Patents by Inventor Steven F. Goddard
Steven F. Goddard 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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Publication number: 20160202963Abstract: Devices in a network environment may have a local client application that may periodically update software components on a local device and may configure user access and other parameters to the software component for individual users. The client application may operate by querying a domain server and may receive a description of available software components. After identifying a component to install, the client application may download the component from a data store and install the component, then configure individual user access to the component.Type: ApplicationFiled: January 13, 2016Publication date: July 14, 2016Inventors: Jianhui Xie, Ferry Susanto, Steven F. Goddard, Michael L. Liptack
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Publication number: 20100242037Abstract: Devices in a network environment may have a local client application that may periodically update software components on a local device and may configure user access and other parameters to the software component for individual users. The client application may operate by querying a domain server and may receive a description of available software components. After identifying a component to install, the client application may download the component from a data store and install the component, then configure individual user access to the component.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 17, 2009Publication date: September 23, 2010Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Jianhui Xie, Ferry Susanto, Steven F. Goddard, Michael K. Liptack
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Publication number: 20100241668Abstract: A domain level database containing domain user permission settings may contain local device permission settings for domain users. For each of the local devices attached to the domain, a client service may periodically query the domain database and receive local permission settings for individual domain users. The local permission settings may affect access and availability of certain local resources and actions to the domain users. The client service may update a locally maintained database that may be used by a local security management system to permit or deny access to local resources and local actions to individual users when those users are logged onto the local device.Type: ApplicationFiled: March 17, 2009Publication date: September 23, 2010Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Ferry Susanto, Jianhui Xie, Michael K. Liptack, Steven F. Goddard
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Patent number: 7650403Abstract: The performance of client server interactions is measured by the interacting client. The client-generated performance data is efficiently transmitted to one or more servers by incorporating the performance data regarding one or more previous request/response cycles into a subsequent request. Performance data transmission is made more efficient by transmitting performance data context such as client, server and session details once per connection. Performance data is stored on the client until transmitted or until it has aged beyond a server specified maximum age. Performance data is aggregated on the server in memory resident accumulators. The server may have a set of accumulators for each server its clients communicate with as well as a set for each client. An accumulator value crossing a configurable threshold may trigger an event log entry. The number of performance data events in an event class may be limited to a maximum for a time period.Type: GrantFiled: August 5, 2003Date of Patent: January 19, 2010Assignee: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Dale Koetke, Xiaowen Shan, Nicole A. Bonilla, Alec Dun, Michael C. Price, A. Perry Clarke, Marc R. Allen, Joseph K. W. Chan, Ronald E. Gray, Aaron Hartwell, Steven F. Goddard
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Patent number: 7620688Abstract: A system and method for improved client and server communications, more particularly, an improved protocol that may be used for communication between a client and a server, such as in an email environment. Many features are provided for improved communications. An email server may provide the best message body available for an email message, may transfer an entire data object if requested property or properties are not well defined within the data object, may provide progress data for use in tracking download progress, and may send error information for a data object having an error. Email changes may be optimized at an email server component, even if the email changes occurred at another email server component. An email server may maintain a table of changes that occur to folders at an associated data store, and may notify a subscribed email client component of changes that occur in the table.Type: GrantFiled: February 14, 2003Date of Patent: November 17, 2009Assignee: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Joseph R. Warren, Min Zhong, Karl Froelich, Nicole A. Bonilla, Robert R. Novitskey, Alec Dun, Ronald Eric Gray, Aaron Hartwell, Steven F. Goddard, Brendan Power
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Patent number: 7451180Abstract: A method of batching multiple sets of responses on a server and sending the responses to a client in a single batch (i.e., a “chained” or “packed” batch). The sets of responses may be each be obfuscated and/or compressed. Once the batch is received by the client, each set is processed individually. The client may be configured to communicate the size of an uncompressed set of responses that it can handle. The server may use this information to create sets of responses that are the correct size, and may or may not compress the sets of responses. The server may chain the sets of responses and may continue to chain sets, compressed or not, until the server's buffer is full or close to full. The chained set of responses may then be sent to the client, and may process each of the sets of responses individually.Type: GrantFiled: August 3, 2006Date of Patent: November 11, 2008Assignee: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Joseph R. Warren, Karl Froelich, Nicole A. Bonilla, Remi A. Lemarchand, Ronald E. Gray, Alec Dun, Aaron Hartwell, Steven F. Goddard, Brent Curtis, Brendan Power
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Patent number: 7111039Abstract: A method of batching multiple sets of responses on a server and sending the responses to a client in a single batch (i.e., a “chained” or “packed” batch). The sets of responses may be each be obfuscated and/or compressed. Once the batch is received by the client, each set is processed individually. The client may be configured to communicate the size of an uncompressed set of responses that it can handle. The server may use this information to create sets of responses that are the correct size, and may or may not compress the sets of responses. The server may chain the sets of responses and may continue to chain sets, compressed or not, until the server's buffer is full or close to full. The chained set of responses may then be sent to the client, and may process each of the sets of responses individually.Type: GrantFiled: May 21, 2003Date of Patent: September 19, 2006Assignee: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Joseph R. Warren, Karl Froelich, Nicole A. Bonilla, Remi A. Lemarchand, Ronald E. Gray, Alec Dun, Aaron Hartwell, Steven F. Goddard, Brent Curtis, Brendan Power
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Publication number: 20040098478Abstract: The performance of client server interactions is measured by the interacting client. The client-generated performance data is efficiently transmitted to one or more servers by incorporating the performance data regarding one or more previous request/response cycles into a subsequent request. Performance data transmission is made more efficient by transmitting performance data context such as client, server and session details once per connection. Performance data is stored on the client until transmitted or until it has aged beyond a server specified maximum age. Performance data is aggregated on the server in memory resident accumulators. The server may have a set of accumulators for each server its clients communicate with as well as a set for each client. An accumulator value crossing a configurable threshold may trigger an event log entry. The number of performance data events in an event class may be limited to a maximum for a time period.Type: ApplicationFiled: August 5, 2003Publication date: May 20, 2004Applicant: Microsoft CorporationInventors: Dale Koetke, Xiaowen Shan, Nicole A. Bonilla, Alec Dun, Michael C. Price, A. Perry Clarke, Marc R. Allen, Joseph K. W. Chan, Ronald E. Gray, Aaron Hartwell, Steven F. Goddard