Patents by Inventor Cameron Wilson
Cameron Wilson 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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Patent number: 8474740Abstract: A bale processor apparatus has a bale chamber configured to hold a front bale in the chamber forward of a rear bale in the chamber. A disintegrator apparatus removes shredded material from the front bale and forms a front stream of shredded material moving laterally, and removes shredded material from the rear bale and forms a rear stream of shredded material. An exhaust opening in the bale chamber adjacent to the front bale is oriented such that the front stream passes laterally through the exhaust opening. A conveyor receives the rear stream and carries same forward and moves same into contact with the front stream such that the rear stream is carried out through the exhaust opening with the front stream.Type: GrantFiled: December 13, 2010Date of Patent: July 2, 2013Assignee: Highline Manufacturing Ltd.Inventors: Blake Neudorf, Cameron Wilson
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Publication number: 20120031066Abstract: A method of lifting corn stalks from a field surface and chopping the corn stalks with a rotary mower comprises configuring blades of the blade assembly such that as the blade assembly rotates, air is drawn upward under the mower deck; configuring the rotary mower such that an area of a circle defined by a circular path of outer tips of blades of the blade assembly is greater than 60 square feet; and rotating the blade assembly such that the outer tips of the blades move at a speed greater than 20,000 feet per minute and such that the air drawn upward under the mower deck draws corn stalks up from the field surface into contact with the blades.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 27, 2010Publication date: February 9, 2012Applicant: HIGHLINE MANUFACTURING INC.Inventors: Blake Neudorf, Montgomerie Summach, Cameron Wilson
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Publication number: 20110139910Abstract: A bale processor apparatus has a bale chamber configured to hold a front bale in the chamber forward of a rear bale in the chamber. A disintegrator apparatus removes shredded material from the front bale and forms a front stream of shredded material moving laterally, and removes shredded material from the rear bale and forms a rear stream of shredded material. An exhaust opening in the bale chamber adjacent to the front bale is oriented such that the front stream passes laterally through the exhaust opening. A conveyor receives the rear stream and carries same forward and moves same into contact with the front stream such that the rear stream is carried out through the exhaust opening with the front stream.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 13, 2010Publication date: June 16, 2011Applicant: HIGHLINE MANUFACTURING LTD.Inventors: Blake NEUDORF, Cameron WILSON
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Publication number: 20090276307Abstract: A targeted method for providing coupons and samples to consumers, that provides extensive feedback to manufacturers, identifies consumers that represent a desired demographic profile, enables a convenient consumer couponing experience, controls and contains fraud through the use of expiration methods and location data.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 5, 2009Publication date: November 5, 2009Applicant: SAMPLESAINT, INC.Inventors: Lawrence Griffith, Wad Johnson, Carlos M. Tarazona, Cameron Wilson, Thomas W. Humphrey
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Publication number: 20070197386Abstract: An improved selective herbicide, as well of methods of controlling unwanted plants using such a herbicide, are provided. A method for treating undesired vegetation can include providing a selective herbicidal composition that includes a water-soluble selective auxin-type herbicide and a chelating agent complexed with at least one transition metal, and contacting vegetation with a herbicidally effective amount of the composition such that unwanted vegetation is controlled, while desired vegetation is unaffected.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 14, 2007Publication date: August 23, 2007Applicant: W. NEUDORFF GMBH KGInventors: R. Diebold, Kim Morgan, Cameron Wilson
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Publication number: 20070148204Abstract: An environmentally safe, pesticidally effective composition is provided to control insect/mite pests. In an exemplary embodiment, a composition is provided that includes a pesticidally effective, yet environmentally safe, concentration of at least one spinosyn with at least one additional contact-acting insecticide and/or miticide and at least one solvent or carrier.Type: ApplicationFiled: September 13, 2006Publication date: June 28, 2007Applicant: W. NEUDORFF GMBH KGInventors: Diana Parker, Cameron Wilson, George Puritch, David Almond
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Publication number: 20070148203Abstract: Bait compositions of spinosyns in combination with metal complexones and other mollusicides are provided in an environmentally safe composition that is effective to a treat and/or control a wide spectrum of insect and mollusc pests.Type: ApplicationFiled: September 13, 2006Publication date: June 28, 2007Applicant: W. NEUDORFF GMBH KGInventors: Diana Parker, Cameron Wilson, George Puritch, David Almond
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Publication number: 20060084575Abstract: An environmentally safe selective herbicide is provided that includes at least one metal component and at least one chelating agent. The metal component can have a variety of forms, but is preferably in the form of a metal salt, a metal chelate, or combinations thereof. The chelating agent can also have a variety of forms, but is preferably in the form of a metal chelate, a salt, an acid, or combinations thereof. Methods of use are also provided.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 17, 2005Publication date: April 20, 2006Inventors: Frederick Sedun, Kim Taylor, Cameron Wilson, Diana Parker, David Almond
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Patent number: 6945245Abstract: An oven rack for an oven provides includes a first portion and a second portion extending from the first portion. A pair of handles extend from the first portion to permit a user to easily grasp the oven rack. A support system is attached to the oven rack and extends from the first portion to contact a bottom surface of a cooking chamber when the oven rack is installed in the oven and permits the oven rack to be used as a countertop trivet rack. An oven rack is provided which increases the cooking capacity of the cooking chamber.Type: GrantFiled: September 11, 2000Date of Patent: September 20, 2005Assignee: General Electric CompanyInventor: Arthur Cameron Wilson
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Patent number: 5764275Abstract: A system for providing security on an interactive television system. Two sets of interactive data, with time stamps, are separately sent to a remote location. At the remote location, the time stamps are checked against a remote clock, a time difference being noted for both sets of data. The two time differences are compared to determine if one set of data has been delayed as compared to the other. Non-delayed data can be used to update a game score for an interactive game. After the game is completed, the remote clock is compared to a central clock. the difference between the two clocks are compared to the time difference for non-delayed data to determine whether the entire aggregate of interactive data was delayed.Type: GrantFiled: June 7, 1995Date of Patent: June 9, 1998Assignee: Thomson Multimedia S.A.Inventors: John P. Lappington, Susan K. Marshall, Wayne Y. Yamamoto, Cameron A. Wilson, Eric C. Berkobin, Richard S. Simons
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Patent number: 5734413Abstract: An interactive television system where interactive information is inserted in the vertical blanking interval of a standard television signal or some other appropriate medium. The signal is received and decoded by a settop device which sends the decoder signal, via an infrared signal, to a handheld device. The system includes an interactive program authoring system, and programmer tables in the memory of the handheld device which store data for the various interactive events. This system allows a viewer to enter and exit events at any time without having to wait for information to be downloaded and without losing scores. Furthermore, this system allows many interactive programs to run concurrently over extended periods of time while maintaining cumulative scores in the handheld for each interactive program or series of programs.Type: GrantFiled: November 30, 1993Date of Patent: March 31, 1998Assignee: Thomson Multimedia S.A.Inventors: John P. Lappington, Susan K. Marshall, Wayne Y. Yamamoto, Cameron A. Wilson
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Patent number: 5638113Abstract: An interactive television system where interactive information is inserted in the vertical blanking interval of a standard television signal or some other appropriate medium. The signal is received and decoded by a settop device which sends the decoder signal, via an infrared signal, to a handheld device. The system includes an interactive program authoring system, and programmer tables in the memory of the handheld device which store data for the various interactive events. This system allows a viewer to enter and exit events at any time without having to wait for information to be downloaded and without losing scores. Furthermore, this system allows many interactive programs to run concurrently over extended periods of time while maintaining cumulative scores in the handheld for each interactive program or series of programs.Type: GrantFiled: June 7, 1995Date of Patent: June 10, 1997Assignee: Thomson, Multimedia, S.A.Inventors: John P. Lappington, Susan K. Marshall, Wayne Y. Yamamoto, Cameron A. Wilson
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Patent number: 5519433Abstract: A system for providing security on an interactive television system. Two sets of interactive data, with time stamps, are separately sent to a remote location. At the remote location, the time stamps are checked against a remote clock, a time difference being noted for both sets of data. The two time differences are compared to determine if one set of data has been delayed as compared to the other. Non-delayed data can be used to update a game score for an interactive game. After the game is completed, the remote clock is compared to a central clock. The difference between the two clocks are compared to the time difference for non-delayed data to determine whether the entire aggregate of interactive data was delayed.Type: GrantFiled: November 30, 1993Date of Patent: May 21, 1996Assignee: Zing Systems, L.P.Inventors: John P. Lappington, Susan K. Marshall, Wayne Y. Yamamoto, Cameron A. Wilson, Eric C. Berkobin, Richard S. Simons