Patents by Inventor Ken Beoughter
Ken Beoughter 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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Publication number: 20070211079Abstract: A common process control graphical user interface plant operators, plant maintenance personnel, and management is disclosed which provides a real-time interface to both the process and the plant. The common interface is modular in design and is capable of supporting various specializations for each user type. Operator consoles are dedicated to each section of the plant and include additional functions such as maintenance, configuration, simulation and supervisory information. The unified for common graphical interface replaces control room displays filled with single case analog controllers, meters, and digital indicators. The common interface addresses the functions that previously were provided by the panel motor start/stop buttons and status indications, chart recorders, annunciator panels and subsystem interfaces.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 4, 2005Publication date: September 13, 2007Applicant: FISHER-ROSEMOUNT SYSTEMS, INC.Inventors: Mark Nixon, Stephen Hammack, Bruce Campney, Ken Beoughter, J. Lucas, Stephen Gilbert
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Publication number: 20070168065Abstract: A system for facilitating configuration of a process plant may include a process graphics editor and a process module editor. The process graphics editor may facilitate creation and/or modification of a graphical representation of physical entities In the process plant. The process module editor may facilitate creation and/or modification of a process module. A process module may include one or more interconnected process objects representative of one or more corresponding physical entities in the process plant. The system may also include a supervisor module communicatively coupled to the process graphics editor and the process module editor. The supervisor module may be capable of detecting changes made to the graphical representation of the physical entities using the process graphics editor. In response to detecting such changes, the supervisor module may instruct the process module editor to make a corresponding change, if any, to a process module.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 4, 2005Publication date: July 19, 2007Applicant: FISHER-ROSEMOUNT SYSTEMS, INC.Inventors: Mark Nixon, Arthur Webb, J. Lucas, Ken Beoughter, Terrence Blevins, Stephen Gilbert, Bruce Campney
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Publication number: 20070165031Abstract: Graphic elements and graphic displays are provided for use in a process environment to display information to one or more users about the process environment, such as the current state of devices within a process plant. The graphic elements and displays include one or more objects, each of which includes a visualization, which depicts an entity within the process environment, a property associated with the depicted process entity and a routine that operates in conjunction with the visualization and the property to cause a change in the-visualization based on a change in the property, or to cause a change in the process environment based on user input through the visualization. In this manner, the graphic objects can be used to create displays that graphically illustrate, through animations and other visual operations, the changing state of the process or detected events within the process.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 4, 2005Publication date: July 19, 2007Applicant: Fisher-Rosemount Systems, Inc.Inventors: Stephen Gilbert, Tennyson Hao, Francis Guzman, Ken Beoughter, Bruce Compney, Mark Nixon
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Publication number: 20070168060Abstract: A user interface system for a process plant includes a graphic display editor to configure a process graphic display having a graphic display element representative of a process plant element of the process plant. The process graphic display is specified via configuration information set forth in a declarative language. A graphics rendering engine generates a depiction of the process graphic display during runtime based on commands derived from the configuration information set forth in the declarative language. The configuration information for the process graphic display may be stored as an object, which, for instance, may include first and second portions to define a graphical parameter and identify a data source, respectively. The graphical parameter may be directed to defining a graphical depiction of the process plant element and, to this end, may be set forth in a formal in accordance with the declarative language.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 4, 2005Publication date: July 19, 2007Applicant: FISHER-ROSEMOUNT SYSTEMS, INC.Inventors: Mark Nixon, Tennyson Hao, Francis Guzman, Richard Rodriguez, Ryan Valderama, J. Lucas, Ken Beoughter, Stephen Gilbert
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Publication number: 20070150081Abstract: An integrated graphical runtime interface that provides a secure, highly available environment for process control systems is disclosed. In one example, a method for displaying process control information via a graphical user interface instantiates a runtime workspace application to operatively interpose between an operator station operating system and a user. The example method displays a plurality of panels via the graphical user interface and displays a portion of the process control information associated with a runtime application in at least one of the plurality of panels via the runtime workspace application.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 3, 2006Publication date: June 28, 2007Inventors: Mark Nixon, Ken Beoughter, Bruce Campney, Tennyson Hoa, Richard Rodriguez, Cheyenne Hernandez, Stephen Gilbert
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Publication number: 20070132779Abstract: Smart graphic elements are provided for use as portions or components of one or more graphic displays, which may be executed in a process plant to display information to users about the process plant environment, such as the current state of devices within the process plant. Each of the graphic elements is an executable object that includes a property or a variable that may be bound to an associated process entity, like a field device, and that includes multiple visualizations, each of which may be used to graphically depict the associated process entity on a user interface when the graphic element is executed as part of the graphic display. Any of the graphic element visualizations may be used in any particular graphic display and the same graphic display may use different ones of the visualizations at different times.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 4, 2005Publication date: June 14, 2007Inventors: Stephen Gilbert, Ken Beoughter, J.Michael Lucas, Tennyson Hao, Mark Nixon
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Publication number: 20070106761Abstract: A service-oriented architecture for process control systems is disclosed. In one example, a method for conveying process control information between a client process and a server process in a process control system establishes a server process including a plurality of process control services, each of which has a corresponding service interface. The example method also establishes a client process having a proxy for each of the plurality of services to which the client process establishes a communicative connection. Additionally, the example method provides port information associated with the service interfaces to the client process to enable the conveyance of process control information between the client process and the server process.Type: ApplicationFiled: November 3, 2006Publication date: May 10, 2007Inventors: Ken Beoughter, Stephen Gilbert, Mark Nixon, J. Lucas
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Publication number: 20070073822Abstract: A communication technique enables the efficient transmission of data through a low bandwidth and/or time delayed communication link and minimizes the idle time of the communication link by using a deferred acknowledgment of message bundles to temporally pack the communication link. The transmitting system stores messages to be transmitted in a pending message queue and applies a dynamic window to the pending message queue to define a message bundle to be sent through the slow communication link. The transmitting system requests an acknowledgment for at least one message within the bundle, but does not require an acknowledgment for every message within the bundle. Transmitted messages are temporarily stored as outstanding messages in a retransmission queue until the transmitted messages are acknowledged or until a time-out period associated with the messages has lapsed.Type: ApplicationFiled: September 11, 2006Publication date: March 29, 2007Applicant: FISHER-ROSEMOUNT SYSTEMS, INC.Inventors: William Bennett, Ken Beoughter, Robert Havekost, John Shepard, Dwight Jennings
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Patent number: 7110835Abstract: Graphic displays, which display information about process elements and the manner in which these elements are connected within a process, process modules, which simulate the operation of the elements depicted within the graphic displays and control modules, which perform on-line control activities within a process, may be communicatively connected together to provide a combined control, simulation and display environment that enables enhanced control, simulation and display activities. Smart process objects, which have both graphical and simulation elements, may used to create one or more graphic displays and one or more process simulation modules, each having elements which may communicate with one another to share data between the graphic displays and the process modules.Type: GrantFiled: July 21, 2003Date of Patent: September 19, 2006Assignee: Fisher-Rosemount Systems, Inc.Inventors: Terrence Blevins, Mark Nixon, Michael Lucas, Arthur Webb, Ken Beoughter
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Publication number: 20050096872Abstract: Smart process objects, which have both graphical and simulation elements, may be used to create one or more graphic displays and one or more process simulation modules, each having elements which may communicate with one another and with devices within a process plant to model and depict the operation of a process plant. The smart process objects may include one or more device objects, which represent physical devices within the process plant, and may include one or more smart connection objects which represent and model the flow of a material, such as a gas, a liquid, a composition of solid, electricity, etc., through a connection between entities within the process plant. The smart process objects may also include one or more smart stream objects, which also may represent and model the flow of a material at a particular point in the process plant.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 16, 2004Publication date: May 5, 2005Applicant: FISHER-ROSEMOUNT SYSTEMS, INC.Inventors: Terrence Blevins, Mark Nixon, Ken Beoughter, Michael Lucas, Arthur Webb
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Publication number: 20050021832Abstract: A communication technique enables the efficient transmission of data through a low bandwidth and/or time delayed communication link and minimizes the idle time of the communication link by using a deferred acknowledgment of message bundles to temporally pack the communication link. The transmitting system stores messages to be transmitted in a pending message queue and applies a dynamic window to the pending message queue to define a message bundle to be sent through the slow communication link. The transmitting system requests an acknowledgment for at least one message within the bundle, but does not require an acknowledgment for every message within the bundle. Transmitted messages are temporarily stored as outstanding messages in a retransmission queue until the transmitted messages are acknowledged or until a time-out period associated with the messages has lapsed.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 26, 2004Publication date: January 27, 2005Inventors: William Bennett, Ken Beoughter, Robert Havekost, John Shepard, Dwight Jennings
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Publication number: 20040153700Abstract: An application station for use in a process control system includes a redundancy manager and a redundancy link subsystem coupled to the redundancy manager. The redundancy manager is adapted to communicate with a second application station via a redundancy communication link. The redundancy manager establishes a redundancy context with the second application station and uses the redundancy context to track the operations of the second application station. Additionally, the redundancy manager receives information from the second application station via the redundancy link and the redundancy link subsystem and, in response to the information, executes a switchover of the operations of the second application station to the application station.Type: ApplicationFiled: January 2, 2003Publication date: August 5, 2004Inventors: Mark J. Nixon, Ken Beoughter
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Publication number: 20040153804Abstract: Graphic displays, which display information about process elements and the manner in which these elements are connected within a process, process modules, which simulate the operation of the elements depicted within the graphic displays and control modules, which perform on-line control activities within a process, may be communicatively connected together to provide a combined control, simulation and display environment that enables enhanced control, simulation and display activities. Smart process objects, which have both graphical and simulation elements, may used to create one or more graphic displays and one or more process simulation modules, each having elements which may communicate with one another to share data between the graphic displays and the process modules.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 21, 2003Publication date: August 5, 2004Inventors: Terrence Blevins, Mark Nixon, Michael Lucas, Arthur Webb, Ken Beoughter
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Publication number: 20030195639Abstract: A system and method for creating and incorporating a function block within a process control system enables a user of the process control system to generate a function block by combining a plurality of files selected from a group of files provided by the manufacturer of the process control system to form a source code file associated with the function block. The user can modify the function block source code file to include a procedure, routine or algorithm that is not provided by the manufacturer and can send the modified source code file to the manufacturer for validation. If the function block source code file is validated, a security measure such as a digital signature is provided to the user that enables the user to incorporate the function block within the process control system.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 15, 2002Publication date: October 16, 2003Inventors: Mark J. Nixon, Ken Beoughter, Brandon Hieb, Terrence L. Blevins, Dennis L. Stevenson
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Publication number: 20020111948Abstract: A process control system includes multiple zones containing process control network communicatively interconnected to exchange information necessary to monitor the system and to perform process control. Each zone may include an inter-zone server that controls the exchange of information between the zones via communication links. In addition to controlling the routing of information between the zones, the inter-zone servers may perform additional processing on the information being exchanged, such as security monitoring, language translation and version control.Type: ApplicationFiled: April 9, 2002Publication date: August 15, 2002Inventors: Mark J. Nixon, Robert Havekost, Ken Beoughter