Patents by Inventor William Winston Williams

William Winston Williams 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: 7826466
    Abstract: Media Access Control (MAC) layer transmit and receive buffering with multi-level prioritization. The receive buffering allocates receive buffers for receiving frame data from a PHY interface in priority order using both a static and dynamic buffer allocation, and delivers completed buffers queued in a multi-level priority queue to a host interface highest priority first. The transmit buffering delivers completed buffers queued in a multi-level priority queue to the PHY interface in priority order. When the multi-level priority queue contains a buffer that is higher priority than one being prepared for transmit, a priority-based interruption causes the transmit processing of the buffer to be suspended at its current state with the higher priority buffer taking its place. Upon completion of the higher priority buffer, the suspended buffer is resumed at its current state.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 26, 2002
    Date of Patent: November 2, 2010
    Assignee: Atheros Communications, Inc.
    Inventors: James Philip Patella, William E. Earnshaw, Stanley J. Kostoff, II, William Winston Williams, Timothy Robert Gargrave
  • Publication number: 20040001499
    Abstract: Media Access Control (MAC) layer transmit and receive buffering with multi-level prioritization. The receive buffering allocates receive buffers for receiving frame data from a PHY interface in priority order using both a static and dynamic buffer allocation, and delivers completed buffers queued in a multi-level priority queue to a host interface highest priority first. The transmit buffering delivers completed buffers queued in a multi-level priority queue to the PHY interface in priority order. When the multi-level priority queue contains a buffer that is higher priority than one being prepared for transmit, a priority-based interruption causes the transmit processing of the buffer to be suspended at its current state with the higher priority buffer taking its place. Upon completion of the higher priority buffer, the suspended buffer is resumed at its current state.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 26, 2002
    Publication date: January 1, 2004
    Inventors: James Philip Patella, William E. Earnshaw, Stanley J. Kostoff, William Winston Williams, Timothy Robert Gargrave