Patents by Inventor Colin Lingwood Mallows

Colin Lingwood Mallows 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: 6707903
    Abstract: An automated method for servicing a plurality of work items within committed times. A workflow including two or more work activities is assigned for each of the plurality of work items and a commitment is assigned either to each workflow or to each work item in each workflow. Queued work items are automatically assigned to a next available agent based on an activity state. A short-term predictor provides early detection of work items that are at risk of failing to meet their commitments. A long-term predictor detects backlogs of work items where excessive delays in queue are likely to put work items at risk of failing to meet their commitments. An activity's state can also cause additional reserve and backup agents to be assigned to it, to service work items from its queue before their commitments are missed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 5, 2003
    Date of Patent: March 16, 2004
    Assignee: Avaya, Inc.
    Inventors: Didina Burok, Andrew D. Flockhart, James M. Landwehr, Colin Lingwood Mallows, Sami Joseph Qutub, Rafal Sitkowski, Leta G. Herman, Peter J. Matteo, Larry John Roybal, Robert C. Steiner, Wen-Hua Ju, Gail Levenelm
  • Publication number: 20030152212
    Abstract: An automated method for servicing a plurality of work items within committed times. A workflow including two or more work activities is assigned for each of the plurality of work items and a commitment is assigned either to each workflow or to each work item in each workflow. Queued work items are automatically assigned to a next available agent based on an activity state. A short-term predictor provides early detection of work items that are at risk of failing to meet their commitments. A long-term predictor detects backlogs of work items where excessive delays in queue are likely to put work items at risk of failing to meet their commitments. An activity's state can also cause additional reserve and backup agents to be assigned to it, to service work items from its queue before their commitments are missed.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 5, 2003
    Publication date: August 14, 2003
    Inventors: Didina Burok, Andrew D. Flockhart, James M. Landwehr, Colin Lingwood Mallows, Sami Joseph Qutub, Rafal Sitkowski, Leta G. Herman, Peter J. Matteo, Larry John Roybal, Robert C. Steiner, Wen-Hua Ju, Gail Levenelm