: February 5, 1985
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Palmer W. Agnew, Anne S. Kellerman, Grayson W. Randall