Andeen
Bruce Andeen, Collierville, TN US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
---|---|---|
20100313583 | HELIUM MANAGEMENT CONTROL SYSTEM - A helium management control system for controlling the helium refrigerant supply from a common manifold supplies a plurality of cryogenic refrigerators with an appropriate helium supply. The system employs a plurality of sensors to monitor and regulate the overall refrigerant supply to deliver an appropriate refrigerant supply to each of the cryogenic refrigerators depending on the computed aggregate cooling demand of all of the cryogenic refrigerators. An appropriate supply of helium is distributed to each cryopump by sensing excess and sparse helium refrigerant and redistributing refrigerant accordingly. If the total refrigeration supply exceeds the total refrigerant demand, or consumption, excess refrigerant is directed to cryogenic refrigerators which can utilize the excess helium to complete a current cooling function more quickly. Similarly, if the total refrigeration demand exceeds the total refrigeration supply, the refrigerant supply to some or all of the cryogenic refrigerators will be reduced accordingly so that detrimental or slowing effects are minimized based upon the current cooling function. | 12-16-2010 |
Bruce Andeen, Collerville, TN US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
---|---|---|
20130019620 | Helium Management Control System - A helium management control system for controlling the helium refrigerant supply from a common manifold supplies cryogenic refrigerators with an appropriate helium supply. The system employs sensors to monitor and regulate the overall refrigerant supply to deliver an appropriate refrigerant supply to each of the cryogenic refrigerators depending on the computed aggregate cooling demand of all of the cryogenic refrigerators. An appropriate supply of helium is distributed to each cryopump by sensing excess and sparse helium and redistributing refrigerant accordingly. If the total refrigeration supply exceeds the demand, or consumption, excess refrigerant is directed to cryogenic refrigerators which can utilize the excess helium to complete a current cooling function more quickly. If the total refrigeration demand exceeds the total refrigeration supply, the refrigerant supply to some or all of the cryogenic refrigerators will be reduced accordingly so that detrimental or slowing effects are minimized based upon the current cooling function. | 01-24-2013 |
Bruce R. Andeen, Collierville, TN US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
---|---|---|
20110126554 | Linear Drive Cryogenic Refrigerator - A cryogenic refrigerator has a refrigeration cylinder and at least two displacers. Each displacer reciprocates in the refrigeration cylinder and moves refrigeration gas through the refrigeration cylinder. A regenerator cools the refrigeration gas, and gas control valves admit high pressure gas into the refrigeration cylinder and exhaust gas from the refrigeration cylinder. The refrigerator also has linear motors operatively connected to displacers, and the linear motors drive the displacers in reciprocating movement. A position sensor is provided to determine a parameter of the displacers during reciprocation. A controller is operatively connected to the linear motors to control the linear motors. The controller controls a parameter of the two displacers during reciprocation. The parameter can be stroke length, stroke speed, stroke phase or another parameter of the displacer for temperature control of the cryogenic refrigerator. The cryogenic refrigerator may also include a device to remove vibration. | 06-02-2011 |
20150040596 | Helium Management Control System - A helium management control system for controlling the helium refrigerant supply from a common manifold supplies cryogenic refrigerators with an appropriate helium supply. The system employs sensors to monitor and regulate the overall refrigerant supply. An appropriate supply of helium is distributed to each cryopump. If the total refrigeration supply exceeds the demand, or consumption, excess refrigerant is directed to cryogenic refrigerators which can utilize the excess helium to complete a current cooling function more quickly. If the total refrigeration demand exceeds the total refrigeration supply, the refrigerant supply to some or all of the cryogenic refrigerators will be reduced accordingly so that detrimental or slowing effects are minimized based upon the current cooling function. | 02-12-2015 |
Richard E. Andeen, Kirkland, WA US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
---|---|---|
20100242013 | User Code Workflow Activities - A front-end computing system initializes an instance of a workflow. The workflow contains a plurality of activities. The plurality of activities includes a shim activity. When the front-end computing system executes the workflow instance, the front-end computing system performs the shim activity. When the front-end computing system performs the shim activity, the front-end computing system sends a custom activity assembly to a sandbox computing system. The custom activity assembly is not fully trusted. The sandbox computing system executes the custom activity assembly. The sandbox computing system is isolated from the front-end computing system such that unexpected behavior of the sandbox computing system does not cause the front-end computing system to perform unexpected behavior. | 09-23-2010 |
Richard Eric Andeen, Kirkland, WA US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
---|---|---|
20090249192 | CREATING A VIEW FROM MULTIPLE TEMPLATES - Instead of using a single template to define a view, multiple interchangeable templates are selected to create a view. The interchangeable templates are shareable across different views which helps in creating different views without requiring users to hard code the changes to the view within a single template. The selected interchangeable templates defining the view are accessed and used to render the display of the view. | 10-01-2009 |
20100023852 | DECLARATIVE FORMS AND VIEWS - Technologies are described herein for declaratively defining forms and views and for rendering the declaratively defined forms and views. A declarative and rendering technology agnostic form definition is defined and stored that defines a layout for a form. A transformation definition file is also stored that defines a transformation from the declarative form definition to renderer-specific code. A transformation is performed using the transformation definition file, the declarative form definition, and form data provided by an application to generate renderer-specific markup for the form. The desired form will be displayed when a rendering client is utilized to render the renderer-specific markup. A view may also be declaratively defined, transformed, and rendered similarly. | 01-28-2010 |
20100241948 | Overriding XSLT Generation - A method is presented for editing and saving a web page at a client based web-page editor. A rendered web page is received from a server computer and displayed at a web-page editor on the client computer. The client computer identifies one or more customizable web parts on the web page and also identifies one or more shared templates that are associated with the customizable web parts. Each identified shared template is copied as an overriding template. A data view of one or more web parts is edited, causing one or more of the overriding templates associated with the web part to be modified. When the edited changes are saved, the client computer sends a message to the server computer. The message includes the portions of the overriding templates that are modified as a result of the edited changes to the web page. | 09-23-2010 |
Richard Eric Andeen, Seattle, WA US
Patent application number | Description | Published |
---|---|---|
20130055116 | THEME VARIATION ENGINE - A theme variation engine generates mock web pages based on selected user inputs defining thematic aspects of a web site. The inputs may include a color, which is used to derive a color palette used in generating the mock web pages. The input can also include an image, which can be transformed in various ways, and a web page layout that determines where the transformed image may be placed. The theme variation engine uses the inputs to generate various mock web pages that the user can select and have the associated thematic parameters saved for future use. Alternatively, certain thematic parameters associated with the selected mock web pages can be used for generating additional mock web pages. The selected thematic parameters can then be used to generate the web site for the user. A computer system may implement execute instructions using a theme variation engine program module. | 02-28-2013 |
20130067338 | DYNAMIC NAVIGATION REGION BASED ON SITE USAGE - A request for a page in a site can be received. The page can include a dynamic navigation region. The dynamic navigation region can be automatically updated based on usage of the site by multiple user profiles. The updating can include querying multiple sources of navigation item data and compiling a record of dynamic navigation items to be displayed in the dynamic navigation region. The page can be generated with the dynamic navigation region, and the page can be returned in response to the page request. Also, a request to pin a navigation item from the dynamic navigation region to the static navigation region can be received. In response to the request to pin, the pinned navigation item can be added to the static navigation region, and the page can be returned with the pinned navigation item added to the static navigation region. | 03-14-2013 |
20130111324 | Theming Engine | 05-02-2013 |
20140025628 | IMITATION OF FILE EMBEDDING IN A DOCUMENT - A container document can include a file node indicating a file and pointing to a location for the file that is separate from the container document on a server. An embedded relationship between the file and the container document can be imitated. The imitation can include responding to user input by performing the update on the file node, and by requesting that the server perform an update on the file that reflects the update performed on the file node. A request for an update to be performed on the file node can be received from a client at the server. In response to the request, the update can be performed on the file node at the server. A corresponding update, which reflects the update performed on the file node, can also be performed on the file at the server. | 01-23-2014 |