Patents by Inventor William J. Lloyd
William J. Lloyd 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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Patent number: 7920296Abstract: A system and method for determining the image and ancillary image sides of scanned hardcopy media. Hardcopy prints typically provide ancillary data to supply additional information for an area of interest and can enhance the analysis of key data in the print. Postcards, for example, provide a unique form of ancillary data. On the back of a postcard image, ancillary data information such as stamps, user notes, dates, addresses, and other types of annotation can be found. This data typically provides additional information to a reader of the postcard. Dual sided scanners provide both the image and ancillary (i.e., non-image) scans simultaneously. In addition, ancillary data can be in a variety of formats, such as audio, video and the like. When a hardcopy print is scanned the scanner provides two image files that represent the image and ancillary image sides of the print.Type: GrantFiled: December 14, 2007Date of Patent: April 5, 2011Assignee: Eastman Kodak CompanyInventors: Louis J. Beato, William J. Lloyd, Dale F. McIntyre
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Publication number: 20090153925Abstract: A system and method for determining the image and ancillary image sides of scanned hardcopy media. Hardcopy prints typically provide ancillary data to supply additional information for an area of interest and can enhance the analysis of key data in the print. Postcards, for example, provide a unique form of ancillary data. On the back of a postcard image, ancillary data information such as stamps, user notes, dates, addresses, and other types of annotation can be found. This data typically provides additional information to a reader of the postcard. Dual sided scanners provide both the image and ancillary (i.e., non-image) scans simultaneously. In addition, ancillary data can be in a variety of formats, such as audio, video and the like. When a hardcopy print is scanned the scanner provides two image files that represent the image and ancillary image sides of the print.Type: ApplicationFiled: December 14, 2007Publication date: June 18, 2009Inventors: Louis J. Beato, William J. Lloyd, Dale F. McIntyre
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Patent number: 5508826Abstract: A Self Calibrating Color Printer. The present invention enables color printers to accurately reproduce color images despite variations in ink, paper or the printing system. The calibrated printer includes a movable optical sensor assembly which first calibrates itself by measuring an included known color gamut located within the movement range of the sensor assembly. Once calibrated, the sensor assembly measures a color print test pattern newly printed by a movable color print head of the printer. An analog-to-digital converter transforms electrical signals from the sensor assembly to sensor values in digital form, enabling a printer control processor to process the measured data, thereby producing two look-up tables stored in memory: first, a color correction look-up table which adjusts image color values to account for the ink/paper variations, and second, an error diffusion look-up table which spreads color value errors at a given pixel to its neighbors.Type: GrantFiled: April 27, 1993Date of Patent: April 16, 1996Inventors: William J. Lloyd, John D. Meyer, King-Wah W. Yeung
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Patent number: 5442384Abstract: In one of the preferred embodiments, an inkjet printhead includes a nozzle member formed of a polymer material that has been laser-ablated to form inkjet orifices. The nozzle member also has formed on it conductive traces for supplying electrical signals to heating elements on a substrate mounted to a surface of the nozzle member. In a preferred method, the orifices are formed by Excimer laser ablation.Type: GrantFiled: October 19, 1993Date of Patent: August 15, 1995Assignee: Hewlett-Packard CompanyInventors: Christopher A. Schantz, Eric G. Hanson, Si Ty, Paul H. McClelland, William J. Lloyd, Winthrop D. Childers
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Patent number: 5408738Abstract: In one of the preferred embodiments, an inkjet printhead includes a nozzle member formed of a polymer material that has been laser-ablated to form inkjet orifices, ink channels, and vaporization chambers in the unitary nozzle member. The nozzle member is then mounted to a substrate containing heating elements associated with each orifice. In a preferred method, the orifices, ink channels, and vaporization chambers are formed using an Excimer laser.Type: GrantFiled: October 18, 1993Date of Patent: April 25, 1995Assignee: Hewlett-Packard CompanyInventors: Christopher A. Schantz, Eric G. Hanson, Si-Ty Lam, Paul H. McClelland, William J. Lloyd, Laurie S. Mittelstadt, Alfred I. Pan
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Patent number: 5305015Abstract: In one of the preferred embodiments, an inkjet printhead includes a nozzle member formed of a polymer material that has been laser-ablated to form tapered inkjet orifices. The nozzle member is then mounted to a substrate containing heating elements, each heating element being associated with a single orifice. In a preferred method, the orifices are formed by Excimer laser ablation.In other aspects of the invention, vaporization chambers as well as ink channels, providing fluid communication between an ink reservoir and the orifices, are also formed by Excimer laser ablation.Type: GrantFiled: April 2, 1992Date of Patent: April 19, 1994Assignee: Hewlett-Packard CompanyInventors: Christopher A. Schantz, Eric G. Hanson, Si-Ty Lam, Paul H. McClelland, William J. Lloyd, Laurie S. Mittelstadt, Alfred I. Tsong Pan
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Patent number: 5291226Abstract: In one of the preferred embodiments, an inkjet printhead includes a nozzle member formed of a polymer material that has been laser-ablated to form inkjet orifices, ink channels, and vaporization chambers in the unitary nozzle member. The nozzle member is then mounted to a substrate containing heating elements associated with each orifice. In a preferred method, the orifices, ink channels, and vaporization chambers are formed using an Excimer laser.Type: GrantFiled: April 2, 1992Date of Patent: March 1, 1994Assignee: Hewlett-Packard CompanyInventors: Christopher A. Schantz, Eric G. Hanson, Si-Ty Lam, Paul H. McClelland, William J. Lloyd, Laurie S. Mittelstadt, Alfred I. Pan
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Patent number: 5081596Abstract: A desktop printer for plain paper sheets includes the integral combination of a color printer and a text printer. The color printer is of the inkjet type to print color images incrementally and the text printer is of the laser-electrophotographic type to print monochrome text continuously. The printing information is segregated into color and text components, and the color printer is controlled to print only color components while the text printer is controlled to print only text components. A conveyor transports sheets from the text print engine to the color image print engine with incremental indexing motion.Type: GrantFiled: March 13, 1991Date of Patent: January 14, 1992Assignee: Hewlett-Packard CompanyInventors: Kent Vincent, William J. Lloyd
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Patent number: 5016024Abstract: Disclosed is an integral ink jet print head having an improved design. An ink reservoir wall at the base of print head guides a flow of ink from a remote reservoir. Ink is drawn by capillary action past flow restrictors and an ink channel into an ink heating zone. The ink heating zone is a chamber residing below an integrated ink heating structure which has been fabricated, using processes including photolithography, directly on the underside of an orifice plate. An orifice is located to one side of the ink heating zone. The ink heating structure housing the ink heating zone is a combination of thin layers deposited directly on the orifice plate. The multilayered structure includes an insulating layer of silicon dioxide, a resistive layer of tantalum aluminum alloy, and a top conductive layer formed of gold. The invention provides a single integrated print head that combines the separate elements of the previous designs into one unit having many ink jets on one ink jet print head.Type: GrantFiled: January 9, 1990Date of Patent: May 14, 1991Assignee: Hewlett-Packard CompanyInventors: Si-Ty Lam, William J. Lloyd
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Patent number: 4872028Abstract: A thermal ink jet printing system includes a drop detector which is used in a feedback loop to optimize operational drive pulse parameters. By optimizing the drive pulse, drop velocity can be set within an optimal range above a inflection point in the transfer function of a print head drop generator. This provides near maximal drop velocity while minimizing heat dissipation at the heater resistors which would otherwise impair reliability and print head life. The drive circuitry includes a microcontroller including a pulse controller, a test generator and an algorithm function. During a maintenance procedure, for example, during start-up, the test generator causes the pulse controller to test each of many drop generators with a series of fixed-voltage rectangular pulses of digitally increasing pulse width. The pulse width at which a drop is first detected and the velocity of each drop detected is correlated with the width of the pulse which generated that drop.Type: GrantFiled: March 21, 1988Date of Patent: October 3, 1989Assignee: Hewlett-Packard CompanyInventor: William J. Lloyd
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Patent number: 4734563Abstract: A unique inverse processed film resistance heater structure including a conventional passivation wear layer which is deposited directly on a first substrate. This deposition step is then followed by the deposition and patterning of resistance and conductive layers, and these layers are covered by an isolation layer and a thick support layer. The thick support layer is then bonded to a second substrate and the first substrate is removed so that a uniform, flat passivation layer is exposed. The result is a film resistor which has a reduced failure rate as compared to the prior art because it is covered by a planar passivation wear layer with fewer pin-holes and reduced stress.Type: GrantFiled: August 21, 1986Date of Patent: March 29, 1988Assignee: Hewlett-Packard CompanyInventor: William J. Lloyd
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Patent number: 4616408Abstract: A unique inverse processed film resistance heater structure is disclosed. A conventional passivation wear layer is deposited directly on a first substrate, followed by the deposition and patterning of resistive and conductive layers, and covered by an isolation layer and a thick support layer. The thick support layer is then bonded to a second substrate and the first substrate is removed so that a uniform, flat passivation layer is exposed. The result is a film resistor which has a reduced failure rate as compared to the prior art because it is covered by a passivation wear layer with fewer pin-holes and reduced stress.Type: GrantFiled: January 4, 1985Date of Patent: October 14, 1986Assignee: Hewlett-Packard CompanyInventor: William J. Lloyd