Patents by Inventor Alexander Gounares
Alexander Gounares 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).
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Publication number: 20060218642Abstract: Authorization of a file on a computer is provided for using a cryptographic hash of the file or other identifier to find one or more content ratings. Content ratings, coupled with source and publisher ratings, are used to evaluate the file against an authorization policy set up by a user, manufacturer, or corporate IT department. Files which are suspect due to low ratings are not authorized to run on the computer. Files for which little information can be found are left to the user to decide whether to authorize. Rating services provide aggregated content ratings based on editorial or user reviews, and index their searchable ratings based on cryptographic hashes of the files being evaluated. Rating services provide allow lists and exclude lists or may provide individual responses to queries containing cryptographic hashes of files.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 22, 2005Publication date: September 28, 2006Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Ashok Kuppusamy, Alexander Gounares, Elissa Murphy, Raymond Endres
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Publication number: 20060093219Abstract: The present invention relates to interfacing with electronic ink. Ink is stored in a data structure that permits later retrieval by applications. The ink includes stroke information and may include property information. Through various programming interfaces, one may interact with the ink through methods and setting or retrieving properties. Other objects and collections may be used as well in conjunction with the ink objects.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 16, 2005Publication date: May 4, 2006Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Alexander Gounares, Steve Dodge, Timothy Kannapel, Rudolph Balaz, Subha Bhattacharyay, Manoj Biswas, Robert Chambers, Bodin Dresevic, Stephen Fisher, Arin Goldberg, Gregory Hullender, Brigette Krantz, Todd Torset, Jerome Turner, Andrew Silverman, Shiraz Somji
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Publication number: 20060093218Abstract: The present invention relates to interfacing with electronic ink. Ink is stored in a data structure that permits later retrieval by applications. The ink includes stroke information and may include property information. Through various programming interfaces, one may interact with the ink through methods and setting or retrieving properties. Other objects and collections may be used as well in conjunction with the ink objects.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 16, 2005Publication date: May 4, 2006Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Alexander Gounares, Steve Dodge, Timothy Kannapel, Rudolph Balaz, Subha Bhattacharyay, Manoj Biswas, Robert Chambers, Bodin Dresevic, Stephen Fisher, Arin Goldberg, Gregory Hullender, Brigette Krantz, Todd Torset, Jerome Turner, Andrew Silverman, Shiraz Somji
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Publication number: 20050229117Abstract: A system and process for capturing and implementing handwritten gestures is described. A user may use gestures to quickly command a pen-based input device to perform operations. Using the described embodiments, users may edit text or handwritten ink using a pen in a pen-based computing platform and have the edits affect the text or ink.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 17, 2005Publication date: October 13, 2005Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Gregory Hullender, Alexander Gounares
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Patent number: 6938222Abstract: A system and process for capturing and implementing handwritten gestures is described. A user may use gestures to quickly command a pen-based input device to perform operations. Using the described embodiments, users may edit text or handwritten ink using a pen in a pen-based computing platform and have the edits affect the text or ink.Type: GrantFiled: February 8, 2002Date of Patent: August 30, 2005Assignee: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Gregory Hullender, Alexander Gounares
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Publication number: 20050125377Abstract: An architecture integrates spreadsheet functionality into tables commonly used in word processing programs and HTML documents. The architecture presents a table user interface (UI) that resembles a table when not being edited and adds spreadsheet elements to the table when being edited. Underlying the table UI, the architecture separates data handling functions from presentation functions. The architecture includes a table appearance manager to manage how the table appears in a document including such characteristics as table resizing, selection, cut, copy, paste, split, merge, table formatting and so on. The architecture also has a spreadsheet functionality manager to manage the spreadsheet functions for the table, such as recalculation, formula handling, sorting, referencing, and the like.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 9, 2004Publication date: June 9, 2005Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Matthew Kotler, Alexander Gounares, Oliver Fisher, Richard Wolf, Vinod Anantharaman, Matthew Morgan, Christopher Franklin
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Publication number: 20050111736Abstract: A system and process for capturing and implementing handwritten gestures is provided. A user may use gestures to quickly command a pen-based input device to perform operations. According to certain aspects, users may edit text or handwritten ink using a pen in a pen-based computing platform and have the edits and affects the text or ink.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 28, 2004Publication date: May 26, 2005Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Gregory Hullender, Alexander Gounares
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Publication number: 20050066265Abstract: A system architecture integrates spreadsheet functionality into text. The architecture allows insertion of discrete individual fields, referred to as “free floating fields”, inline with normal textual sentences. In an HTML document, for example, the free floating fields are elements constructed along with text elements and rendered together as an integrated document. Once rendered, the free floating fields present contents that resemble normal text consistent with the surrounding text. The free floating fields offer spreadsheet functionality, including the ability to handle complex formulas, reference values in a separate free floating field or table, and automatically recalculate the formulas when a source value changes. The values and formula results can also be formatted (e.g., numbers, date, times, currency, etc.), like a spreadsheet, while remaining part of the normal text of a document. Underlying the user interface, the architecture separates data handling functions from presentation functions.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 8, 2004Publication date: March 24, 2005Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Matthew Kotler, Alexander Gounares, Oliver Fisher, Matthew Morgan, Christopher Franklin
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Publication number: 20050055626Abstract: An architecture integrates spreadsheet functionality into tables commonly used in word processing programs and HTML documents. The architecture presents a table user interface (UI) that resembles a table when not being edited and adds spreadsheet elements to the table when being edited. Underlying the table UI, the architecture separates data handling functions from, presentation functions. The architecture includes a table appearance manager to manage how the table appears in a document including such characteristics as table resizing, selection, cut, copy, paste, split, merge, table formatting and so on. The architecture also has a spreadsheet functionality manager to manage the spreadsheet functions for the table, such as recalculation, formula handling, sorting, referencing, and the like.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 8, 2004Publication date: March 10, 2005Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Matthew Kotler, Alexander Gounares, Oliver Fisher, Richard Wolf, Vinod Anantharaman, Matthew Morgan, Christopher Franklin
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Publication number: 20050050088Abstract: An architecture integrates spreadsheet functionality into tables commonly used in word processing programs and HTML documents. The architecture presents a table user interface (UI) that resembles a table when not being edited and adds spreadsheet elements to the table when being edited. Underlying the table UI, the architecture separates data handling functions from presentation functions. The architecture includes a table appearance manager to manage how the table appears in a document including such characteristics as table resizing, selection, cut, copy, paste, split, merge, table formatting and so on. The architecture also has a spreadsheet functionality manager to manage the spreadsheet functions for the table, such as recalculation, formula handling, sorting, referencing, and the like.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 8, 2004Publication date: March 3, 2005Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Matthew Kotler, Alexander Gounares, Oliver Fisher, Richard Wolf, Vinod Anantharaman, Matthew Morgan, Christopher Franklin
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Publication number: 20050044497Abstract: A system architecture integrates spreadsheet functionality into text. The architecture allows insertion of discrete individual fields, referred to as “free floating fields”, inline with normal textual sentences. In an HTML document, for example, the free floating fields are elements constructed along with text elements and rendered together as an integrated document. Once rendered, the free floating fields present contents that resemble normal text consistent with the surrounding text. The free floating fields offer spreadsheet functionality, including the ability to handle complex formulas, reference values in a separate free floating field or table, and automatically recalculate the formulas when a source value changes. The values and formula results can also be formatted (e.g., numbers, date, times, currency, etc.), like a spreadsheet, while remaining part of the normal text of a document. Underlying the user interface, the architecture separates data handling functions from presentation functions.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 8, 2004Publication date: February 24, 2005Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Matthew Kotler, Alexander Gounares, Oliver Fisher, Matthew Morgan, Christopher Franklin
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Publication number: 20050044486Abstract: An architecture integrates spreadsheet functionality into tables commonly used in word processing programs and HTML documents. The architecture presents a table user interface (UI) that resembles a table when not being edited and adds spreadsheet elements to the table when being edited. Underlying the table UI, the architecture separates data handling functions from presentation functions. The architecture includes a table appearance manager to manage how the table appears in a document including such characteristics as table resizing, selection, cut, copy, paste, split, merge, table formatting and so on. The architecture also has a spreadsheet functionality manager to manage the spreadsheet functions for the table, such as recalculation, formula handling, sorting, referencing, and the like.Type: ApplicationFiled: September 16, 2004Publication date: February 24, 2005Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Matthew Kotler, Alexander Gounares, Oliver Fisher, Richard Wolf, Vinod Anantharaman, Matthew Morgan, Christopher Franklin
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Publication number: 20050044496Abstract: A system architecture integrates spreadsheet functionality into text. The architecture allows insertion of discrete individual fields, referred to as “free floating fields”, inline with normal textual sentences. In an HTML document, for example, the free floating fields are elements constructed along with text elements and rendered together as an integrated document. Once rendered, the free floating fields present contents that resemble normal text consistent with the surrounding text. The free floating fields offer spreadsheet functionality, including the ability to handle complex formulas, reference values in a separate free floating field or table, and automatically recalculate the formulas when a source value changes. The values and formula results can also be formatted (e.g., numbers, date, times, currency, etc.), like a spreadsheet, while remaining part of the normal text of a document. Underlying the user interface, the architecture separates data handling functions from presentation functions.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 8, 2004Publication date: February 24, 2005Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Matthew Kotler, Alexander Gounares, Oliver Fisher, Matthew Morgan, Christopher Franklin
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Publication number: 20050034060Abstract: An architecture integrates spreadsheet functionality into tables commonly used in word processing programs and HTML documents. The architecture presents a table user interface (UI) that resembles a table when not being edited and adds spreadsheet elements to the table when being edited. Underlying the table UI, the architecture separates data handling functions from presentation functions. The architecture includes a table appearance manager to manage how the table appears in a document including such characteristics as table resizing, selection, cut, copy, paste, split, merge, table formatting and so on. The architecture also has a spreadsheet functionality manager to manage the spreadsheet functions for the table, such as recalculation, formula handling, sorting, referencing, and the like.Type: ApplicationFiled: September 16, 2004Publication date: February 10, 2005Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Matthew Kotler, Alexander Gounares, Oliver Fisher, Richard Wolf, Vinod Anantharaman, Matthew Morgan, Christopher Franklin
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Publication number: 20040141648Abstract: Methods for communicating between an application and an ink divider object (which stores ink strokes to be divided into groups) may include: (a) issuing a divide request to the ink divider object, optionally by the application; (b) in response to the divide request, calling a divide method, which groups the stored ink strokes into one or more groupings of strokes having a first predetermined granularity (e.g., words, lines, paragraphs, sentences, drawings, etc.); and (c) making information regarding the one or more groupings of strokes available to the application. This “information” made available to the application may include, for example, the actual groupings of the strokes, the number of stroke groupings having the first predetermined granularity, machine generated text corresponding to the stroke groupings, or the like. The results of the divide method may be stored in an ink division result object.Type: ApplicationFiled: January 21, 2003Publication date: July 22, 2004Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Steve Dodge, Alexander Gounares, Arin J. Goldberg, Bodin Dresevic, Jerome J. Turner, Matthew Paul Rhoten, Robert L. Chambers, Sashi Raghupathy, Timothy H. Kannapel, Tobiasz Zielinski, Zoltan C. Szilagyi
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Publication number: 20030214531Abstract: Various user interfaces and processes are described for receiving electronic ink. A user may write in a first input region. In addition, a user may write in an expanded input region having a greater sized than the first region. Third, a user may write or tap keys to input ink/text from a third region including an input panel.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 28, 2002Publication date: November 20, 2003Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Robert L. Chambers, Steve Dodge, Kyril Feldman, Arin J. Goldberg, Alexander Gounares, Timothy H. Kannapel, Todd A. Torset, Tobias Z. Zielinski
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Publication number: 20030214515Abstract: Association of ink information with image files is described. An image file is created and ink information is parsed and inserted into comment or arbitrary data fields of the image file. The image file with additional ink information may be used by both ink-enabled applications/environments and non-ink-enabled applications environments. The ink-enabled applications/environments may extract the ink information and use the original ink while the non-ink-enabled applications/environments may use the image information to permit the end user to see the visual representation of the ink.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 14, 2002Publication date: November 20, 2003Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Subha Bhattacharyay, Alexander Gounares, Alexander J. Kolmykov-Zotov, Andrew Silverman
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Publication number: 20030217336Abstract: Overlaying electronic ink over a document. A typical scenario may be where one it would be useful to mark up a document with electronic ink, such as by making handwritten comments, drawings, and the like over the underlying document. In some embodiments, a developer may easily define an inking surface, such as a transparent or opaque window, over a document. The inking surface may act as an input interface such that a user may write onto the inking surface such that is appears that the document itself is being marked up.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 28, 2002Publication date: November 20, 2003Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Alexander Gounares, Steve Dodge, Tobiasz A. Zielinski, Arin J. Goldberg, Eugene A. Tsimberg, Todd A. Torset, Robert L. Chambers, Timothy H. Kannapel, Rudolph Balaz, Subha Bhattacharyay, Manoj K. Biswas, Bodin Dresevic, Stephen A. Fisher, Brigette E. Krantz, Shiraz M. Somji
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Publication number: 20030215142Abstract: A control and its associated programming interface for allowing entry of electronic ink, editing and other manipulation of the ink, and/or recognition of the ink. Ink may be stored in a data structure such as an ink object that permits later retrieval by applications. As is the case with text that may be bolded, underlined, italicized, and the like, the describe control and its programming interface may permit ink information to be manipulated as easily as text, while providing the richness of handwritten ink.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 28, 2002Publication date: November 20, 2003Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Alexander Gounares, Steve Dodge, Tobiasz A. Zielinski, Arin J. Goldberg, Kyril Feldman, Todd A. Torset, Robert L. Chambers, Richard K. Sailor
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Publication number: 20030215140Abstract: The present invention relates to interfacing with electronic ink. Ink is stored in a data structure that permits later retrieval by applications. The ink includes stroke information and may include property information. Through various programming interfaces, one may interact with the ink through methods and setting or retrieving properties. Other objects and collections may be used as well in conjunction with the ink objects.Type: ApplicationFiled: June 28, 2002Publication date: November 20, 2003Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Alexander Gounares, Steve Dodge, Timothy H. Kannapel, Rudolph Balaz, Subha Bhattacharyay, Manoj K. Biswas, Robert L. Chambers, Bodin Dresevic, Stephen A. Fisher, Arin J. Goldberg, Gregory Hullender, Brigette E. Krantz, Todd A. Torset, Jerome J. Turner, Andrew Silverman, Shiraz M. Somji