Patents by Inventor Lee D. Gibbons

Lee D. Gibbons 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: 7936794
    Abstract: Clock correlation can be achieved, for example, utilizing the RTP stream between a sender and receiver by determining a baseline at the start of, for example, a communication. This baseline is derived as a point in time from an arriving packet and represents a point from which subsequent packets deviate. Using this baseline, an early packet or a late packet can be detected. An early packet pushes the baseline down to that earlier point, while late arriving packets, if they are arriving late for a continuous period of time, represents a shift in the opposite direction from the baseline, resulting in a baseline moving to the “earliest” packet out of the sequence of the late arriving packets.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 7, 2007
    Date of Patent: May 3, 2011
    Assignee: Avaya Inc.
    Inventors: Lee D. Gibbons, Luke A. Tucker, Alexander Scholte, Mei-Sing Ong
  • Patent number: 7912075
    Abstract: The present invention is directed, in various embodiments, to a hardware supported duplication token for arbitrating active and standby module states, a weighted state of health exchange for identifying unhealthy module states and relative module health states, and a packet sequence number synchronization technique for maintaining desired levels of synchronization between the active and standby modules.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 26, 2006
    Date of Patent: March 22, 2011
    Assignee: Avaya Inc.
    Inventors: David S. Holland, Matthew A. Chandler, Michael A. Tamny, Benny Rodrig, Dave Sueper, Fraser A. McKinnon, Dicky A. Pillai, Bhum C. Kim, Randall B. Kramer, Luke A. Tucker, Lee D. Gibbons, Margaret L. Kelley-Johnson
  • Publication number: 20090041020
    Abstract: Clock correlation can be achieved, for example, utilizing the RTP stream between a sender and receiver by determining a baseline at the start of, for example, a communication. This baseline is derived as a point in time from an arriving packet and represents a point from which subsequent packets deviate. Using this baseline, an early packet or a late packet can be detected. An early packet pushes the baseline down to that earlier point, while late arriving packets, if they are arriving late for a continuous period of time, represents a shift in the opposite direction from the baseline, resulting in a baseline moving to the “earliest” packet out of the sequence of the late arriving packets.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 7, 2007
    Publication date: February 12, 2009
    Applicant: AVAYA TECHNOLOGY LLC
    Inventors: Lee D. Gibbons, Luke A. Tucker, Alexander Scholte, Mei-Sing Ong