Inventor · Rancho Cordova, CA, US

Mark T. Feuerstraeter

16Patents
9h-index
18Co-inventors
69Inventor score

Filing activity: Sep 14, 1995 → Mar 29, 2019

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US6285659A Automatic protocol selection mechanism Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 39 Expired
US6154464A Physical layer device having a media independent interface for connecting to either media access control entitices or other physical layer devices Electricity 34 Expired
US7200153B2 Method and apparatus for autosensing LAN vs WAN to determine port type Electricity 31 Expired
US6169729A 200 Mbps PHY/MAC apparatus and method Electricity 30 Expired
US6917594B2 Automatic protocol selection mechanism Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 25 Expired
US6584109B1 Automatic speed switching repeater Electricity 23 Expired
US5742603A Method and apparatus for integrating repeater management, media access control, and bridging functions Electricity 15 Expired
US7286557B2 Interface and related methods for rate pacing in an ethernet architecture Physics 10 Expired
US7433971B2 Interface and related methods for dynamic channelization in an ethernet architecture Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 9 Expired
US7583599B1 Transporting stream client signals via packet interface using GFP mapping Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 8 Active
US6693550B1 Visually displaying status information in an electronic signaling system Electricity 4 Expired
US8929262B2 Automatic protocol selection mechanism Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 3 Active
US8325758B2 Automatic protocol selection mechanism Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies 1 Active
US7804847B2 Interface and related methods for rate pacing in an ethernet architecture Physics 1 Active
US11113402B2 Tunneling functional safety communications over an enhanced serial peripheral interface Physics 0 Active
US7243154B2 Dynamically adaptable communications processor architecture and associated methods Electricity 0 Expired

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