Patents by Inventor Kenneth P. Coleman

Kenneth P. Coleman 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: 8151273
    Abstract: An installation and configuration system consolidates workloads of multiple applications and services, including applications or services that may be installed or configured on multiple server devices or remotely hosted services. The system gathers environmental information, analyzes dependencies among the workloads, and populates the input data used by the workloads from a common database. The system then executes the workloads, allowing branching within the workloads or the sequence of workloads. An example of branching may include detecting an error condition, pausing the sequence, and presenting alternative fixes to a user.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 28, 2008
    Date of Patent: April 3, 2012
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Jeanine E. Spence, Joseph W. Hallock, Eric C. Kool-Brown, Jeremy D. Brown, Christer Garbis, Michael W. Jackson, Edward K. Tremblay, Dmitry Sonkin, Marc Greisen, Kanchuki Sarma, Michael D. Lubrecht, Gary J. Purchase, Kenneth P. Coleman
  • Publication number: 20100058120
    Abstract: A user interface displays multiple steps in sequential relationship to each other, and may group various steps together and provide completion indicators for each step as well as an overall completion indicator. Error conditions, status information, queries, and details about a particular step or group of steps may be displayed inline with the steps in a task detail portion of the user interface. The task detail portion may be collapsible and expandable by the user. Progress and completion indicators may be updated for each step, groups of steps, and the overall sequence. In a typical use, a software installation sequence may comprise installation steps from multiple software components. The user interface may illustrate the status of individual tasks, groups of task, and the overall sequence as the tasks are performed, and enable errors to be resolved by displaying queries and other information inline with the steps.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 26, 2008
    Publication date: March 4, 2010
    Applicant: MICROSOFT CORPORATION
    Inventors: Kenneth P. Coleman, Joseph W. Hallock, Terrance C. Kirkwood, Christer Garbis, Edward K. Tremblay, Dmitry Sonkin, Michael D. Lubrecht, Jeanine E. Spence
  • Publication number: 20100058105
    Abstract: An installation and configuration system consolidates workloads of multiple applications and services, including applications or services that may be installed or configured on multiple server devices or remotely hosted services. The system gathers environmental information, analyzes dependencies among the workloads, and populates the input data used by the workloads from a common database. The system then executes the workloads, allowing branching within the workloads or the sequence of workloads. An example of branching may include detecting an error condition, pausing the sequence, and presenting alternative fixes to a user.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 28, 2008
    Publication date: March 4, 2010
    Applicant: MICROSOFT CORPORATION
    Inventors: Jeanine E. Spence, Joseph W. Hallock, Eric C. Kool-Brown, Jeremy D. Brown, Christer Garbis, Michael W. Jackson, Edward K. Tremblay, Dmitry Sonkin, Marc Greisen, Kanchuki Sarma, Michael D. Lubrecht, Gary J. Purchase, Kenneth P. Coleman
  • Publication number: 20090094552
    Abstract: A guided transition user interface may be used to transition from a first user interface to a second user interface. The guided transition user interface may include a representation of the second user interface as well as a description of a task to perform from the first user interface. The guided transition user interface may include a graphical image of the second user interface with annotated or highlighted areas that are related to the task. The guided transition user interface may be used for transitioning between areas of one application, transitioning between applications, and transitioning between interacting with different computing devices.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 4, 2007
    Publication date: April 9, 2009
    Applicant: MICROSOFT CORPORATION
    Inventors: Eric Watson, Krishna Sunkammurali, Kenneth P. Coleman