Patents by Inventor Michael J. Scholtes

Michael J. Scholtes 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: 7062683
    Abstract: A two-phase method to perform root-cause analysis over an enterprise-specific fault model is described. In the first phase, an up-stream analysis is performed (beginning at a node generating an alarm event) to identify one or more nodes that may be in failure. In the second phase, a down-stream analysis is performed to identify those nodes in the enterprise whose operational condition are impacted by the prior determined failed nodes. Nodes identified as failed as a result of the up-stream analysis may be reported to a user as failed. Nodes identifies as impacted as a result of the down-stream analysis may be reported to a user as impacted and, beneficially, any failure alarms associated with those impacted nodes may be masked. Up-stream (phase 1) analysis is driven by inference policies associated with various nodes in the enterprise's fault model.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 22, 2003
    Date of Patent: June 13, 2006
    Assignee: BMC Software, Inc.
    Inventors: Michael R. Warpenburg, Michael J. Scholtes
  • Publication number: 20040225927
    Abstract: A two-phase method to perform root-cause analysis over an enterprise-specific fault model is described. In the first phase, an up-stream analysis is performed (beginning at a node generating an alarm event) to identify one or more nodes that may be in failure. In the second phase, a down-stream analysis is performed to identify those nodes in the enterprise whose operational condition are impacted by the prior determined failed nodes. Nodes identified as failed as a result of the up-stream analysis may be reported to a user as failed. Nodes identifies as impacted as a result of the down-stream analysis may be reported to a user as impacted and, beneficially, any failure alarms associated with those impacted nodes may be masked. Up-stream (phase 1) analysis is driven by inference policies associated with various nodes in the enterprise's fault model.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 22, 2003
    Publication date: November 11, 2004
    Applicant: BMC Software, Inc.
    Inventors: Michael R. Warpenburg, Michael J. Scholtes