Dr. Doan graduated from the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in 1970. He works in Kalamazoo, MI and specializes in Internal Medicine and Endocrinology, Diabetes & Metabolism. Dr. Doan is affiliated with Borgess Medical Center and Bronson Methodist & Childrens Hospital.
Otolaryngology Facial Plastic Surgery Sleep Medicine
Education:
Louisiana State University at New Orleans (1966) University of Mississippi Medical Center (1975) *Otolaryngology - Plastic Surgery within the Head & Neck
Rene Estrada - Orange CA 92866 David Doan - Garden Grove CA 92843
International Classification:
G02C 102
US Classification:
351110, 351146
Abstract:
A pair of rimless eyeglasses are formed with lenses having mounting apertures defined through their structures near both their mutually proximate and mutually remote edges. The mounting wires and mounting apertures are of uniform cross section throughout between the inner and outer surfaces of the lenses. The ends of coupling wires at the bridge and temple pieces are bent back upon themselves to form mounting loops. The ends of the coupling wires at the mounting loops are inserted into the apertures in the lenses. The mounting wires are thereby secured in the apertures by the force of friction. Preferably each mounting aperture is lined with a resilient grommet that conforms to the shape of the aperture and at least partially conforms to the shape of the wire inserted therewithin. The grommets grip the wires and the structure of the lenses at the apertures to stabilize the bridge and temple pieces relative to be lenses.
Syamal Kumar Lahiri - Milpitas CA, US Frank Swiatowiec - San Jose CA, US Fu Chiung Chong - Saratoga CA, US Sammy Mok - Cupertino CA, US Erh-Kong Chieh - Cupertino CA, US Roman L. Milter - San Francisco CA, US Joseph M. Haemer - San Jose CA, US Chang-Ming Lin - San Jose CA, US Yi-Hsing Chen - San Jose CA, US David Thanh Doan - San Jose CA, US
Assignee:
NanoNexus, Inc. - San Jose CA
International Classification:
H01L 23/48 H01L 23/52 H01L 29/40
US Classification:
257734, 257761, 257764
Abstract:
This invention provides a solution to increase the yield strength and fatigue strength of miniaturized springs, which can be fabricated in arrays with ultra-small pitches. It also discloses a solution to minimize adhesion of the contact pad materials to the spring tips upon repeated contacts without affecting the reliability of the miniaturized springs. In addition, the invention also presents a method to fabricate the springs that allow passage of relatively higher current without significantly degrading their lifetime.
Syamal Kumar Lahiri - Milpitas CA, US Frank Swiatowiec - San Jose CA, US Fu Chiung Chong - Saratoga CA, US Sammy Mok - Cupertino CA, US Erh-Kong Chieh - Cupertino CA, US Roman L. Milter - San Francisco CA, US Joseph M. Haemer - San Jose CA, US Chang-Ming Lin - San Jose CA, US Yi-Hsing Chen - San Jose CA, US David Thanh Doan - San Jose CA, US
Assignee:
NanoNexus, Inc. - San Jose CA
International Classification:
H01R 12/00 H05K 1/00
US Classification:
439 81, 439 66, 439775, 438117, 438118, 257734
Abstract:
This invention provides a solution to increase the yield strength and fatigue strength of miniaturized springs, which can be fabricated in arrays with ultra-small pitches. It also discloses a solution to minimize adhesion of the contact pad materials to the spring tips upon repeated contacts without affecting the reliability of the miniaturized springs. In addition, the invention also presents a method to fabricate the springs that allow passage of relatively higher current without significantly degrading their lifetime.
Esd Induced Artifact Reduction Design For A Thin Film Transistor Image Sensor Array
Richard Weisfield - Los Altos CA, US Kungang Zhou - San Jose CA, US David Doan - San Jose CA, US
Assignee:
dpiX LLC - Palo Alto CA
International Classification:
H01L 21/00 H01L 21/84
US Classification:
438151, 438142, 438149, 257 72
Abstract:
A method is provided for fabricating an image sensor array in a manner that reduces the potential for defects resulting from electrostatic discharge events during fabrication of the image sensor array. The method includes: forming at least one pixel over a substrate, the pixel including a switching transistor and a photo-sensitive cell; and forming a dielectric interlayer over the pixel. A key step in the method of the present invention is depositing a first conductive layer over the dielectric interlayer. After the first conductive layer is formed, the image sensor array is well protected from ESD events because the first conductive layer spreads out any charge induced by tribo-electric charging events that may occur during subsequent fabrication processing steps, thereby reducing the potential for localized damage to the switching transistors upon the occurrence of ESD events.
Fu Chong - Saratoga CA, US Sammy Mok - Cupertino CA, US Erh-Kong Chieh - Cupertino CA, US Roman Milter - Alviso CA, US Joseph Haemer - San Jose CA, US David Doan - San Jose CA, US
International Classification:
F16F 9/32
US Classification:
188266700
Abstract:
This invention provides a solution to increase the yield strength and fatigue strength of miniaturized springs, which can be fabricated in arrays with ultra-small pitches. It also discloses a solution to minimize adhesion of the contact pad materials to the spring tips upon repeated contacts without affecting the reliability of the miniaturized springs. In addition, the invention also presents a method to fabricate the springs that allow passage of relatively higher current without significantly degrading their lifetime.
A PCI-bus is added to a VESA local bus (VL-bus) computer system using a VL-bus/PCI-bus bridge. The VL-bus/PCI-bus bridge claims a VL-bus cycle by asserting LDEV# to the VL-bus/system-bus bridge. If no other VL-bus device claims the cycle as well, then the VL-bus/PCI-bus bridge translates the cycle onto the PCI-bus and awaits a response from a PCI device. If no PCI device claims a cycle by the PCI-bus device claiming deadline, then the VL-bus/PCI-bus bridge asserts BOFF# to the host and suppresses its assertion of LDEV# when the host repeats the cycle on the VL-bus. The VL-bus/system-bus bridge therefore can translate the repetition of the cycle onto the system bus. When asserting BOFF# to the host, the VL-bus/PCI-bus bridge also asserts the VL-bus device ready signal LRDY# after assertion of BOFF# and releases LRDY# before releasing BOFF#. The VL-bus controller does not receive BOFF# necessarily, but responds to LRDY# by asserting RDYRTN# onto the VL-bus, thereby signifying to all other VL-bus devices that the VL-bus cycle has ended and permitting them to restart their state machines in anticipation of a new VL-bus cycle. The host ignores RDYRTN# while, and only while, BOFF# is asserted.
Using A Back-Off Signal To Bridge A First Bus To A Second Bus
A PCI-bus is added to a VESA local bus (VL-bus) computer system using a VL-bus/PCI-bus bridge. The VL-bus/PCI-bus bridge claims a VL-bus cycle by asserting LDEV# to the VL-bus/system-bus bridge. If no other VL-bus device claims the cycle as well, then the VL-bus/PCI-bus bridge translates the cycle onto the PCI-bus and awaits a response from a PCI device. If no PCI device claims a cycle by the PCI-bus device claiming deadline, then the VL-bus/PCI-bus bridge asserts BOFF# to the host and suppresses its assertion of LDEV# when the host repeats the cycle on the VL-bus. The VL-bus/system-bus bridge therefore can translate the repetition of the cycle onto the system bus. When asserting BOFF# to the host, the VL-bus/PCI-bus bridge also asserts the VL-bus device ready signal LRDY# after assertion of BOFF# and releases LRDY# before releasing BOFF#. The VL-bus controller does not receive BOFF# necessarily, but responds to LRDY# by asserting RDYRTN# onto the VL-bus, thereby signifying to all other VL-bus devices that the VL-bus cycle has ended and permitting them to restart their state machines in anticipation of a new VL-bus cycle. The host ignores RDYRTN# while, and only while, BOFF# is asserted.
Name / Title
Company / Classification
Phones & Addresses
Mr. David Doan Owner
Governors Liquor Liquor Stores
9876 W. Belleview Avenue, Suite F, Littleton, CO 80123 (303)9720616
David Doan Managing
Doan Technologies LC Engineering Semiconductor & Mems Enginee
10080 Bon Vis Ct, San Jose, CA 95127
David Doan
PC Fix LLC Computer Consulting
10582 Ketch Ave, Garden Grove, CA 92843
David Doan Owner, Principal
Happy Nails & Spa of Corona Beauty Shop · Nail Salons
2470 Tuscany St, Corona, CA 92881 (951)8988656, (951)8981577
David A. Doan Owner
David Doan Construction Single-Family House Construction
630 Gln Cyn Rd, Santa Cruz, CA 95060
David D. Doan President, Owner, Partner
APX OPTICAL, INC Ret Optical Goods
573 N Tustin APT #C, Santa Ana, CA 92705 1638 E 17 St, Santa Ana, CA 92705 1513 S Grand Ave, Santa Ana, CA 92705 650 S Grand Ave, Santa Ana, CA 92705 (714)9532729
David Doan Manager
Wholesale Pool Table Company Whol Sporting/Recreational Goods
BS Trucking - Goshen, Indiana since Feb 2013
Transporter
RV Capital Transport - Elkhart, Indiana Area Apr 2009 - Feb 2013
Transporter of Recreational Trailers
Unemployed - Elkhart, Indiana Area Mar 2009 - Mar 2009
Class A CDL Driver
Borden - Elkhart, Indiana Area Feb 2006 - Mar 2009
Class A CDL County Route Driver
YMCA Of Elkhart - Elkhart, Indiana Area Oct 2000 - Aug 2008
Assistant Community Youth Director
Education:
John A Logan College 1998 - 1998
Certificate from Tractor Trailer Driving School, To attain my Class A CDL License
Sauk Valley Community College 1987 - 1989
Associate's degree, Accounting and Business/Management
Sauk Valley Community College 1987 - 1989
Associate's degree, Marketing/Marketing Management, General
Sauk Valley Community College 1987 - 1989
Associate's degree, Business Administration, Management and Operations
Skills:
Customer-focused Service Organizational Capability Credibility Dependent Multi-tasked Multi-skilled Managerial Supervising Administrative Professionals Coordinating Skills Business-minded Dedicated to work Communication Result-oriented Pro-active Cross-functional Problem Solving analytical skills Training Leadership Train New Employees Strategic Planning Analytical Skills Result Oriented Trucking Customer Satisfaction Purchasing Leadership Retail Customer Service Inventory Management Small Business Team Building Customer Retention Budgets
Interests:
I am a coin collector also a certified grader of coin. I have my own ebay account in which I buy and sell coins. Have taken many classes online to advance and make myself more knowledgeable within the Numismatic world. I am also a long time member of the NGC.
Beechcraft since Mar 2013
Business Manager
PDS Tech, Inc. - Hawker Beechcraft Apr 2012 - Mar 2013
Business Manager
PDS Tech, Inc. - Wichita, Kansas Area Dec 2010 - Oct 2011
Data/Financial Analyst
Hawker Beechcraft - Wichita, KS Aug 1995 - Dec 2010
Data/Financial Analyst
Full Service Beverage - Wichita, Kansas Area Aug 1993 - Aug 1995
Inventory Control Accountant
Education:
Wichita State University 1988
Bachelor's Degree, Finance, Accounting, Economics
Skills:
SAP Access Microsoft Excel Data Analysis Aerospace Six Sigma Troubleshooting Aviation Aircraft Team Building Process Improvement Customer Service