Patents by Inventor Ronald W. Christain

Ronald W. Christain 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: 4363936
    Abstract: A private telephone network that includes multifunction telephones. Multifunction telephones are connected to common equipment by a voice signal path and a data signal path. Supervisory information passes over the data signal path in the form of polled messages that are sent from the common equipment to the telephone. Sense information is received by the common equipment from the telephone. The transmission is by frequency modulation, such as frequency-shift-keying modulation, techniques. At the multifunction telephone, a programmed microcomputer contains three blocks of instructions for enabling the microcomputer to perform background operations, to respond to the initial receipt of a message, and to thereafter transmit and decode the message. Further, in response to the decoding block of instructions, that are provided on a fixed time basis, the microcomputer is able to transmit frequency-shift-keyed signals without the need for a separate frequency-shift-keyed transmitter.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 11, 1980
    Date of Patent: December 14, 1982
    Assignee: Stromberg-Carlson Corporation
    Inventors: Ronald W. Christain, Uwe A. Pommerening, Stanley L. Russell, Barry Slingsby, Julian W. West
  • Patent number: 4322581
    Abstract: A private telephone network that includes multifunction telephones. Multifunction telephones are connected to common equipment by a voice signal path and a data signal path. Supervisory information passes over the data signal path in the form of polled messages that are sent from the common equipment to the telephone. Sense information is received by the common equipment from the telephone. The transmission is by frequency modulation, such as frequency-shift-keying modulation, techniques. At the multifunction telephone, a programmed microcomputer contains three blocks of instructions for enabling the microcomputer to perform background operations, to respond to the initial receipt of a message, and to thereafter transmit and decode the message. Further, in response to the decoding block of instructions, that are provided on a fixed time basis, the microcomputer is able to transmit frequency-shift-keyed signals without the need for a separate frequency-shift-keyed transmitter.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 11, 1980
    Date of Patent: March 30, 1982
    Assignee: Stromberg-Carlson Corporation
    Inventors: Ronald W. Christain, Barry Slingsby