Puleio
Jonathan Puleio, Forest Hills, NY US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
---|---|---|
20090213068 | Ergonomic Pointing Device - An input device for a computer is described that positions the user's hand in a more ergonomically desirable position, i.e., at an angle of about 45° to the work surface. In preferred embodiments, the input device accommodates either a user's left or right hand, and in either case, positions the hand in an ergonomically desirable position. In another embodiment, the length of the input device of the present invention is adjusted for the size of the user's hand. In further embodiments, the input device of the present invention provides a palm rest. Other desirable features included in preferred embodiments include lateral buttons that are positioned one above the other. | 08-27-2009 |
Jonathan Philip Puleio, Forest Hills, NY US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
---|---|---|
20130200579 | Accessory Cart - In the specification and drawings an accessory cart is described and shown with a base, a housing element that is connected to the base and extends upward from the base, and a platform, which is connected to the housing element with the height of the platform being automatically adjustable. | 08-08-2013 |
Michael Puleio, Duyall, WA US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
---|---|---|
20100083219 | Runtime Object Composition - Objects in computing environments are often instantiated based on a class definition that is statically declared at design time, but such instantiation limits the flexibility of the objects so created. Objects may also be composed at runtime through a series of invocations of a reflection programming interface, but reflection techniques may be computationally expensive, and the generation of many objects at runtime based on a single object definition may redundantly invoke the reflection programming interface. As provided herein, when requested to generate a new object at runtime based on an object definition, the host environment may instead automatically generate a factory method (via reflection) using the object definition, and may invoke the factory method to compose the object. The factory method may also be cached with the object definition to facilitate the composing of additional objects based on the same object definition, thereby economizing computing resources and improving system performance. | 04-01-2010 |