Patents by Inventor Brian Bamsch

Brian Bamsch 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: 10147075
    Abstract: The systems and methods that warm-up a virtual machine are provided. An application byte code is generated from an application source code for an application that processes time-sensitive messages using a virtual machine. The virtual machine is configured to interpret the application byte code. A warm-up data is received by the virtual machine. The warm-up data is configured to emulate one or more time-sensitive messages processed by the virtual machine. From the warm-up data, the virtual machine generates application machine-readable code from the application byte code, and stores the application machine-readable code. After the virtual machine generates the application machine-readable code, a computing device that includes the virtual machine is placed in a real-world environment and begins to receive the time-sensitive messages. The virtual machine processes the time-sensitive messages using the generated application machine-readable code.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 30, 2016
    Date of Patent: December 4, 2018
    Assignee: PayPal, Inc.
    Inventors: Brian Bamsch, Krishnakumar Balasubramanian, Tim Craig, Ray Tai
  • Publication number: 20180004557
    Abstract: The systems and methods that warm-up a virtual machine are provided. An application byte code is generated from an application source code for an application that processes time-sensitive messages using a virtual machine. The virtual machine is configured to interpret the application byte code. A warm-up data is received by the virtual machine. The warm-up data is configured to emulate one or more time-sensitive messages processed by the virtual machine. From the warm-up data, the virtual machine generates application machine-readable code from the application byte code, and stores the application machine-readable code. After the virtual machine generates the application machine-readable code, a computing device that includes the virtual machine is placed in a real-world environment and begins to receive the time-sensitive messages. The virtual machine processes the time-sensitive messages using the generated application machine-readable code.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 30, 2016
    Publication date: January 4, 2018
    Inventors: Brian Bamsch, Krishnakumar Balasubramanian, Tim Craig, Ray Tai