Patents by Inventor Michael Lupinacci

Michael Lupinacci 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: 7742489
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for a communications network that executes a medium access control (MAC) protocol that permits multiple access to a shared medium or shared switching fabric. The MAC protocol uses a BANDWIDTH_ALLOCATOR to regulate access to the network by sending a permission message to a NODE, allowing it to transmit to a specific set of NODEs for a specific length of time. The medium and switching fabric can carry one or more protocols, each of varying framing format and native bitrate. The switching fabric provides a connection-oriented bufferless data transport service that preserves frame ordering. An illustrative embodiment uses a slotted master/slave time-division multiplexed access (TDMA) scheme to allow flexible provisioning of network bandwidth.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 2, 2007
    Date of Patent: June 22, 2010
    Assignee: NetApp, Inc.
    Inventors: Stephen R. Chinn, Gene M. Ciancaglini, Michael M. Garofalo, James A. Hart, Michael Lupinacci, Paul Marichal, John D. Moores, Guy Oliveira, Salil A. Parikh, Mark R. Parquette, William Proulx, Donald Proulx, Michael Rydeen
  • Publication number: 20070258475
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for a communications network that executes a medium access control (MAC) protocol that permits multiple access to a shared medium or shared switching fabric. The MAC protocol uses a BANDWIDTH_ALLOCATOR to regulate access to the network by sending a permission message to a NODE, allowing it to transmit to a specific set of NODEs for a specific length of time. The medium and switching fabric can carry one or more protocols, each of varying framing format and native bitrate. The switching fabric provides a connection-oriented bufferless data transport service that preserves frame ordering. An illustrative embodiment uses a slotted master/slave time-division multiplexed access (TDMA) scheme to allow flexible provisioning of network bandwidth.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 2, 2007
    Publication date: November 8, 2007
    Applicant: Network Appliance, Inc.
    Inventors: Stephen Chinn, Gene Ciancaglini, Michael Garofalo, James Hart, Michael Lupinacci, Paul Marichal, John Moores, Guy Oliveira, Salil Parikh, Mark Parquette, William Proulx, Donald Proulx, Michael Rydeen
  • Patent number: 7289499
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for a communications network that executes a medium access control (MAC) protocol that permits multiple access to a shared medium or shared switching fabric. The MAC protocol uses a bandwidth allocator to regulate access to the network by sending a permission message to a node, allowing it to transmit to a specific set of nodes for a specific length of time. The medium and switching fabric can carry one or more protocols, each of varying framing format and native bitrate. The switching fabric provides a connection-oriented bufferless data transport service that preserves frame ordering. An illustrative embodiment uses a slotted master/slave time-division multiplexed access (TDMA) scheme to allow flexible provisioning of network bandwidth.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 16, 2002
    Date of Patent: October 30, 2007
    Assignee: Network Appliance, Inc.
    Inventors: Stephen R. Chinn, Gene M. Ciancaglini, Michael M. Garofalo, James A. Hart, Steven Lumetta, Michael Lupinacci, Paul Marichal, Muriel Medard, John D. Moores, Guy Oliveira, Salil A. Parikh, Mark R. Parquette, William Proulx, Donald Proulx, Michael Rydeen
  • Patent number: 7239642
    Abstract: A method and apparatus for a communications network that executes a medium access control (MAC) protocol that permits multiple access to a shared medium or shared switching fabric. The MAC protocol uses a BANDWIDTH_ALLOCATOR to regulate access to the network by sending a permission message to a NODE, allowing it to transmit to a specific set of NODEs for a specific length of time. The medium and switching fabric can carry one or more protocols, each of varying framing format and native bitrate. The switching fabric provides a connection-oriented bufferless data transport service that preserves frame ordering. An illustrative embodiment uses a slotted master/slave time-division multiplexed access (TDMA) scheme to allow flexible provisioning of network bandwidth.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 16, 2002
    Date of Patent: July 3, 2007
    Assignee: Network Appliance, Inc.
    Inventors: Stephen R. Chinn, Gene M. Ciancaglini, Michael M. Garofalo, James A. Hart, Michael Lupinacci, Paul Marichal, John D. Moores, Guy Oliveira, Salil A. Parikh, Mark R. Parquette, William Proulx, Donald Proulx, Michael Rydeen