Patents by Inventor Norman W. Petty

Norman W. Petty 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: 7233895
    Abstract: A low energy detector maintains a sorted list that defines to the circuit removing samples from the queue the location and energy of all samples that fall below the predetermined energy level. This allows a circuit removing samples to execute an algorithm that allows samples to be deleted in accordance with a predetermined pattern.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 30, 2002
    Date of Patent: June 19, 2007
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 7133411
    Abstract: Maintaining a count of the number of samples below a predefined energy level that are in the sample queue. This count is then utilized by a circuit that is removing samples from the sample queue to determine which samples to delete in order to maintain a synchronous flow of data to a synchronous physical interface. The samples in the queue are being received from a packet switched network via a voice coder. A low energy detector is utilized to determine the energy level of samples before the samples are placed within the sample queue. This information is then utilized to maintain a counter for the circuit that is removing samples from the sample queue. Utilizing the contents of this counter, the circuit removing samples can determine which samples should be deleted of the ones that have a low energy.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 30, 2002
    Date of Patent: November 7, 2006
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 7072828
    Abstract: Problems of front-end clipping and excessively long holdover times in digitally encoded speech are resolved by the introduction of a queue at the transmitting end of a digital conversation. Samples are transmitted from the queue until an interval of low energy samples is encountered upon which time samples are not transmitted from queue until energy samples are present.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 13, 2002
    Date of Patent: July 4, 2006
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6956940
    Abstract: Utilizing an invisible agent within a remote switch to allow the redirection of calls received from a telephone set connected to a public telephone network to a main switching system.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 29, 2002
    Date of Patent: October 18, 2005
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventors: Isaac K. Eyeson, Joel M. Ezell, Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6792381
    Abstract: Accurately determining a location of a device by using an acoustic gyroscope within the device The acoustic gyroscope is periodically adjusted using information from external sources.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 6, 2002
    Date of Patent: September 14, 2004
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6674853
    Abstract: allowing a central business communication system to handle all aspects of call setup on a remote switch. Call control for a telecommunication call set up on a remote switch continues to be handled by the central business communication system; however, the switching of the bearer channels is performed automatically on the remote switch if the telecommunication call is between telecommunication terminals on the remote switch. In addition, if the telecommunication call is between two remote switches, the remote switches will automatically communicate the bearer channels through an interconnecting media without going through the central business communication system.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 22, 2000
    Date of Patent: January 6, 2004
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventors: Joel Ezell, John S. Helton, Norman W. Petty, Douglas A. Spencer, Wayne A. Zakowski
  • Publication number: 20030223443
    Abstract: A low energy detector maintains a sorted list that defines to the circuit removing samples from the queue the location and energy of all samples that fall below the predetermined energy level. This allows a circuit removing samples to execute an algorithm that allows samples to be deleted in accordance with a predetermined pattern.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 30, 2002
    Publication date: December 4, 2003
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Publication number: 20030223568
    Abstract: Utilizing an invisible agent within a remote switch to allow the redirection of calls received from a telephone set connected to a public telephone network to a main switching system.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 29, 2002
    Publication date: December 4, 2003
    Inventors: Isaac K. Eyeson, Joel M. Ezell, Norman W. Petty
  • Publication number: 20030225573
    Abstract: Maintaining a count of the number of samples below a predefined energy level that are in the sample queue. This count is then utilized by a circuit that is removing samples from the sample queue to determine which samples to delete in order to maintain a synchronous flow of data to a synchronous physical interface. The samples in the queue are being received from a packet switched network via a voice coder. A low energy detector is utilized to determine the energy level of samples before the samples are placed within the sample queue. This information is then utilized to maintain a counter for the circuit that is removing samples from the sample queue. Utilizing the contents of this counter, the circuit removing samples can determine which samples should be deleted of the ones that have a low energy.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 30, 2002
    Publication date: December 4, 2003
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Publication number: 20030223404
    Abstract: Utilizing an invisible agent within a remote switch to allow the redirection of calls received from a telephone set connected to a public telephone network to a main switching system using a transfer.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 29, 2002
    Publication date: December 4, 2003
    Inventors: Isaac K. Eyeson, Joel M. Ezell, Norman W. Petty
  • Publication number: 20030212548
    Abstract: Problems of front-end clipping and excessively long holdover times in digitally encoded speech are resolved by the introduction of a queue at the transmitting end of a digital conversation. Samples are transmitted from the queue until an interval of low energy samples is encountered upon which time samples are not transmitted from queue until energy samples are present.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 13, 2002
    Publication date: November 13, 2003
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Publication number: 20030208336
    Abstract: Accurately determining a location of a device by using an acoustic gyroscope within the device The acoustic gyroscope is periodically adjusted using information from external sources.
    Type: Application
    Filed: May 6, 2002
    Publication date: November 6, 2003
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6621792
    Abstract: A computationally-efficient traffic shaper replaces per-virtual-circuit shaping queues that all must be processed during each cell-emission period, with a sequence (130) of shaping queues (131) shared by a plurality of virtual circuits and only one of which must be processed during each cell-emission period. N shaping queues are used, where N is the maximum cell delay effected by the traffic shaper divided by the cell emission period; for constant-bit-rate narrowband virtual circuits, N is 47. Each virtual circuit is assigned one or more of the shaping queues, spaced evenly in the sequence, as its serving queues, proportionally to its size. A dequeue state machine (141) cyclically transmits the contents of a current one of the shaping queues during each period. Per-virtual-circuit instances of an enqueue state machine (140) each enqueue received ATM cells of its corresponding virtual circuit.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 23, 1999
    Date of Patent: September 16, 2003
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6574220
    Abstract: A traffic shaper (121) accommodates F5 maintenance cells of an ATM constant bit rate (CBR) virtual circuit without causing jitter or delay of the CBR traffic cells. Each virtual circuit is allocated two queues: a first queue (131) for enqueuing CBR traffic cells and a second queue (132) for enqueuing maintenance cells. Each virtual circuit is allocated twice its normal bandwidth on the transmission medium (120). A dequeue state machine (140) transmits contents of each first queue at twice the normal transmission rate during one half of each normal transmission interval of the queue's corresponding virtual circuit, and transmits contents of each second queue at twice the normal transmission rate during the other half of each normal transmission interval of the queue's corresponding virtual circuit.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 6, 1999
    Date of Patent: June 3, 2003
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6546007
    Abstract: A time-slot interchanger (TSI 100) is used to control both time-slot access and distribution of signals to physical or virtual signal-processing circuits (106-116). The TSI includes a control table (200) with an entry (202) for each time slot, that specifies the source (204, 205) and destination (230, 231) of signals received during the corresponding time-slot interval and the processing (208-228) of those signals. The TSI is coupled to the signal processing circuits, and sends the received signals to the signal processing circuits for processing along with control signals to effect the processing specified by the corresponding control-table entries. For conferencing, the TSI sends all signals for each conference in sequence to the conferencing circuit (108) before starting and sending any signals for any other conference, thereby allowing a single conference accumulator to support any number of conferences of any size.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 31, 1999
    Date of Patent: April 8, 2003
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6480511
    Abstract: An ATM cell constructor (100) of an ATM transmitter assembles a stream of frames of constant bit-rate traffic received on a listen TDM bus (102) into cell payloads (1104) using ATM adaptation layer 1 (AAL1). Once every eight cells, the AAL1 structured data transfer (SDT) cell constructor layer (112) introduces a one-octet SDT offset pointer (1120) into the payload. This pointer designates traffic-block (TDM frame) boundaries. The payload with an attached ATM header forms an ATM cell, and the constructor transmits a stream of the ATM cells to an ATM cell deconstructor (2100) of an ATM receiver. The deconstructor disassembles the payloads of the received ATM cells and transmits the stream of frames of constant bit-rate traffic on a talk TDM bus (102). In response to each received SDT offset pointer, the deconstructor's time slot interchanger (TSI 2108) resets to the start of frame-processing, thereby aligning frames formed by the TSI with the received frames.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 15, 1998
    Date of Patent: November 12, 2002
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6424651
    Abstract: In an asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) disassembler unit that is receiving ATM cells from an optical interface and converting data from these cells onto a constant bit rate (CBR) call, only a nominal predefined build out is defined for each optical interface. If an ATM cell is not received within the proper amount of time for the CBR call from the optical interface, the build out is automatically adjusted so that the build out is equal to the amount of delay that was experienced in receiving the next ATM cell for the call. Only the build out for the individual call that actually experienced the delay of the ATM cell is redefined. The other calls being handled by the optical interface are not effected by this automatic adjustment of the build out interval for the individual call. In addition, when an ATM cell is delayed for a particular call, the information that is transmitted for the call is the last PCM sample of the present ATM cell for that call.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 15, 1998
    Date of Patent: July 23, 2002
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventors: Norman C. Chan, Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6212189
    Abstract: An ATM cell constructor (100) limits transmission-delay variations between successive cells of traffic of individual narrowband and wideband channels in a multi-channel environment. Whenever an ATM AAL1 layer (112) of processing completes assembling (606) an ATM cell payload for a narrowband channel (611), it increments (612) a count that anticipates the number of ATM cells that will mature for transmission during the next cell construction period. For wideband channels, a function checks (1010) whether traffic from the number of narrowband channels that form the wideband channel will result in completion of assembly of that channel's cell payload during the next cell construction period; if so, the function increments (1012) the abovementioned count. The count is reset (302) at the beginning of each cell construction period.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 12, 1998
    Date of Patent: April 3, 2001
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6178184
    Abstract: An ATM cell constructor (100) of an ATM transmitter assembles a stream of frames of constant bit-rate traffic received on a listen TDM bus (102) into cell payloads (1104) using ATM adaptation layer 1 (AAL1). Once every eight cells, the AAL1 structured data transfer (SDT) cell constructor layer (112) introduces a one-octet SDT offset pointer (1120) into the payload. This pointer designates traffic-block (TDM frame) boundaries. The payload with an attached ATM header forms an ATM cell, and the constructor transmits a stream of the ATM cells to an ATM cell deconstructor (2100) of an ATM receiver. The deconstructor disassembles the payloads of the received ATM cells and transmits the stream of frames of constant bit-rate traffic on a talk TDM bus (102). In response to each received SDT offset pointer, the deconstructor's time slot interchanger (TSI 2108) resets to the start of frame-processing, thereby aligning frames formed by the TSI with the received frames.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 11, 1998
    Date of Patent: January 23, 2001
    Assignee: Avaya Technology Corp.
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty
  • Patent number: 6026467
    Abstract: A content-addressable memory (CAM) is implemented by using otherwise-unused memory management unit (MMU 102) and cache memories (104, 105) of a program-controlled microprocessor (100). A program stored in an instruction cache (104) and executed by the microprocessor causes the microprocessor to respond to receipt of a word of data (200), which is illustratively the VPI/VCI of an ATM network connection, by applying the most-significant bits (MSBs 202) of the received word as a comparand to tags (203) of entries (206) of a fully-associative translation buffer (103) of the MMU to obtain an index (204) indicative of which translation buffer entry's corresponding tag matches the comparand.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 1, 1997
    Date of Patent: February 15, 2000
    Assignee: Lucent Technologies Inc.
    Inventor: Norman W. Petty