Patents by Inventor Noam A. Shendar

Noam A. Shendar 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: 20040216170
    Abstract: Content which users may wish to receive may be distributed with interrupting content such that the use of the content on the user's receiver may be interrupted and replaced with the interrupting content. The content which the user wishes to receive may be software, audio, video, graphics or other material and the interrupting content in one embodiment of the prevent invention may be advertisements. In this way, the user's receiver may be utilized to determine when it is appropriate to interrupt the interruptible content with the interrupting content. This may provide a convenient mechanism for reduced price or free distribution of a wide variety of media currently provided only in physical form or only for free without any compensation to the content provider.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 19, 2004
    Publication date: October 28, 2004
    Inventors: Oleg B. Rashkovskiy, Noam A. Shendar
  • Patent number: 6519011
    Abstract: A digital television may be implemented with more than one front end section so that more than one channel may be tuned at any given time. Thus, the delay inherent in acquiring a new channel in digital television system may be ameliorated because one tuner may tune to a current channel and another tuner may tune to another channel which the user is likely to tune to next.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 23, 2000
    Date of Patent: February 11, 2003
    Assignee: Intel Corporation
    Inventor: Noam A. Shendar
  • Publication number: 20020184642
    Abstract: A method for digital data distribution or broadcasting that takes advantage of non-deterministic (or “opportunistic”) unused bandwidth in dynamically optimized broadband digital broadcast systems. Digital data files received from broadcasts are stored in mass storage devices for viewing at a later time at high speed, overcoming “last mile” narrow bandwidth issues. Instead of reserving a particular communications channel or data transfer spectrum, data is opportunistically “piggybacked” onto unrelated broadcasts, using otherwise unused bandwidth within existing broadcast channels or spectrums. The broadcast source does not target the digital files at specific identifiable users or broadcast contents based on their interactive requests. Data broadcasting in accordance with the present invention may be implemented to work with any medium which allows the delivery of large files in a one-to-many fashion (i.e.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 23, 2002
    Publication date: December 5, 2002
    Inventors: Peter J. Lude, Daniel A. Radke, Noam A. Shendar, Michael K. Stauffer