Inventor · Everett, WA, US

Michael Schmitz

19Patents
7h-index
10Co-inventors
59Inventor score

Filing activity: Jul 17, 2003 → Dec 9, 2019

Most-cited inventions

PatentTitleAreaCited byStatus
US8428871B1 Using routing symbols to describe a driving maneuver Physics 43 Active
US7620494B1 Using routing symbols to describe a driving maneuver Physics 22 Active
US9280563B2 Pre-computing digests for image similarity searching of image-based listings in a network-based publication system Physics 12 Active
US9471604B2 Finding products that are similar to a product selected from a plurality of products Physics 11 Active
US8861844B2 Pre-computing digests for image similarity searching of image-based listings in a network-based publication system Physics 11 Active
US7324897B2 Using route narrative symbols Physics 8 Active
US7076363B1 Using route narrative symbols Physics 7 Expired
US8209164B2 Use of lexical translations for facilitating searches Physics 6 Active
US9715510B2 Finding products that are similar to a product selected from a plurality of products Physics 5 Active
US10528615B2 Finding products that are similar to a product selected from a plurality of products Physics 5 Active
US8489385B2 Use of lexical translations for facilitating searches Physics 3 Active
US9733698B1 System and method for enabling a user to create and post polls on a microblogging website that can be answered on the microblogging website Physics 3 Active
US11132391B2 Finding products that are similar to a product selected from a plurality of products Physics 1 Active
US7729855B2 Using route narrative symbols Physics 1 Active
US9322663B2 Using routing symbols to describe a driving maneuver Physics 0 Active
US8145426B2 Using route narrative symbols Physics 0 Active
US9453738B1 Using routing symbols to describe a driving maneuver Physics 0 Active
US9696172B2 Using routing symbols to describe a driving maneuver Physics 0 Active
US8483957B2 Using route narrative symbols Physics 0 Active

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