Patents by Inventor Kenneth F. Gudan

Kenneth F. Gudan 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).

  • Publication number: 20080244752
    Abstract: A system for using accelerometer-based detection of physical movement for document sharing provides easy and intuitive ways to securely share documents, even without passwords, between computing devices. The system of the present invention includes: at least two computing devices that each have a motion detection device capable of detecting sudden movements and generating a unique signature. The unique signature can then be used to generate signatures or shared secrets for controlling the transfer of data between devices. The motion detection device is capable of detecting sudden movement such as the tapping of the two computing devices together, tapping a stack of computing devices, tossing a computing device in the air. The system may optionally include an intermediary device such as a server for transferring the documents or files between computing devices such that only a small decryption key and file pointer is needed to share records between computing devices.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 27, 2007
    Publication date: October 2, 2008
    Inventors: Kenneth F. Gudan, John W. Barrus, Kurt W. Piersol, Sergey Chemishkian
  • Patent number: 6256682
    Abstract: A power-up switch circuit in a peripheral device such as a keyboard is coupled to the main processing portion of a computer via an interface bus. The switch circuit together with bias and detection circuitry in the main processing portion allow non-intrusive use of a data communication line of the interface for controlling the supply of power to the main processing portion, without requiring a dedicated power-on wire between the peripheral device and the processing portion. A repeater circuit between the keyboard and the main processing portion causes a second signal to be sent through an upstream portion of the interface bus in response to receiving a first signal through a downstream portion of the bus, while the main processing portion is in low power mode. The repeater is also configured to not affect the interface bus when the main processing portion is in high power mode.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 10, 1998
    Date of Patent: July 3, 2001
    Assignee: Apple Computer, Inc.
    Inventors: Kenneth F. Gudan, Douglas M. Farrar, Christoph H. Krah, Richard D. Cappels, Sr.