Patents by Inventor Bryan Spaulding

Bryan Spaulding 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).

  • Publication number: 20060053066
    Abstract: The present invention overcomes the problems in the existing art described above by providing an online digital video signal transfer apparatus and method. Rental of the digital video signals occurs within an online environment including one or more client computers and at least one network server connected by a communications link to the one or more client computers. The method includes providing access to an online catalog stored within a memory of a network video server computer. The online catalog includes information regarding digital video signals available for rental from the network server computer. Requests are then received from client computers for rental of digital video signals selected from the online catalog for a specified period of time. The requests include electronic payment based on the selected digital video signal and the specified period of time. Once electronic payment is provided, the digital video signal is transmitted to the client computer via communications link.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 20, 2005
    Publication date: March 9, 2006
    Inventors: Scott Sherr, Eva Miranda, Ira Rubenstein, Sean Carey, Yair Landau, Andrew Frank, Brian Lakamp, Bryan Spaulding, Charles Evans, Everton Schnabel, Hartmut Ochs, Jeremy Barnett, Seth Palmer, Todd Henderson, William Chong, Steven Koenig, Bruce Forest
  • Publication number: 20050021738
    Abstract: A method for accurately determining the geographic location of a PC or other networked device on the Internet. Client software furnished by a service provider performs trace-route or other network analysis commands to known servers (e.g., eBay, Yahoo, Amazon) or even servers at random locations. The client collects an array of IP address and other network information as a result of the trace-routes, and the trace-route IP information is then transmitted to the service provider that is trying to identify the geographic location of the client. Using the array of IP addresses thus generated, the Internet server software can analyze location information of each Internet hop within each trace-route. For example, the server might look at the first five hops from the client to the server. If four of the five routers have addresses within the geographic area of interest, the server can conclude that the client is probably within the geographic area.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 6, 2003
    Publication date: January 27, 2005
    Inventors: Kenneth Goeller, Bryan Spaulding, John Godwin, Bruce Anderson, Luan Le-Chau