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Matthew Denesuk Phones & Addresses

  • Miami, FL
  • 123 High Ridge Ave, Ridgefield, CT 06877 (203) 438-8781
  • 23 Dockside Cir, Redwood City, CA 94065 (650) 610-0954 (650) 739-0851
  • 956 El Cajon Way, Palo Alto, CA 94303 (650) 561-4533 (650) 739-0851
  • 1770 Hudson Dr, San Jose, CA 95124 (408) 264-9686
  • 4400 The Woods Dr, San Jose, CA 95136
  • Tucson, AZ
  • Santa Clara, CA

Publications

Us Patents

Degradable Plastics Possessing A Microbe-Inhibiting Quality

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US Patent:
6566419, May 20, 2003
Filed:
Feb 25, 2000
Appl. No.:
09/513703
Inventors:
Matthew Denesuk - San Jose CA
Assignee:
Seefar Technologies, Inc. - Tucson AZ
International Classification:
C08K 546
US Classification:
523122, 424 7808, 524 83, 524 87, 524167, 524242, 524339
Abstract:
A microbe-inhibiting (MI) compound is incorporated into a biodegradable polymer composition, most preferably, a starch-based polymer, to inhibit microbial growth and to attenuate the biodegradation of the polymer composition. Such a composition is used to manufacture any of a number of articles, particularly those that come in contact with foods such as foam containers and fruit shock absorber nets as well as packing materials such as loose fill pellets.

Degradable Animal Chewing Article Possessing Enhanced Safety, Durability And Mouth-Feel

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US Patent:
6576246, Jun 10, 2003
Filed:
May 24, 2000
Appl. No.:
09/578199
Inventors:
Matthew Denesuk - San Jose CA
Donald R. Uhlmann - Tucson AZ
Assignee:
Seefar Technologies, Inc. - Tucson AZ
International Classification:
A61K 900
US Classification:
424400, 424404, 424484, 424486
Abstract:
A chewable, biodegradable article for use as a pet toy comprises a matrix made of a natural polymer, a synthetic organic polymer or a mixture thereof, a natural or synthetic fibrous material that comprises fibers and that is bonded chemically or physically with the matrix material, and, optionally, includes one or more microbe inhibiting agents that inhibit the growth of microbes in or on the article. The presence of the fibrous material inhibits formation of sharp edges upon breakage when the article is chewed, thereby rendering the article safer when used by pets. Also disclosed are processes for manufacturing the above article.

Degradable Plastics Possessing A Microbe-Inhibiting Quality

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US Patent:
6756428, Jun 29, 2004
Filed:
Mar 12, 2003
Appl. No.:
10/249049
Inventors:
Matthew Denesuk - San Jose CA
Assignee:
Seefar Technologies, Incorporated - Tucson AZ
International Classification:
C08J 900
US Classification:
524 47, 521 50, 521142, 523100, 523122, 523128, 424404, 424408, 424413
Abstract:
A microbe-inhibiting (MI) compound is incorporated into a biodegradable polymer composition most preferably, a starch-based polymer, to inhibit microbial growth and to attenuate the biodegradation of the polymer composition. Such a composition is used to manufacture any of a number of articles, particularly those that come in contact with foods such as foam containers and fruit shock absorber nets as well as packing materials such as loose fill pellets.

Degradable Animal Chewing Article Possessing Enhanced Safety, Durability And Mouth-Feel

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US Patent:
6972133, Dec 6, 2005
Filed:
Apr 21, 2003
Appl. No.:
10/249578
Inventors:
Matthew Denesuk - San Jose CA, US
Donald R. Uhlmann - Tucson AZ, US
Assignee:
Seefar Technologies, Inc. - Tucson AZ
International Classification:
A61K009/14
A61K009/00
A01N025/34
US Classification:
424484, 424486, 424400, 424404
Abstract:
A chewable, biodegradable article for use as a pet toy comprises a matrix made of a natural polymer, a synthetic organic polymer or a mixture thereof, a natural or synthetic fibrous material that comprises fibers and that is bonded chemically or physically with the matrix material, and, optionally, includes one or more microbe inhibiting agents that inhibit the growth of microbes in or on the article. The presence of the fibrous material inhibits formation of sharp edges upon breakage when the article is chewed, thereby rendering the article safer when used by pets. Also disclosed are processes for manufacturing the above article.

Data Store For Knowledge-Based Data Mining System

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US Patent:
6993534, Jan 31, 2006
Filed:
May 8, 2002
Appl. No.:
10/142673
Inventors:
Matthew Denesuk - San Jose CA, US
Daniel Frederick Gruhl - San Jose CA, US
Kevin Snow McCurley - San Jose CA, US
Joerg Meyer - San Jose CA, US
Sridhar Rajagopalan - San Jose CA, US
Andrew S. Tomkins - San Jose CA, US
Jason Yeong Zien - San Jose CA, US
Assignee:
International Business Machines Corporation - Armonk NY
International Classification:
G06F 17/30
US Classification:
707102, 707 10, 707101, 707103, 7071041, 709206, 709224, 709225, 713168
Abstract:
In a data mining system, data is gathered into a data store using, e. g. , a Web crawler. The data is classified into entities and stored into underlying vertical and horizontal tables respectively representing miner outputs and entities that can be the subjects of indexing. Data miners use rules to process the entities and append respective keys to the entities representing characteristics of the entities as derived from rules embodied in the miners, with the keys being associated with the entities in the tables. With these keys, characteristics of entities as defined by disparate expert authors of the data miners are identified for use in responding to complex data requests from customers.

Knowledge-Based Data Mining System

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US Patent:
7010526, Mar 7, 2006
Filed:
May 8, 2002
Appl. No.:
10/141686
Inventors:
Matthew Denesuk - San Jose CA, US
Daniel Frederick Gruhl - San Jose CA, US
Kevin Snow McCurley - San Jose CA, US
Sridhar Rajagopalan - San Jose CA, US
Andrew S. Tomkins - San Jose CA, US
Assignee:
International Business Machines Corporation - Armonk NY
International Classification:
G06F 17/30
US Classification:
707 6, 707101
Abstract:
In a data mining system, data is gathered into a data store using, e. g. , a Web crawler. The data is classified into entities. Data miners use rules to process the entities and append respective keys to the entities representing characteristics of the entities as derived from expert rules embodied in the miners. With these keys, characteristics of entities as defined by disparate expert authors of the data miners are identified for use in responding to complex data requests from customers.

Synthesizing Information-Bearing Content From Multiple Channels

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US Patent:
7117200, Oct 3, 2006
Filed:
Jan 11, 2002
Appl. No.:
10/044720
Inventors:
Arnon Amir - Cupertino CA, US
Gal Ashour - Yokneam, IL
Brian K. Blanchard - Sunnyvale CA, US
Matthew Denesuk - San Jose CA, US
Reiner Kraft - Gilroy CA, US
Assignee:
International Business Machines Corporation - Armonk NY
International Classification:
G06F 17/30
US Classification:
707 3, 707 6, 707100
Abstract:
A computing system and method receive a query; separate a plurality of information sources into individual elements of content (EOC); tag each EOC with metadata that indicate source, date, and other relevant information; pattern match each EOC; calculate the distance function from every EOC to every other EOC; and output EOC to a set of virtual buffers () containing appropriately related EOC less than a given distance value. The method further creates virtual summary buffers (); then concatenates the EOC in each virtual buffer (); applies a comparative analysis filter () to remove redundant sub-elements; and presents the results as summary digests ().

Synthesizing Information-Bearing Content From Multiple Channels

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US Patent:
7512598, Mar 31, 2009
Filed:
Sep 19, 2006
Appl. No.:
11/523104
Inventors:
Arnon Amir - Cupertino CA, US
Gal Ashour - Yokneam, IL
Brian K. Blanchard - Sunnyvale CA, US
Matthew Denesuk - San Jose CA, US
Reiner Kraft - Gilroy CA, US
Assignee:
International Business Machines Corporation - Armonk NY
International Classification:
G06F 17/30
US Classification:
707 3, 707 6, 707100
Abstract:
A method receives a query; separates a plurality of information sources into individual elements of content (EOC); tags each EOC with metadata that indicate source, date, and other relevant information; pattern matches each EOC; calculates the respective distance function from every EOC to every other EOC; and outputs EOC to a set of virtual buffers () containing appropriately related EOC less than a given distance value. The method further creates virtual summary buffers (); concatenates the EOC in each virtual buffer (); applies a comparative analysis filter () to remove redundant sub-elements extracts context-preserving EOC, determined based upon a respective degree of corroboration of the context preserving EOC, from each respective concatenated EOC. The method synthesizes the content-preserving EOC extracted from each respective concatenated EOC into summary digests; and presents the results as summary digests ().
Matthew A Denesuk from Miami, FL, age ~59 Get Report