Patents by Inventor Gregory H. Manto

Gregory H. Manto 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: 7515751
    Abstract: In a computing device, a method and system for searching for matching ink words or phrases, by comparing a given search term of at least one word (and possibly alternates) with the words in a document, including recognized ink words and any possible alternates for those recognized words as returned by a recognizer. Various matching tests are possible because of the use of alternates, which also may have corresponding probability rankings that may influence the search. Searching may occur in actively edited ink documents, or the recognition results may be saved as saved search file data that can be searched independent of recognition.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 11, 2006
    Date of Patent: April 7, 2009
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Charlton E. Lui, Gregory H. Manto, Vikram Madan, Ryan E. Cukierman, Jon E. Clark
  • Patent number: 7379928
    Abstract: A method and system for searching digitally annotated computer documents, including searching the annotations. An annotated document may be open for viewing by a user, or alternatively present among closed files that are searched to find files that match a query. In one implementation, the document data and the ink-annotation data exist on two separate layers, with each layer having associated text content, whether as original text or as annotations that are recognized as text. When a user issues a query to search the annotated document, the query is passed to a search engine that performs the pattern matching on the text in each layer, to produce search results. The search engine may produce a search result data structure for each match, which may be sorted with other data structures into a list, such as sorted by pages and coordinates, to present them to a user in a logical ordering.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 13, 2003
    Date of Patent: May 27, 2008
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Ryan E. Cukierman, Vikram Madan, Gregory H. Manto
  • Patent number: 7284200
    Abstract: A system and method for associating an ink title with a note is described. A user may hand write a title for a document or note and have the handwritten ink title be displayed when interacting with the system when, for example, viewing the contents of a directory, reviewing the results of a search, viewing a list of most recently used documents, viewing a history of which documents were used, and the like. The use of a handwritten ink title speeds a user's recall of the content of the note over textual titles.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 10, 2002
    Date of Patent: October 16, 2007
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Michael S. Bernstein, Vikram Madan, Gregory H. Manto, Gerhard A. Schobbe, Shawna Swanson, Kurt A. Geisel, Steve E. Weil
  • Patent number: 7155061
    Abstract: In a computing device, a method and system for searching for matching ink words or phrases, by comparing a given search term of at least one word (and possibly alternates) with the words in a document, including recognized ink words and any possible alternates for those recognized words as returned by a recognizer. Various matching tests are possible because of the use of alternates, which also may have corresponding probability rankings that may influence the search. Searching may occur in actively edited ink documents, or the recognition results may be saved as saved search file data that can be searched independent of recognition.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 21, 2002
    Date of Patent: December 26, 2006
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Charlton E. Lui, Gregory H. Manto, Vikram Madan, Ryan E. Cukierman, Jon E. Clark
  • Publication number: 20040196306
    Abstract: Various techniques and tools are described for allowing a user to flag desired content within a data file. More particularly, a user can select content within a file, such as an image or a group of electronic ink strokes. The user can then flag that selected content so that it may later be easily retrieved. The flag may simply mark the position of selected content, or the flag may be associated with the selected content such that, if the content is moved to another location or even to another file, the flag will remain associated with the selected content, and can continue to be used to easily retrieve the selected content.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 4, 2003
    Publication date: October 7, 2004
    Applicant: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Gregory H. Manto, Steve E. Weil, Michael Williams, Shawna Swanson, Vikram Madan, Michael S. Bernstein, Kevin P. Paulson, Roger Wynn
  • Publication number: 20040161150
    Abstract: A method and system for searching digitally annotated computer documents, including searching the annotations. An annotated document may be open for viewing by a user, or alternatively present among closed files that are searched to find files that match a query. In one implementation, the document data and the ink-annotation data exist on two separate layers, with each layer having associated text content, whether as original text or as annotations that are recognized as text. When a user issues a query to search the annotated document, the query is passed to a search engine that performs the pattern matching on the text in each layer, to produce search results. The search engine may produce a search result data structure for each match, which may be sorted with other data structures into a list, such as sorted by pages and coordinates, to present them to a user in a logical ordering.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 13, 2003
    Publication date: August 19, 2004
    Applicant: MICROSOFT CORPORATION
    Inventors: Ryan E. Cukierman, Vikram Madan, Gregory H. Manto
  • Publication number: 20040093565
    Abstract: A system and method for associating an ink title with a note is described. A user may hand write a title for a document or note and have the handwritten ink title be displayed when interacting with the system when, for example, viewing the contents of a directory, reviewing the results of a search, viewing a list of most recently used documents, viewing a history of which documents were used, and the like. The use of a handwritten ink title speeds a user's recall of the content of the note over textual titles.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 10, 2002
    Publication date: May 13, 2004
    Inventors: Michael S. Bernstein, Vikram Madan, Gregory H. Manto, Gerhard A. Schobbe, Shawna Swanson, Kurt A. Geisel, Steve E. Weil
  • Publication number: 20030101163
    Abstract: In a computing device, a method and system for searching for matching ink words or phrases, by comparing a given search term of at least one word (and possibly alternates) with the words in a document, including recognized ink words and any possible alternates for those recognized words as returned by a recognizer. Various matching tests are possible because of the use of alternates, which also may have corresponding probability rankings that may influence the search. Searching may occur in actively edited ink documents, or the recognition results may be saved as saved search file data that can be searched independent of recognition.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 21, 2002
    Publication date: May 29, 2003
    Applicant: MICROSOFT CORPORATION
    Inventors: Charlton E. Lui, Gregory H. Manto, Vikram Madan, Ryan E. Cukierman, Jon E. Clark