Patents by Inventor Frederick C. Livermore

Frederick C. Livermore 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: 6542511
    Abstract: This invention relates to the design of a scaleable high performance multiservice network based on programmable transport. A meshed network with dynamically-adjustable link capacities and nodes which provide data packing into “containers” for transport is proposed. A ring-based network, exchanging data containers among its nodes, is the preferred implementation, due to its flexibility, maintainability, and high reliability. With lossless rings, the quality of service is controlled solely by the origin and destination nodes, without any interference from other data streams. Flexible programmable transport greatly improves the performance, simplifies the controls, and facilitates scaleability. The concept is a departure from classical network thinking. By reducing the complexity of the network core, an economical, reliable, and manageable network with feature-rich edge nodes can be realized.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 16, 1998
    Date of Patent: April 1, 2003
    Assignee: Nortel Networks Limited
    Inventors: Frederick C. Livermore, Richard P. Skillen, Maged E. Beshai
  • Patent number: 6339488
    Abstract: A fully meshed telecommunications network based on an optical core transport network having a plurality of optical nodes is described. An electronic edge switch is connected to an optical node and dedicated channels are established between all the possible pairs of electronic edge switches through their associated optical nodes and the optical core transport network. Connection paths are set up using a channel or channels between a pair of electronic edge switches which perform major functions concerning connection routes, including rate regulation, path establishment, etc.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 25, 1998
    Date of Patent: January 15, 2002
    Assignee: Nortel Networks Limited
    Inventors: Maged E. Beshai, Frederick C. Livermore
  • Patent number: 5610910
    Abstract: In current voice telephony, CATV, and wireless networks, traffic is channelized for both access and transport. This channelization is wasteful of resources where multiple services have varying demands for bandwidth and holding times, or a service generates traffic that is bursty in nature. The invention solves these problems by providing flexible and adapatable multiservice access to the networks. Customer requirements are checked by monitoring traffic on a local access at a connection request and/or during the established connection, and the local access is configured according to the transmission requirements. The local access can also be configured in response to the network information.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 17, 1995
    Date of Patent: March 11, 1997
    Assignee: Northern Telecom Limited
    Inventors: Mihai Focsaneanu, Richard P. Skillen, Frederick C. Livermore
  • Patent number: 5015600
    Abstract: In a method for making integrated circuits, a semiconductor substrate is provided which carries a plurality of unconnected devices of a first device type at regularly spaced regions of the substrate and a plurality of unconnected devices of a secound, distinct device type at substantially all regions of the substrate other than those carrying devices of the first device type, and at least one interconnection layer is formed on the substrate to interconnect selected ones of the devices of the first device type and the devices of the second device type to define a plurality of integrated circuits. Pad regions may be formed over unconnected devices for connection of the integrated circuits to package terminals. The integrated circuits are separated by regions containing unconnected devices, and the semiconductor substrate may be scribed and broken or otherwise cut in these regions to separate the integrated circuits.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 25, 1990
    Date of Patent: May 14, 1991
    Assignee: Northern Telecom Limited
    Inventors: Frederick C. Livermore, John G. Hogeboom, Go S. Sunatori
  • Patent number: 4709296
    Abstract: The contacts of an isolation relay are positioned between a line interface circuit and the associated feed resistors, the relay being controlled to open the contacts in response to an excessive common mode alternating current through the feed resistors. The common mode a.c. is detected by a sensing amplifier, and is integrated and compared with a threshold level in a dectector unit. If the common mode a.c. is excessive, a zero crossing predictor enables the detector unit to control the isolation relay and open its contacts at a zero crossing of the a.c. A phase shifter in the zero crossing predictor compensates for the response delay of the isolation relay. As the excessive current is now interrupted, the sensing amplifier responds to the line voltage. When this falls below a predetermined peak level, a delayed resetting of the protection arrangement is automatically effected.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 20, 1985
    Date of Patent: November 24, 1987
    Assignee: Northern Telecom Limited
    Inventors: Francis Y. Hung, Frederick C. Livermore
  • Patent number: 4625255
    Abstract: An overvoltage protection device, especially for telephone equipment and the like, comprises two protectors connected directly in parallel. One protector, for example a back-to-back semiconductor diode, has a breakdown voltage below which it is a high impedance. Between the breakdown voltage and a failure voltage it has a lower impedance. Above the failure voltage it has negligible impedance. The other protector, for example a gas tube, has a range of operating voltages which extends from below the breakdown voltage of the diode, to a voltage between the breakdown voltage and the failure voltage of the diode. In operation the two protectors interact, the diode operating, for example, on faster surges and, in so doing, slowing the surge front so as to increase the likelihood that the gas tube will fire.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 23, 1984
    Date of Patent: November 25, 1986
    Assignee: Northern Telecom Limited
    Inventors: Jerzy Borkowicz, James E. Anderson, Frederick C. Livermore
  • Patent number: 4544983
    Abstract: An overvoltage protection device, for protecting communications equipment against hazardous voltages cue to lightning or power surges, comprises a primary protector, for example a gas tube device, and a back-up protector connected in parallel. The back-up protector includes a semiconductor pn junction, and is preferably a pair of diodes back-to-back. The back-up protector has a breakdown voltage slightly higher than that of the primary protector and is arranged to fail short-circuit once it has operated so as to provide an indication that the primary protector failed to operate.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 28, 1983
    Date of Patent: October 1, 1985
    Assignee: Northern Telecom Limited
    Inventors: James E. Anderson, Michael J. Coleman, Frederick C. Livermore
  • Patent number: 4393433
    Abstract: An overvoltage or surge protector, particularly for telephone lines, has two electrodes in opposition in a housing. The gap between the inner ends of the electrodes is set by a layer of dielectric material on the center portion of one or both end surfaces of the electrodes. Breakdown occurs with assistance from dielectric stimulation of the arc, resulting from an electrical field across the dielectric. The center portions are surrounded by annular grooves, which are also covered with a dielectric layer. The end surfaces external to the center portions can be convex, and also roughened.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 16, 1981
    Date of Patent: July 12, 1983
    Assignee: Northern Telecom Limited
    Inventors: James E. Anderson, John D. Lee, Frederick C. Livermore
  • Patent number: 4217480
    Abstract: In a thermal print bar for use in facsimile systems, an array of individually selectable electrical current paths are defined in a strip of resistive materials having a high negative temperature coefficient of resistance. In operation, the resistance of a selected current path is markedly reduced in contrast with the resistance of unselected current paths parallel to the selected path so that the parallel current paths do not experience joule heating. Electrical power saving and visual contrast result.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 5, 1978
    Date of Patent: August 12, 1980
    Assignee: Northern Telecom Limited
    Inventors: Frederick C. Livermore, Robert J. Boynton
  • Patent number: 4074109
    Abstract: A thermal printing bar, as for a facsimile printer, has a pattern of associated conductors on each side thereof to produce two rows of hot spots in the printing bar. The hot spots in one row are offset relative to the other row. By suitably sizing the hot spots, the spots in one row will at least completely fill the gaps between the spots in the other row, or can even overlap. By this means, the one row is first printed on the paper; the paper moved by the distance between the centers of the rows and then the other row printed. This provides contiguous or overlapping spots on the paper, giving improved contrast.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 15, 1977
    Date of Patent: February 14, 1978
    Assignee: Northern Telecom Limited
    Inventors: David R. Baraff, Robert J. Boynton, Frederick C. Livermore