Inventor · Oakland, CA, US

Benjamin Rewis

17Patents
3h-index
16Co-inventors
53Inventor score

Filing activity: Jul 29, 2010 → Apr 22, 2024

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US11526997B2 Targeting agricultural objects to apply units of treatment autonomously Physics 10 Active
US11308323B2 Micro-precision application of multiple treatments to agricultural objects Human Necessities 8 Active
US8818882B2 Alias identity and reputation validation engine Physics 8 Active
US11625915B2 Micro-precision application of multiple treatments to agricultural objects Human Necessities 3 Active
US11465162B2 Obscurant emission to assist image formation to automate agricultural management and treatment Performing Operations; Transporting 3 Active
US11963473B2 Multiple emitters to treat agricultural objects from multiple payload sources Human Necessities 3 Active
US11406052B2 Cartridges to employ an agricultural payload via an agricultural treatment delivery system Physics 2 Active
US11449976B2 Pixel projectile delivery system to replicate an image on a surface using pixel projectiles Electricity 2 Active
US12315171B2 Targeting agricultural objects via image pixel tracking Physics 1 Active
US11812681B2 Precision treatment of agricultural objects on a moving platform Human Necessities 0 Active
US11653590B2 Calibration of systems to deliver agricultural projectiles Performing Operations; Transporting 0 Active
US12310272B2 Systems and methods for autonomously applying precision treatements to a group of plant objects Human Necessities 0 Active
US10949826B2 Token management and handling system Physics 0 Active
US12223502B2 Instant digital issuance Electricity 0 Active
US12262663B2 Managing stages of growth of a crop with micro-precision via an agricultural treatment delivery system Physics 0 Active
US12004443B2 Payload selection to treat multiple plant objects having different attributes Physics 0 Active
US12045793B2 Token management and handling system Physics 0 Active

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Inventor disambiguation is heuristic; counts are objective bibliographic measures.