Patents by Inventor George David Timms, Jr.

George David Timms, Jr. 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: 7844781
    Abstract: An operating system kernel includes an attach mechanism and a detach mechanism. In addition, processes are tagged with an access attribute identifying the process as either a client process or a server process. Based on the access attribute, the operating system kernel lays out the process local address space differently depending on whether the process is a client process or a server process. A server process can “attach” to a client process and reference all of the client process' local storage as though it were its own. The server process continues to reference its own process local storage, but in addition, it can reference the other storage, using the client process' local addresses. When access to the other storage is no longer needed, the server process can “detach” from the client process. Once detached, the other storage can no longer be referenced.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 23, 2006
    Date of Patent: November 30, 2010
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Michael J. Corrigan, Paul LuVerne Godtland, Richard Karl Kirkman, Wade Byron Ouren, George David Timms, Jr.
  • Patent number: 6738889
    Abstract: An apparatus and method provide simultaneous local and global addressing capabilities. A global address space is defined that may be accessed by all processes. In addition, each process has a local address space that is local (and therefore available) only to that process. An address translation mechanism is implemented, preferably in hardware, to compare an address to defined addresses for local and global addressing and to detect when a virtual address computation result would go outside a boundary for the appropriate addressing scheme. The address translation mechanism maps a virtual address to a corresponding physical address, and uses different criteria depending on whether the address is local or global.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 12, 1999
    Date of Patent: May 18, 2004
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Paul LuVerne Godtland, George David Timms, Jr.