Patents by Inventor Sharry Claypool

Sharry Claypool 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: 7502843
    Abstract: A queuing server is used for reliable message transport, where one subsystem desires to execute one or more ordered operations asynchronously. Messages are sent to the queue in groups, which may have one or more messages. Messages within a particular group are processed in a predetermined order. Optionally, groups of messages can marked as correlated such that all groups within a particular correlation can be processed in a predetermined order. A message can be stored in a SQL database table until processing of that message is complete. The receiving side of the message system can be scaled across multiple machines and/or across available resources of any given machine. The system can handle “disaster” scenarios on both the sending side (i.e. the sending machine crashes in the middle of sending a group), and the receiving side (i.e., a power failure causes a reboot in at least one of the receiving machines).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 30, 2004
    Date of Patent: March 10, 2009
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Jack Michael Kirstein, Chih-Jen Huang, Pradeep GanapathyRaj, Sharry Claypool
  • Publication number: 20060146848
    Abstract: A queuing server is used for reliable message transport, where one subsystem desires to execute one or more ordered operations asynchronously. Messages are sent to the queue in groups, which may have one or more messages. Messages within a particular group are processed in a predetermined order. Optionally, groups of messages can marked as correlated such that all groups within a particular correlation can be processed in a predetermined order. A message can be stored in a SQL database table until processing of that message is complete. The receiving side of the message system can be scaled across multiple machines and/or across available resources of any given machine. The system can handle “disaster” scenarios on both the sending side (i.e. the sending machine crashes in the middle of sending a group), and the receiving side (i.e., a power failure causes a reboot in at least one of the receiving machines).
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 30, 2004
    Publication date: July 6, 2006
    Applicant: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Jack Kirstein, Chih-Jen Huang, Pradeep Ganapathyraj, Sharry Claypool