Patents by Inventor Steven P. Zagame

Steven P. Zagame 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: 5138611
    Abstract: A computer interconnect coupler has channel transmitters and channel receivers and logic circuitry for the routing of messages from the channel receivers which are addressed to the channel transmitters. When a message is received by a channel receiver, the channel receiver stores the beginning portion of the message in a first-in-first-out buffer, and sends a route message request to central switch logic. If the destination transmitter or receiver is busy, the central logic places the message request on a destination queue and returns a signal to the requesting source transmitter to turn on a flow control signal which is transmitted back to the data processing device having originated the message. Any message addressed to this data processing device, however, is inserted into the flow control carrier with pauses both before and after the message, and provisions are also made to allow the data processing device to return an acknowledgment responsive to the incoming message.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 12, 1991
    Date of Patent: August 11, 1992
    Assignee: Digital Equipment Corporation
    Inventors: Ronald C. Carn, Donald R. Metz, Steven P. Zagame, Robert C. Kirk, Allan R. Kent, Harold A. Read, Barry A. Henry, Charles E. Kaczor, Milton V. Mills
  • Patent number: 5084871
    Abstract: A computer interconnect coupler has channel transmitters and logic and channel receivers and logic circuitry for the routing of messages from the channel receivers which are addressed to the channel transmitters. When a message is received by a channel receiver, the channel receiver stores the beginning portion of the message in a first-in-first-out buffer, and sends a route message request to central switch logic. If the destination transmitter or receiver is busy, the central logic places the message request on a destination queue and returns a signal to the requesting source transmitter to turn on a flow control signal which is transmitted back to the data processing device having originated the message. Any message addressed to this data processing device, however, is inserted into the flow control carrier with pauses both before and after the message, and provisions are also made to allow the data processing device to return an ackowledgement responsive to the incoming message.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 3, 1989
    Date of Patent: January 28, 1992
    Assignee: Digital Equipment Corporation
    Inventors: Ronald C. Carn, Donald R. Metz, Steven P. Zagame, Robert C. Kirk, Allan R. Kent, Harold A. Read, Barry A. Henry, Charles E. Kaczor, Milton V. Mills
  • Patent number: 4887076
    Abstract: A computer interconnect coupler has channel transmitters and channel receivers and logic circuitry for the routing of messages from the channel receivers which are addressed to the channel transmitters. When a message is received by a channel receiver, the channel receiver stores the beginning portion of the message in a first-in-first-out buffer, and sends a route message request to central switch logic. If the destination transmitter or receiver is busy, the central logic places the message request on a destination queue and returns a signal to the requesting source transmitter to turn on a flow control signal which is transmitted back to the data processing device having originated the message. Any message addressed to this data processing device, however, is inserted into the flow control carrier with pauses both before and after the message, and provisions are also made to allow the data processing data to return an acknowledgment responsive to the incoming message.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 16, 1987
    Date of Patent: December 12, 1989
    Assignee: Digital Equipment Corporation
    Inventors: Allan R. Kent, Harold A. Read, Barry A. Henry, Charles E. Kaczor, Milton V. Mills, Ronald C. Carn, Donald R. Metz, Steven P. Zagame, Robert C. Kirk