Patents by Inventor Didina Burok

Didina Burok 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: 6947543
    Abstract: In a computer-telephony integrated (CTI) contact center, a CTI adjunct (160) enqueues contacts in contact queues (184) of the CTI adjunct, but also causes contacts that are calls (168) to be enqueued as ACD calls in ACD call queues (120) of an ACD system (101), whereby the ACD system and its management information system (MIS 110) provide ACD features to the calls. Similarly, the CTI adjunct enqueues agents in agent queues (185) of the CTI adjunct, but also causes agents (102-104) that have call-handling skills to log into and to be enqueued as ACD agents in ACD agent queues (130) of the ACD system, whereby the ACD system and its MIS provide ACD features to the agents.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 3, 2002
    Date of Patent: September 20, 2005
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventors: Joaquin Omar Alvarado, Didina Burok, Andrew D. Flockhart, Eugene P. Mathews, Peter J. Matteo, Christopher Moss, Robert Daniel Nalbone
  • Patent number: 6748073
    Abstract: In a computer integrated telephony call center where an adjunct host (160) normally controls enqueuing of calls (168) in call queues (120) of an ACD system (101) and corresponding call queues (120′) of the adjunct host and assigning of the enqueued calls to agents, the ACD system assumes (604) control over its call queues upon loss of the control by the adjunct host (e.g., upon failure (600) of the adjunct host). The ACD system flags (602, 606) all calls that are enqueued at the time of loss of the adjunct host control as well as all calls that the ACD subsequently enqueues as being under ACD system control. When the adjunct host regains its control ability, the ACD system stops flagging new calls, call queues of the host processor are cleared (702), and the adjunct host regains control (722) of enqueuing calls in call queues of the ACD and the adjunct host.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 3, 2002
    Date of Patent: June 8, 2004
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventors: Joaquin Omar Alvarado, Didina Burok, Andrew D. Flockhart, Eugene P. Mathews, Peter J. Matteo, Christopher Moss, Robert Daniel Nalbone
  • Patent number: 6707903
    Abstract: An automated method for servicing a plurality of work items within committed times. A workflow including two or more work activities is assigned for each of the plurality of work items and a commitment is assigned either to each workflow or to each work item in each workflow. Queued work items are automatically assigned to a next available agent based on an activity state. A short-term predictor provides early detection of work items that are at risk of failing to meet their commitments. A long-term predictor detects backlogs of work items where excessive delays in queue are likely to put work items at risk of failing to meet their commitments. An activity's state can also cause additional reserve and backup agents to be assigned to it, to service work items from its queue before their commitments are missed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 5, 2003
    Date of Patent: March 16, 2004
    Assignee: Avaya, Inc.
    Inventors: Didina Burok, Andrew D. Flockhart, James M. Landwehr, Colin Lingwood Mallows, Sami Joseph Qutub, Rafal Sitkowski, Leta G. Herman, Peter J. Matteo, Larry John Roybal, Robert C. Steiner, Wen-Hua Ju, Gail Levenelm
  • Publication number: 20030152212
    Abstract: An automated method for servicing a plurality of work items within committed times. A workflow including two or more work activities is assigned for each of the plurality of work items and a commitment is assigned either to each workflow or to each work item in each workflow. Queued work items are automatically assigned to a next available agent based on an activity state. A short-term predictor provides early detection of work items that are at risk of failing to meet their commitments. A long-term predictor detects backlogs of work items where excessive delays in queue are likely to put work items at risk of failing to meet their commitments. An activity's state can also cause additional reserve and backup agents to be assigned to it, to service work items from its queue before their commitments are missed.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 5, 2003
    Publication date: August 14, 2003
    Inventors: Didina Burok, Andrew D. Flockhart, James M. Landwehr, Colin Lingwood Mallows, Sami Joseph Qutub, Rafal Sitkowski, Leta G. Herman, Peter J. Matteo, Larry John Roybal, Robert C. Steiner, Wen-Hua Ju, Gail Levenelm
  • Publication number: 20030123642
    Abstract: In a computer-telephony integrated (CTI) contact center, a CTI adjunct (160) enqueues contacts in contact queues (184) of the CTI adjunct, but also causes contacts that are calls (168) to be enqueued as ACD calls in ACD call queues (120) of an ACD system (101), whereby the ACD system and its management information system (MIS 110) provide ACD features to the calls. Similarly, the CTI adjunct enqueues agents in agent queues (185) of the CTI adjunct, but also causes agents (102-104) that have call-handling skills to log into and to be enqueued as ACD agents in ACD agent queues (130) of the ACD system, whereby the ACD system and its MIS provide ACD features to the agents.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 3, 2002
    Publication date: July 3, 2003
    Inventors: Joaquin Omar Alvarado, Didina Burok, Andrew D. Flockhart, Eugene P. Mathews, Peter J. Matteo, Christopher Moss, Robert Daniel Nalbone
  • Publication number: 20030123641
    Abstract: In a computer integrated telephony call center where an adjunct host (160) normally controls enqueuing of calls (168) in call queues (120) of an ACD system (101) and corresponding call queues (120′) of the adjunct host and assigning of the enqueued calls to agents, the ACD system assumes (604) control over its call queues upon loss of the control by the adjunct host (e.g., upon failure (600) of the adjunct host). The ACD system flags (602, 606) all calls that are enqueued at the time of loss of the adjunct host control as well as all calls that the ACD subsequently enqueues as being under ACD system control. When the adjunct host regains its control ability, the ACD system stops flagging new calls, call queues of the host processor are cleared (702), and the adjunct host regains control (722) of enqueuing calls in call queues of the ACD and the adjunct host.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 3, 2002
    Publication date: July 3, 2003
    Inventors: Joaquin Omar Alvarado, Didina Burok, Andrew D. Flockhart, Eugene P. Mathews, Peter J. Matteo, Christopher Moss, Robert Daniel Nalbone
  • Patent number: 6038302
    Abstract: A call initiation request generated by an application running on a computer-telephony integration (CTI) server or other CTI device is supplied via a CTI link to a switch. The switch receives the request over the CTI link, and places a "phantom" call from the originator of the call to the destination of the call. The phantom call may be representative of, for example, a real-time voice call or a non-real-time transaction such as a delivery of an e-mail, facsimile or voice mail message. The originator corresponds to a phantom extension or group of phantom extensions which is not associated with any physical communication device of the system. A phantom extension in accordance with the invention does not require an actual physical originator or destination communication device, as well as a corresponding switch port card or other hardware, and therefore does not consume valuable switch resources. The switch reports call status information for the phantom call to the application over the CTI link.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 2, 1998
    Date of Patent: March 14, 2000
    Assignee: Lucent Technologies Inc.
    Inventors: Didina Burok, Brian Hillis, Steven Michael Silverstein