DN

Danny Marvin Neal

IBM: 14 patents #30 of 5,400Top 1%
🗺 Texas: #25 of 8,590 inventorsTop 1%
Overall (2002): #738 of 266,432Top 1%
14
Patents 2002

Issued Patents 2002

Showing 1–14 of 14 patents

Patent #TitleCo-InventorsDate
6495911 Scalable high frequency integrated circuit package Patrick H. Buffet, Paul Lee Clouser 2002-12-17
6493779 Method and system for interrupt handling using device pipelined packet transfers Guy L. Guthrie, Richard Allen Kelley, Steven M. Thurber 2002-12-10
6483720 EMC protection in digital computers Patrick H. Buffet, Paul Lee Clouser 2002-11-19
6480923 Information routing for transfer buffers Daniel F. Moertl, Steven M. Thurber, Adalberto G. Yanes 2002-11-12
6480917 Device arbitration including peer-to-peer access arbitration Daniel F. Moertl, Steven M. Thurber, Adalberto G. Yanes 2002-11-12
6477057 High frequency de-coupling via short circuits Patrick H. Buffet, Paul Lee Clouser 2002-11-05
6457077 System for executing a current information transfer request even when current information transfer request exceeds current available capacity of a transit buffer Richard Allen Kelley, Steven M. Thurber, Adalberto G. Yanes 2002-09-24
6425024 Buffer management for improved PCI-X or PCI bridge performance Richard Allen Kelley, Lawrence D. Whitley, Adalberto G. Yanes 2002-07-23
6421756 Buffer assignment for bridges Richard Allen Kelley, Steven M. Thurber 2002-07-16
6418503 Buffer re-ordering system Daniel F. Moertl, Steven M. Thurber, Adalberto G. Yanes 2002-07-09
6418497 Method and system for interrupt handling using system pipelined packet transfers Guy L. Guthrie, Richard Allen Kelley, Steven M. Thurber 2002-07-09
6405276 Selectively flushing buffered transactions in a bus bridge Wen-Tzer T. Chen, Richard Allen Kelley, Steven M. Thurber 2002-06-11
6351784 System for determining whether a subsequent transaction may be allowed or must be allowed or must not be allowed to bypass a preceding transaction Steven M. Thurber 2002-02-26
6347349 System for determining whether a subsequent transaction may be allowed or must be allowed or must not be allowed to bypass a preceding transaction Steven M. Thurber 2002-02-12