Patents by Inventor Samuel D. Gendler

Samuel D. Gendler 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: 8972461
    Abstract: Content is dynamically assembled at the edge of the Internet, preferably on content delivery network (CDN) edge servers. A content provider leverages an “edge side include” (ESI) markup language that is used to define Web page fragments for dynamic assembly at the edge. Dynamic assembly improves site performance by caching objects that comprise dynamically-generated pages at the edge of the Internet, close to the end user. Instead of being assembled by an application/web server in a centralized data center, the application/web server sends a page template and content fragments to a CDN edge server where the page is assembled. Each content fragment can have its own cacheability profile to manage the “freshness” of the content. Once a user requests a page, the edge server examines its cache for the included fragments and assembles the page on-the-fly.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 28, 2013
    Date of Patent: March 3, 2015
    Assignee: Akamai Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Daniel M. Lewin, Andrew T. Davis, Samuel D. Gendler, Marty Kagan, Jay G. Parikh, William E. Weihl
  • Publication number: 20140052811
    Abstract: Content is dynamically assembled at the edge of the Internet, preferably on content delivery network (CDN) edge servers. A content provider leverages an “edge side include” (ESI) markup language that is used to define Web page fragments for dynamic assembly at the edge. Dynamic assembly improves site performance by caching objects that comprise dynamically-generated pages at the edge of the Internet, close to the end user. Instead of being assembled by an application/web server in a centralized data center, the application/web server sends a page template and content fragments to a CDN edge server where the page is assembled. Each content fragment can have its own cacheability profile to manage the “freshness” of the content. Once a user requests a page, the edge server examines its cache for the included fragments and assembles the page on-the-fly.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 28, 2013
    Publication date: February 20, 2014
    Applicant: Akamai Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Daniel M. Lewin, Andrew T. Davis, Samuel D. Gendler, Marty Kagan, Jay G. Parikh, William E. Weihl
  • Patent number: 8572132
    Abstract: Content is dynamically assembled at the edge of the Internet, preferably on content delivery network (CDN) edge servers. A content provider leverages an “edge side include” (ESI) markup language that is used to define Web page fragments for dynamic assembly at the edge. Dynamic assembly improves site performance by caching objects that comprise dynamically-generated pages at the edge of the Internet, close to the end user. Instead of being assembled by an application/web server in a centralized data center, the application/web server sends a page template and content fragments to a CDN edge server where the page is assembled. Each content fragment can have its own cacheability profile to manage the “freshness” of the content. Once a user requests a page, the edge server examines its cache for the included fragments and assembles the page on-the-fly.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 23, 2012
    Date of Patent: October 29, 2013
    Assignee: Akamai Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Andrew T. Davis, Samuel D. Gendler, Marty Kagan, Jay G. Parikh, William E. Weihl, Anne E. Lewin
  • Patent number: 8166079
    Abstract: The disclosed technique enables a content provider to dynamically assemble content at the edge of the Internet, preferably on content delivery network (CDN) edge servers. Preferably, the content provider leverages an “edge side include” (ESI) markup language that is used to define Web page fragments for dynamic assembly at the edge. Dynamic assembly improves site performance by catching the objects that comprise dynamically generated pages at the edge of the Internet, close to the end user. The content provider designs and develops the business logic to form and assemble the pages, for example, by using the ESI language within its development environment. Instead of being assembled by an application/web server in a centralized data center, the application/web server sends a page template and content fragments to a CDN edge server where the page is assembled. Each content fragment can have its own cacheability profile to manage the “freshness” of the content.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 29, 2010
    Date of Patent: April 24, 2012
    Assignee: Akamai Technologies, Inc.
    Inventors: Daniel M. Lewin, Anne E. Lewin, legal representative, Andrew T. Davis, Samuel D. Gendler, Marty Kagan, Jay G. Parikh, William E. Weihl