Inventor · Brackney, PA, US

Mark A. Musa

16Patents
6h-index
18Co-inventors
59Inventor score

Filing activity: Jun 7, 1995 → Sep 12, 2012

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US5710917A Method for deriving data mappings and data aliases Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 174 Expired
US6035300A Method and apparatus for generating a user interface from the entity/attribute/relationship model of a database Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 98 Expired
US6772167B1 System and method for providing a role table GUI via company group Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 54 Expired
US7133868B1 System and method for catalog administration using supplier provided flat files Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 22 Expired
US7243077B2 Method and computer program product for managing an internet trading network Physics 14 Expired
US6922671B2 System and method for grouping companies according to accounting system or rules Physics 8 Expired
US7856352B2 Method and system of presenting a document to a user Physics 6 Active
US7983958B2 Method and program storage device for managing a supplier for participation in a plurality of trading networks Physics 5 Active
US7593865B2 Back-end data routing method, system and program product Physics 4 Expired
US7945122B2 Method, system, and program product for processing an electronic document Physics 2 Active
US7392173B2 Method and system of presenting a document to a user Physics 2 Expired
US8032484B2 Creation of generic hierarchies Physics 1 Active
US8332280B2 System for managing a supplier for participation in a plurality of trading networks Physics 1 Active
US8027981B2 System, method and program product for classifying data elements into different levels of a business hierarchy Physics 1 Active
US8589251B2 Method, system, and storage device for managing trading network packages for a plurality of trading networks Physics 1 Active
US9026561B2 Automated report of broken relationships between tables Physics 0 Active

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