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Benjamin Bounketh Phones & Addresses

  • 780 Santa Clara Ln NE, Bainbridge Is, WA 98110 (503) 781-7302
  • Bainbridge Island, WA
  • 13803 SE Alta Vista Dr, Happy Valley, OR 97086
  • Kirkland, WA
  • Portland, OR
  • Bainbridge Is, WA

Resumes

Resumes

Benjamin Bounketh Photo 1

Sr. Product Manager, Digital Products At Amazon

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Position:
Sr. Product Manager, Digital Products at Amazon
Location:
Greater Seattle Area
Industry:
Computer Software
Work:
Amazon - Seattle since Aug 2012
Sr. Product Manager, Digital Products

Digimarc Aug 2005 - Aug 2012
Product Line Manager

Digimarc Sep 2003 - Sep 2005
Sr. Product/Technical Marketing Manager

Digimarc Oct 1999 - Sep 2003
Sr. QA Engineer

Network Associates (McAfee) Feb 1997 - Oct 1999
Automation Engineer
Education:
Portland State University - School of Business 1999 - 2001
Portland State University 2001
Skills:
Product Management
Cross-functional Team Leadership
Product Life Cycle Management
Requirements Analysis
Product Strategy
Mobile Applications
Competitive Analysis
Mobile
Agile
Product Development
Strategic Partnerships
Product Launch
Product Marketing
Pricing
Program Management
Team Leadership
Agile Methodologies
Product Lifecycle Management
Mobile Devices
Scrum
Customer Experience
eCommerce Strategy
Mobile Technology
Online Purchase Experience
E-commerce
SaaS
Business Development
Start-ups
Agile Project Management
Software Engineering
Enterprise Software
Benjamin Bounketh Photo 2

Benjamin Bounketh

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Publications

Us Patents

Methods And Arrangements For Sensing Identification Information From Objects

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US Patent:
20130048722, Feb 28, 2013
Filed:
Sep 13, 2011
Appl. No.:
13/231893
Inventors:
Bruce L. Davis - Lake Oswego OR, US
Tony F. Rodriguez - Portland OR, US
Geoffrey B. Rhoads - West Linn OR, US
Benjamin B. Bounketh - Portland OR, US
Alastair M. Reed - Lake Oswego OR, US
Robert Craig Brandis - Portland OR, US
International Classification:
G06K 7/10
US Classification:
235383, 235454
Abstract:
In one arrangement, retail product packaging is digitally watermarked over most of its extent to allow machine identification by one or more inexpensive cameras at retail checkouts. Such a system also considers image fingerprints, product configuration, barcodes and other available information in identifying products. Imagery captured by conventional or plenoptic cameras is processed to derive several perspective-transformed views, which are provided to the identification system—increasing throughput by minimizing the need to manually reposition items for identification. Crinkles and other deformations in product packaging are optically sensed, allowing the surface to be virtually flattened to aid identification. A marked conveyor belt at the checkout station increases speed and accuracy, and provides other benefits to both shoppers and sellers. A great variety of other features are also detailed.
Benjamin B Bounketh from Bainbridge Island, WA, age ~51 Get Report