Patents by Inventor Thomas K. Philips

Thomas K. Philips 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: 5235592
    Abstract: Dynamic switch protocols are implemented on a token bus protocol in a shared medium network to improve the basic token bus functional capabilities and link utilization, and to produce a uniform transaction protocol that supports both token bus and dynamic switch networks. Frame formats common to both token bus and dynamic switch protocols are utilized, and circuit switched protocols are superimposed on a token bus protocol in interlocked and data transmissions to establish a circuit switched path between a token holder sender node and a destination node. An initial frame transmission uses a normal link header and establishes the circuit switched path between the sender node and the destination node. Subsequent data frames contain no link header information, thereby improving transmission efficiency, and the last frame in such a transmission disconnects the switched circuit path, thereby allowing other transmissions to resume.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 13, 1991
    Date of Patent: August 10, 1993
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Ting D. Cheng, Peter A. Franaszek, Christos J. Georgiou, Gregory M. Nordstrom, Thomas K. Philips, Martin W. Sachs, Anujan M. Varma, Thomas M. Walker
  • Patent number: 5001730
    Abstract: A distributed algorithm for clock synchronization in address independent networks such as token rings and token busses is described. Synchronization is accomplished by using the fastest clock in the network as the master clock against which all other clocks in the network are synchronized. An algorithm is implemented in which each node sends out a message to all the other nodes in the network when its timer times out to tell its time. If a node receives a message with a higher clock time before it has had an opportunity to send out its own message, that node assumes that it is not the fastest node and it will not send out its message. Provision is made for maximum and minimum delays that are expected within a particular network. It has been proven that after a few cycles, all nodes will be synchronized to the node with the fastest clock and that this node will be the only one to transmit its time.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 31, 1989
    Date of Patent: March 19, 1991
    Assignee: International Business Machines Corporation
    Inventors: Peter A. Franaszek, Thomas K. Philips