Patents by Inventor Richard Schoonover
Richard Schoonover 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).
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Patent number: 10966507Abstract: A removal and re-application board for hair extensions and process of using same. The board contains at least 3 serially spaced apart lines (linear or curvilinear), vertically or radially spaced apart. Hair extension bands are mounted on, above or below the lines. Board indicia conveys sequential band removal and board placement, and then band board-dismount and re-application sequential order data to re-apply the hair bands on a user's head. When the bands are on-board, the bands from a columnar matrix; therefore the serially spaced apart lines provide board-mounting and board dismounting data to the stylist (board-mounting is hair band removal; board dismounting is band re-application). The indicia and the serially spaced apart lines allow for hair bands to be easily stored (board-mounted) and organized, such that the hair bands can be reliably re-applied to substantially the same location on a user's head.Type: GrantFiled: July 15, 2020Date of Patent: April 6, 2021Assignee: INTERNATIONAL DESIGNS CORPORATION, LLCInventor: Richard Schoonover
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Publication number: 20200345123Abstract: A removal and re-application board for hair extensions and process of using same. The board contains at least 3 serially spaced apart lines (linear or curvilinear), vertically or radially spaced apart. Hair extension bands are mounted on, above or below the lines. Board indicia conveys sequential band removal and board placement, and then band board-dismount and re-application sequential order data to re-apply the hair bands on a user's head. When the bands are on-board, the bands from a columnar matrix; therefore the serially spaced apart lines provide board-mounting and board dismounting data to the stylist (board-mounting is hair band removal; board dismounting is band re-application). The indicia and the serially spaced apart lines allow for hair bands to be easily stored (board-mounted) and organized, such that the hair bands can be reliably re-applied to substantially the same location on a user's head.Type: ApplicationFiled: July 15, 2020Publication date: November 5, 2020Inventor: Richard Schoonover
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Patent number: 10729222Abstract: A removal and re-application board for hair extensions and process of using same. The board contains at least 3 serially spaced apart lines (linear or curvilinear), vertically or radially spaced apart. Hair extension bands are mounted on, above or below the lines. Board indicia conveys sequential band removal and board placement, and then band board-dismount and re-application sequential order data to re-apply the hair bands on a user's head. When the bands are on-board, the bands from a columnar matrix; therefore the serially spaced apart lines provide board-mounting and board dismounting data to the stylist (board-mounting is hair band removal; board dismounting is band re-application). The indicia and the serially spaced apart lines allow for hair bands to be easily stored (board-mounted) and organized, such that the hair bands can be reliably re-applied to substantially the same location on a user's head.Type: GrantFiled: October 6, 2017Date of Patent: August 4, 2020Assignee: International Designs Corporation, LLCInventor: Richard Schoonover
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Publication number: 20190104828Abstract: A removal and re-application board for hair extensions and process of using same. The board contains at least 3 serially spaced apart lines (linear or curvilinear), vertically or radially spaced apart. Hair extension bands are mounted on, above or below the lines. Board indicia conveys sequential band removal and board placement, and then band board-dismount and re-application sequential order data to re-apply the hair bands on a user's head. When the bands are on-board, the bands from a columnar matrix; therefore the serially spaced apart lines provide board-mounting and board dismounting data to the stylist (board-mounting is hair band removal; board dismounting is band re-application). The indicia and the serially spaced apart lines allow for hair bands to be easily stored (board-mounted) and organized, such that the hair bands can be reliably re-applied to substantially the same location on a user's head.Type: ApplicationFiled: October 6, 2017Publication date: April 11, 2019Inventor: Richard Schoonover
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Patent number: 8732632Abstract: SOC designs increasingly feature IP cores with standardized wrapper cells having vendor-provided test patterns for the internal logic. To test wrapper, interconnect, and other boundary logic, a boundary model is extracted from the design in a synthesis or ATPG environment. Wrapper cells are identified and boundary logic extracted by structural tracing of wrapper chains and tracing from core inputs/outputs to the wrapper cells. A created boundary model excludes core internal logic tested by vendor-provided test patterns to be migrated to the containing chip interface. An SOC ATPG model is built including boundary models for all embedded cores, interconnects, and any other logic residing at the SOC top hierarchical level. This model is very compact yet accurate for testing logic external to all embedded cores. Test time is reduced and test pattern generation greatly simplified, while featuring good test coverage. The same approach is used for 3D packages having multiple dies.Type: GrantFiled: March 15, 2013Date of Patent: May 20, 2014Assignee: Cadence Design Systems, Inc.Inventors: Brion Keller, Pradeep Nagaraj, Richard Schoonover, Vivek Chickermane
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Patent number: 8120378Abstract: Systems, methods, and computer readable media storing instructions for such methods relate to generating test vectors that can be used for exercising a particular area of interest in an integrated circuit. The test vectors generally include a non-overlapping repeating and/or predictable sequence of care bits (a care bit pattern) that can be used by a tester to cause the exercise of the area and collect emissions caused by exercising the area. Such emissions can be used for analysis and debugging of the circuit and/or a portion of it. Aspects can include providing a synchronization signal that can be used by a tester to allow sensor activation at appropriate times.Type: GrantFiled: August 31, 2010Date of Patent: February 21, 2012Assignee: Cadence Design Systems, Inc.Inventors: Joseph Swenton, Thomas Bartenstein, Richard Schoonover, David Sliwinski
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Publication number: 20100321055Abstract: Systems, methods, and computer readable media storing instructions for such methods relate to generating test vectors that can be used for exercising a particular area of interest in an integrated circuit. The test vectors generally include a non-overlapping repeating and/or predictable sequence of care bits (a care bit pattern) that can be used by a tester to cause the exercise of the area and collect emissions caused by exercising the area. Such emissions can be used for analysis and debugging of the circuit and/or a portion of it. Aspects can include providing a synchronization signal that can be used by a tester to allow sensor activation at appropriate times.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 31, 2010Publication date: December 23, 2010Applicant: Cadence Design Systems, Inc.Inventors: Joseph Swenton, Thomas Bartenstein, Richard Schoonover, David Sliwinski
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Patent number: 7821276Abstract: Systems, methods, and computer readable media storing instructions for such methods relate to generating test vectors that can be used for exercising a particular area of interest in an integrated circuit. The test vectors generally include a non-overlapping repeating and/or predictable sequence of care bits (a care bit pattern) that can be used by a tester to cause the exercise of the area and collect emissions caused by exercising the area. Such emissions can be used for analysis and debugging of the circuit and/or a portion of it. Aspects can include providing a synchronization signal that can be used by a tester to allow sensor activation at appropriate times.Type: GrantFiled: May 16, 2008Date of Patent: October 26, 2010Assignee: Cadence Design Systems, Inc.Inventors: Joseph Swenton, Thomas Bartenstein, Richard Schoonover, David Sliwinski
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Publication number: 20080284453Abstract: Systems, methods, and computer readable media storing instructions for such methods relate to generating test vectors that can be used for exercising a particular area of interest in an integrated circuit. The test vectors generally include a non-overlapping repeating and/or predictable sequence of care bits (a care bit pattern) that can be used by a tester to cause the exercise of the area and collect emissions caused by exercising the area. Such emissions can be used for analysis and debugging of the circuit and/or a portion of it. Aspects can include providing a synchronization signal that can be used by a tester to allow sensor activation at appropriate times.Type: ApplicationFiled: May 16, 2008Publication date: November 20, 2008Applicant: Cadence Design Systems, Inc.Inventors: Joseph Swenton, Thomas Bartenstein, Richard Schoonover, David Sliwinski
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Publication number: 20070135242Abstract: A portable, easy to use (e.g., baseball) pitching aid is disclosed to provide an audible indication of the arm motion, position and speed of a pitcher during a practice pitch. The pitching aid includes a real or replica ball having seams extending therearound. A flexible flap attachment is coupled to the ball by a connecting strap. Without releasing his grip on the ball during the practice pitch, the flap attachment is subjected to an increased velocity during the pitcher's delivery in response to an accelerated arm motion so as to emit a cracking sound and thereby provide confirmation that the pitcher has achieved proper biomechanics. The ball has first and second pairs of holes extending therethrough. First and opposite ends of the connecting strap extend from the flap attachment through respective ones of the first pair of holes to be detachably connected together when the pitcher wishes to grip a first set of the seams of the ball to practice a first pitch.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 14, 2005Publication date: June 14, 2007Inventor: Richard Schoonover