Patents by Inventor William A. S. Buxton

William A. S. Buxton 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: 6377240
    Abstract: An electronic design guide, such as a french curve, can be placed in the geometry layer of a drawing program. This allows the design guide and a drawing tool, such as an electronic paint brush, to be moved about with in the drawing simultaneously using two different input control devices, such as a mouse and an electronic stylus/tablet. The design guide can then be used block or mask paint from being applied to the drawing by comparing the coordinates of the cursor with the area of the guide and setting pixels of the drawing accordingly. The masking can be performed even as the guide is moved. The system also can be set to constrain the path of the ink applied by the drawing tool to the edge of the drawing guide even as the guide is moved. As the cursor is moved the position of the cursor is matched with the closest next line segment of the guide and that portion painted.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 15, 1999
    Date of Patent: April 23, 2002
    Assignee: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
    Inventors: Thomas P. H. Baudel, George W. Fitzmaurice, William A. S. Buxton, Gordon P. Kurtenbach, Charles T. Tappen, Peter E. Liepe
  • Patent number: 6317128
    Abstract: A system and method for providing a graphical user interface (GUI) with anti-interference outlines for enhanced user attention and fluency of work. The GUI utilizes transparency to merge images (or layers) of objects onto a graphical display. For example, variably-transparent (transparent/semi-transparent) or “see through” objects, such as menus, tool palettes, windows, dialogue boxes, or screens are superimposed over similar objects or different background content, such as text, wire-frame or line art images, and solid images. Anti-interference outlines are utilized to heighten the visibility and hence legibility of objects by mitigating visual interference, which is typically the result of overlaying similar colors or luminance values such that one layer “blends” into another.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 25, 1997
    Date of Patent: November 13, 2001
    Assignee: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
    Inventors: Beverly L. Harrison, William A. S. Buxton, Shumin Zhai
  • Patent number: 6118427
    Abstract: A system and method for providing a graphical user interface (GUI) for maximized user performance and system efficiency. The GUI utilizes variable-transparency to merge images (or layers) of objects onto a graphical display. For example, "see through" objects (such as menus, tool palettes, windows, dialogue boxes, or screens) are superimposed over similar objects or different background content (such as text, wire-frame or line art images, or solid images). A critical factor in the usability of variably-transparent GUI is the effect of visual interference on user performance. That is, the interaction between superimposed objects of varying types measurably alters performance to unacceptable levels in terms of user selection error rates and response times. The present invention provides a system and method of using optimal threshold transparency levels for user performance optimization.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 18, 1996
    Date of Patent: September 12, 2000
    Assignee: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
    Inventors: William A.S. Buxton, Beverly L. Harrison, Kim J. Vicente
  • Patent number: 6094197
    Abstract: A system and method for a graphical keyboard that benefits from the expressive power and intuitive ease of use associated with pen strokes and gestures, yet does not require complex character-recognition software. The graphical keyboard responds differently to different kinds of pen strokes. For example, lowercase "a" is entered by tapping a stylus on the "a" key of the graphical keyboard. Uppercase "A" is entered by an upward stroke initiated over the "a" key. Likewise, by stroking in other directions, a user can express other modifiers to the basic character, such as "control", "alt", "command," etc. Also, strokes in distinct directions can be used to express space, backspace, delete, and return characters, for example. Multiple strokes can be applied in sequence to a single key to express multiple modifiers. Visual feedback of pen strokes can be provided in the form of marks made by the pen.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 17, 1995
    Date of Patent: July 25, 2000
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: William A. S. Buxton, Gordon P. Kurtenbach
  • Patent number: 5973669
    Abstract: A temporal data control system that uses a hand held, mobile scrubwheel that includes two position indicators and an activation switch. As a user moves the scrubwheel about on a surface of a position sensing tablet a computer controls the movement of a cursor on a display. The computer also displays one or more temporal sequences, such as video sequences, on the display. Movement of the scrubwheel is detected by the computer allowing the user to position the cursor on a sequence to be controlled which the computer interprets as selecting the sequence. The computer detects rotation of the scrubwheel and controls the forward and backward motion (and speed) of the sequence responsive to the rotation. By moving the device to another location on the surface the user can select another sequence to control. The user can "point-and-scrub" temporal sequences.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 22, 1996
    Date of Patent: October 26, 1999
    Assignee: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
    Inventors: George W. Fitzmaurice, William A. S. Buxton
  • Patent number: 5666499
    Abstract: A graphical user interface with clickaround tools for enhanced user interaction with an application program utilizing "two-handed" techniques. The "tool-handed" technique provides two displayed cursors controlled by two distinct pointing input devices. Actuation of a secondary input device, corresponding a secondary cursor, provides a tool palette or menu near a displayed primary cursor. This technique allows a user to select and activate tools to perform substantive operations on displayed objects of the application program. The interface allows the user to invoke tools in a fluent and seamless fashion, thus maintaining the user's focus on the substantive operations and not the procedural motions of tool access.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 4, 1995
    Date of Patent: September 9, 1997
    Assignee: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
    Inventors: Thomas Baudel, William A. S. Buxton, George W. Fitzmaurice, Beverly L. Harrison, Gordon P. Kurtenbach, Russell N. Owen
  • Patent number: 5617114
    Abstract: A user interface technique operates in the environment of a processor-controlled machine for executing a program that operates on a set of underlying data and displays a visible representation thereof. The system further provides a visual depiction of a set of tools. The tools include click-through tools that can be combined with other tools (including other click-through tools) to provide composite tools. A click-through tool includes a generally transparent delineated active area that is movable so that it can be placed over a desired portion of the visible representation. When the user interacts with the visible representation through the active area, the action takes on an attribute of the particular click-through tool. A click-through tool can be superimposed on another click-through tool, whereupon an action taken through the two click-through tools onto the visible representation takes on attributes of both tools.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 24, 1995
    Date of Patent: April 1, 1997
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Eric A. Bier, William A. S. Buxton, Maureen C. Stone
  • Patent number: 5581670
    Abstract: A user interface technique operates in the environment of a processor-controlled machine for executing a program that operates on a set of underlying data and displays a visible representation thereof. The system generates a visual depiction of a movable sheet having a number of delineated regions (active areas), responds to a first set of signals for positioning the sheet relative to the visible representation, responds to a second set of signals characterized by position information (typically cursor position) relative to the sheet and the visible representation, and generates a third set of signals to the program. The third set of signals depends on the relative position of the sheet and the visible representation and on the position information that characterizes the second set of input signals. The delineated regions may be thought of and referred to as click-through tools.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 21, 1993
    Date of Patent: December 3, 1996
    Assignee: Xerox Corporation
    Inventors: Eric A. Bier, William A. S. Buxton
  • Patent number: D565653
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 8, 2006
    Date of Patent: April 1, 2008
    Assignee: Microsoft Corporation
    Inventors: Robert M. Freed, William A. S. Buxton, Margaret Johnson