Patents by Inventor Lee Boynton

Lee Boynton 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: 20080037787
    Abstract: A communication network encrypts a first portion of a transaction associated with point-to-point communications using a point-to-point encryption key. A second portion of the transaction associated with end-to-end communications is encrypted using an end-to-end encryption key.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 19, 2007
    Publication date: February 14, 2008
    Applicant: Seven Networks, Inc.
    Inventors: Lee Boynton, Trevor Fiatal, Scott Burke, Mark Sikes
  • Publication number: 20070027832
    Abstract: A real-time communication architecture establishes a continuous connection between an enterprise network and a communication management system. The connection is continuously held open allowing mobile devices real-time access to enterprise email systems. The real-time communication architecture can support an entire enterprise email system or individual email users. The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become more readily apparent from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention which proceeds with reference to the accompanying drawings.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 7, 2006
    Publication date: February 1, 2007
    Applicant: SEVEN NETWORKS, INC.
    Inventors: Trevor Fiatal, Lee Boynton, Scott Burke, Brian Gustafson, Binu Raj, William Alvarado, Juan Benitez, Fred Duncan
  • Publication number: 20060013169
    Abstract: Abstract of the Disclosure A Data Distribution Service (DDS) transfers information between nodes in an ad hoc mobile mesh network. The DDS includes many different novel features including techniques for coalescing retransmit requests to minimize traffic, providing a reasonable level of reliability for event oriented communications, multicasting retransmissions for use by many nodes, and providing other optimizations for multicast traffic. The DDS uses UDP datagrams for communications. Communications operate in a truly peer-to-peer fashion without requiring central authority or storage, and can be purely ad hoc and not depend on any central server. The protocol is NACK-based, which is more suited to a mesh network than a traditional approach like TCP, which uses positive acknowledgements of all data.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 8, 2005
    Publication date: January 19, 2006
    Applicant: Packethop, Inc.
    Inventor: Lee Boynton
  • Publication number: 20050174972
    Abstract: A Data Distribution Service (DDS) transfers information between nodes in an ad hoc mobile mesh network. The DDS includes many different novel features including techniques for coalescing retransmit requests to minimize traffic, providing a reasonable level of reliability for event oriented communications, multicasting retransmissions for use by many nodes, and providing other optimizations for multicast traffic. The DDS uses UDP datagrams for communications. Communications operate in a truly peer-to-peer fashion without requiring central authority or storage, and can be purely ad hoc and not depend on any central server. The protocol is NACK-based, which is more suited to a mesh network than a traditional approach like TCP, which uses positive acknowledgements of all data. The DDS is amenable to very long recovery intervals, matching well with nodes on wireless networks that lose coverage for significant periods of time and also works well with constantly changing network topologies.
    Type: Application
    Filed: February 8, 2005
    Publication date: August 11, 2005
    Inventor: Lee Boynton
  • Patent number: 5481721
    Abstract: The present invention provides a method and apparatus for the distribution of objects and the sending of messages between objects that are located in different processes. Initially, a "proxy" object is created in the same process as a sender object. This proxy acts as a local receiver for all objects in the local program. When the proxy receives a message, the message is encoded and transmitted between programs as a stream of bytes. In the remote process, the message is decoded and executed as if the sender was remote. The result follows the same path, encoded, transmitted, and then decoded back in the local process. The result is then provided to the sending object.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 31, 1994
    Date of Patent: January 2, 1996
    Assignee: NeXT Computer, Inc.
    Inventors: Bertrand Serlet, Lee Boynton, Avadis Tevanian