Patents by Inventor Sarah Wilkin

Sarah Wilkin 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: 20200370085
    Abstract: The present invention relates to a method for screening the activity of a polypeptide, and, equally, for producing a polypeptide with a desired activity by said screening, in an efficient and cost effective manner and with high sensitivity. The methods of the present invention comprise (i) expressing a polypeptide by cell-free in vitro translation and (ii) determining the activity of the expressed polypeptide by solution titration with an interaction member. The screening of a wild-type polypeptide and a mutant library derived there from can be used for identifying a activity of these polypeptides to an interaction member as a consequence of one or more point mutations. Furthermore, the present invention relates to methods for identifying polypeptides with therapeutically relevant properties as a consequence of the identified desired activity of a polypeptide from a mutant library.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 4, 2018
    Publication date: November 26, 2020
    Applicant: PROIMMUNE LIMITED
    Inventors: Nikolai SCHWABE, Sarah WILKINS
  • Patent number: 7797643
    Abstract: A user interface comprises an interactive control and method for quickly changing the amount of text displayed in each item in a list of text items. The control allows the user to choose from a large range of choices for how much text is displayed and provides live updates of the changes. The method saves the user time by eliminating the need to refresh the screen when changing the amount of text displayed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 27, 2004
    Date of Patent: September 14, 2010
    Assignee: Apple Inc.
    Inventors: Steven P. Jobs, Stephen O. Lemay, Jessica Kahn, Sarah Wilkin, David Hyatt, Jens Alfke, Wayne Loofbourrow
  • Publication number: 20060253459
    Abstract: Techniques for presenting and managing syndication XML (feeds) are disclosed. In one embodiment, a user can modify how a feed is displayed, such as which content (and how much) is displayed, in what order, and how it is formatted. In another embodiment, a modification regarding how a feed is displayed is stored so that it can be used again at a later time. In yet another embodiment, a user can create a custom feed through aggregation and/or filtering of existing feeds. Aggregation includes, for example, merging the articles of multiple feeds to form a new feed. Filtering includes, for example, selecting a subset of articles of a feed based on whether they satisfy a search query. In yet another embodiment, a user can find articles by entering a search query into a search engine that searches feeds, which will identify one or more articles that satisfy the query.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 27, 2006
    Publication date: November 9, 2006
    Inventors: Jessica Kahn, Jens Alfke, Sarah Wilkin, Albert Howard, Scott Forstall, Stephen Lemay, Donald Melton, Wayne Loofbourrow
  • Publication number: 20060253489
    Abstract: Techniques for detecting, managing, and presenting syndication XML (feeds) are disclosed. In one embodiment, a web browser automatically determines that a web site is publishing feeds and notifies the user, who can then access the feed easily. In another embodiment, a browser determines that a web page or feed is advertising relationship XML, and displays information about the people identified in the relationship XML. In yet another embodiment, a browser determines that a file contains a feed and enables the user to view it in a user-friendly way. In yet another embodiment, feed state information is stored in a repository that is accessible by applications that are used to view the feed. In yet another embodiment, if a feed's state changes, an application notifies the repository, and the state is updated. In yet another embodiment, a feed is parsed and stored in a structured way.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 27, 2006
    Publication date: November 9, 2006
    Inventors: Jessica Kahn, Jens Alfke, Sarah Wilkin, Albert Howard, Steven Jobs, Scott Forstall, Gregory Christie, Stephen Lemay, Donald Melton, Wayne Loofbourrow
  • Publication number: 20060200443
    Abstract: Techniques for detecting, managing, and presenting syndication XML (feeds) are disclosed. In one embodiment, a web browser automatically determines that a web site is publishing feeds and notifies the user, who can then access the feed easily. In another embodiment, a browser determines that a web page or feed is advertising relationship XML, and displays information about the people identified in the relationship XML. In yet another embodiment, a browser determines that a file contains a feed and enables the user to view it in a user-friendly way. In yet another embodiment, feed state information is stored in a repository that is accessible by applications that are used to view the feed. In yet another embodiment, if a feed's state changes, an application notifies the repository, and the state is updated. In yet another embodiment, a feed is parsed and stored in a structured way.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 7, 2006
    Publication date: September 7, 2006
    Inventors: Jessica Kahn, Jens Alfke, Sarah Wilkin, Albert Howard, Steven Jobs, Scott Forstall, Gregory Christie, Stephen Lemay, Donald Melton, Wayne Loofbourrow
  • Publication number: 20060200740
    Abstract: Techniques for detecting, managing, and presenting syndication XML (feeds) are disclosed. In one embodiment, a web browser automatically determines that a web site is publishing feeds and notifies the user, who can then access the feed easily. In another embodiment, a browser determines that a web page or feed is advertising relationship XML, and displays information about the people identified in the relationship XML. In yet another embodiment, a browser determines that a file contains a feed and enables the user to view it in a user-friendly way. In yet another embodiment, feed state information is stored in a repository that is accessible by applications that are used to view the feed. In yet another embodiment, if a feed's state changes, an application notifies the repository, and the state is updated. In yet another embodiment, a feed is parsed and stored in a structured way.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 7, 2006
    Publication date: September 7, 2006
    Inventors: Jessica Kahn, Jens Alfke, Sarah Wilkin, Albert Howard, Steven Jobs, Scott Forstall, Gregory Christie, Stephen Lemay, Donald Melton, Wayne Loofbourrow
  • Publication number: 20060161845
    Abstract: Techniques for detecting, managing, and presenting syndication XML (feeds) are disclosed. In one embodiment, a web browser automatically determines that a web site is publishing feeds and notifies the user, who can then access the feed easily. In another embodiment, a browser determines that a web page or feed is advertising relationship XML, and displays information about the people identified in the relationship XML. In yet another embodiment, a browser determines that a file contains a feed and enables the user to view it in a user-friendly way. In yet another embodiment, feed state information is stored in a repository that is accessible by applications that are used to view the feed. In yet another embodiment, if a feed's state changes, an application notifies the repository, and the state is updated. In yet another embodiment, a feed is parsed and stored in a structured way.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 7, 2006
    Publication date: July 20, 2006
    Inventors: Jessica Kahn, Jens Alfke, Sarah Wilkin, Albert Howard, Steven Jobs, Scott Forstall, Gregory Christie, Stephen Lemay, Donald Melton, Wayne Loofbourrow
  • Publication number: 20050289147
    Abstract: Techniques for presenting and managing syndication XML (feeds) are disclosed. In one embodiment, a user can modify how a feed is displayed, such as which content (and how much) is displayed, in what order, and how it is formatted. In another embodiment, a modification regarding how a feed is displayed is stored so that it can be used again at a later time. In yet another embodiment, a user can create a custom feed through aggregation and/or filtering of existing feeds. Aggregation includes, for example, merging the articles of multiple feeds to form a new feed. Filtering includes, for example, selecting a subset of articles of a feed based on whether they satisfy a search query. In yet another embodiment, a user can find articles by entering a search query into a search engine that searches feeds, which will identify one or more articles that satisfy the query.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 13, 2005
    Publication date: December 29, 2005
    Inventors: Jessica Kahn, Jens Alfke, Sarah Wilkin, Albert Howard, Scott Forstall, Stephen Lemay, Donald Melton, Wayne Loofbourrow
  • Publication number: 20050289468
    Abstract: Techniques for detecting, managing, and presenting syndication XML (feeds) are disclosed. In one embodiment, a web browser automatically determines that a web site is publishing feeds and notifies the user, who can then access the feed easily. In another embodiment, a browser determines that a web page or feed is advertising relationship XML, and displays information about the people identified in the relationship XML. In yet another embodiment, a browser determines that a file contains a feed and enables the user to view it in a user-friendly way. In yet another embodiment, feed state information is stored in a repository that is accessible by applications that are used to view the feed. In yet another embodiment, if a feed's state changes, an application notifies the repository, and the state is updated. In yet another embodiment, a feed is parsed and stored in a structured way.
    Type: Application
    Filed: April 13, 2005
    Publication date: December 29, 2005
    Inventors: Jessica Kahn, Jens Alfke, Sarah Wilkin, Albert Howard, Steven Jobs, Scott Forstall, Gregory Christie, Stephen Lemay, Donald Melton, Wayne Loofbourrow