Inventor · Auburn, WA, US

Brian J. Griffith

16Patents
3h-index
31Co-inventors
56Inventor score

Filing activity: Aug 22, 2002 → Jul 30, 2018

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6747369B2 Power system including redundant power supplies Electricity 22 Expired
US9461709B2 Methods and systems for server power line communication Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 5 Active
US8067856B2 Power management system Physics 4 Active
US8549329B2 System power management using memory throttle signal Physics 2 Active
US9971391B2 Method to assess energy efficiency of HPC system operated with and without power constraints Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 2 Active
US10214294B1 Method and system for predicting potential icing conditions Physics 2 Active
US9933829B2 Methods and systems for server power line communication Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US9846463B2 Computing system and processor with fast power surge detection and instruction throttle down to provide for low cost power supply unit Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US10963031B2 Methods and systems for server power line communication Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US10719107B2 Method and apparatus to maintain node power budget for systems that share a power supply Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US9268393B2 Enforcing a power consumption duty cycle in a processor Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US10429912B2 Computing system and processor with fast power surge detection and instruction throttle down to provide for low cost power supply unit Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US9729006B2 Power management system Physics 0 Active
US10037075B2 Voltage regulation techniques for electronic devices Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active
US10418850B2 Power management system Physics 0 Active
US10564709B2 Voltage regulation techniques for electronic devices Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 0 Active

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