Patents by Inventor William Sprott Greene

William Sprott Greene 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: 7194543
    Abstract: The present invention is directed to a system, method and software product for balancing resource services are always available to match the desired work to be done through the use of “sticky services.”. Sticky services are defined as services that you know you want to have available as resources and as such they need to be present in the environment of cooperative applications; it may be that you want these always present or it may be that you want them present whenever certain conditions occur (see NewWave policy service). The general assumption of distributed systems is to not count on the environment you want being present, or put another way assume failure will occur. Therefore distributed environments like Jini assume all services are transient and will be garbage collected when not in active use. For the inside out approach to work, a mechanism should exist that, when desired, counters the transit design assumptions.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 12, 2002
    Date of Patent: March 20, 2007
    Assignee: MCI, LLC
    Inventors: James A. Robertson, William Sprott Greene, Chris Stillwell, Matthew C. Pierret
  • Publication number: 20030144894
    Abstract: The present invention is directed to a system, method and software product for balancing resource services are always available to match the desired work to be done through the use of “sticky services.”. Sticky services are defined as services that you know you want to have available as resources and as such they need to be present in the environment of cooperative applications; it may be that you want these always present or it may be that you want them present whenever certain conditions occur (see NewWave policy service). The general assumption of distributed systems is to not count on the environment you want being present, or put another way assume failure will occur. Therefore distributed environments like Jini assume all services are transient and will be garbage collected when not in active use. For the inside out approach to work, a mechanism should exist that, when desired, counters the transit design assumptions.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 12, 2002
    Publication date: July 31, 2003
    Inventors: James A. Robertson, William Sprott Greene, Chris Stillwell, Matthew C. Pierret
  • Publication number: 20030126079
    Abstract: The present invention is directed to a system, method and software program product for implementing a policy payment agent which, based on policy thresholds set by the consumer, determines whether or not to autonomously issue a payment. Initially, the consumer sets the payment policy through the selection of payment parameters such as the type of consumable or transaction, maximum one-time payment amount, and recent spending rate. If the payment request meets the payment policy criteria, then the payment agent autonomously issues a payment. Otherwise, the request is passed to the user for manual intervention.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 12, 2002
    Publication date: July 3, 2003
    Inventors: James A. Roberson, William Sprott Greene