Greenville Health System University Medical GroupUpstate Medical Rehabilitation 111 Doctors Dr STE C, Greenville, SC 29605 (864)7977100 (phone), (864)7977105 (fax)
Languages:
English Spanish
Description:
Mr. Goldsmith works in Greenville, SC and specializes in Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation. Mr. Goldsmith is affiliated with Greenville Memorial Hospital.
Saratoga high school Saratoga, CA 1967 to 1970 High school
Name / Title
Company / Classification
Phones & Addresses
David Goldsmith
Supreme Lending Inc. Mortgage Bankers
1407 York Road, Suite 304B, Lutherville Timonium, MD 21093 (410)2964888, (410)5586308
David S. Goldsmith Director
Studio Hyperset, Inc Data Processing School
598 Needles Ct, Reno, NV 89521 PO Box 3083, Huntington Beach, CA 92605 PO Box 3038, Huntington Beach, CA 92605
David L. Goldsmith Director
VENDELL HEALTHCARE, INC
David Goldsmith Director
VALIDARE, INC Home Health Care Services
3900 Koll Ctr Pkwy, Pleasanton, CA 94566 6900 Koll Ctr Pkwy SUITE 401, Pleasanton, CA 94566 2110 Omega Rd, San Ramon, CA 94583 132 Ml St STE 206, Healdsburg, CA 95448 (888)9344321
Debra Lyn Orton - San Jose CA Eugenie Lee Bolton - Sunnyvale CA Daniel F. Chernikoff - Palo Alto CA David Brook Goldsmith - Los Gatos CA Christopher P. Moeller - Los Altos CA
Assignee:
Object Technology Licensing Corporation - Cupertino CA
International Classification:
G06F 940
US Classification:
709310
Abstract:
An apparatus for enabling an object-oriented application to access in an object-oriented manner a procedural operating system having a native procedural interface is disclosed. The apparatus includes a computer and a memory component in the computer. A code library is stored in the memory component. The code library includes computer program logic implementing an object-oriented class library. The object-oriented class library comprises related object-oriented classes for enabling the application to access in an object-oriented manner services provided by the operating system. The object-oriented classes include methods for accessing the operating system services using procedural function calls compatible with the native procedural interface of the operating system. The computer processes object-oriented statements contained in the application and defined by the class library by executing methods from the class library corresponding to the object-oriented statements.
Object-Oriented Interface For Portability To Diverse Operating Systems Or Hardware Platforms
Debra Lyn Orton - San Jose CA Eugenie Lee Bolton - Sunnyvale CA Daniel F. Chernikoff - Palo Alto CA David Brook Goldsmith - Los Gatos CA Christopher P. Moeller - Los Altos CA
Assignee:
Taligent, Inc. - Cupertino CA
International Classification:
G06F 945
US Classification:
717140, 717136, 717153
Abstract:
An object-oriented interface is disclosed for conferring portability for object-oriented programming to diverse operating systems on diverse hardware platforms in a computer system. The object-oriented interface is executable on a plurality of different computer platforms and includes classes of object-oriented methods. The interface is responsive to the object-oriented programming which instantiates its objects from its own classes and invokes the object oriented methods of the interface. Operating system specific, procedural program logic is compiled for use on a given computer platform that includes given computer hardware and a given procedural operating system which is executable on the hardware. A determination is made if the object-oriented methods of the interface to be invoked during runtime execution are present in the program memory of the computer hardware. A runtime loader selectively loads into the program memory any required object-oriented methods of the interface during runtime before their invocation by the object-oriented programming.
Debra Lyn Orton - San Jose CA Eugenie Lee Bolton - Sunnyvale CA Daniel F. Chernikoff - Palo Alto CA David Brook Goldsmith - Los Gatos CA Christopher P. Moeller - Los Altos CA
Assignee:
Object Technology Licensing Corporation - Cupertino CA
International Classification:
G06F 945
US Classification:
709328, 717116, 717136
Abstract:
An apparatus for enabling an object-oriented application to access in an object-oriented manner a procedural operating system having a native procedural interface is disclosed. The apparatus includes a computer and a memory component in the computer. A code library is stored in the memory component. The code library includes computer program logic implementing an object-oriented class library. The object-oriented class library comprises related object-oriented classes for enabling the application to access in an object-oriented manner services provided by the operating system. The object-oriented classes include methods for accessing the operating system services using procedural function calls compatible with the native procedural interface of the operating system. The computer processes object-oriented statements contained in the application and defined by the class library by executing methods from the class library corresponding to the object-oriented statements.
Debra Lyn Orton - San Jose CA, US Eugenie Lee Bolton - Sunnyvale CA, US Daniel F. Chernikoff - Palo Alto CA, US David Brook Goldsmith - Los Gatos CA, US Christopher P. Moeller - Los Altos CA, US
Assignee:
Object Technology Licensing Corporation - Cupertino CA
International Classification:
G06F 9/45
US Classification:
717136
Abstract:
An apparatus for enabling an object-oriented application to access in an object-oriented manner a procedural operating system having a native procedural interface is disclosed. The apparatus includes a computer and a memory component in the computer. A code library is stored in the memory component. The code library includes computer program logic implementing an object-oriented class library. The object-oriented class library comprises related object-oriented classes for enabling the application to access in an object-oriented manner services provided by the operating system. The object-oriented classes include methods for accessing the operating system services using procedural function calls compatible with the native procedural interface of the operating system. The computer processes object-oriented statements contained in the application and defined by the class library by executing methods from the class library corresponding to the object-oriented statements.
Debra Lyn Orton - San Jose CA, US Eugenie Lee Bolton - Sunnyvale CA, US Daniel F. Chernikoff - Palo Alto CA, US David Brook Goldsmith - Los Gatos CA, US Christopher P. Moeller - Los Altos CA, US
Assignee:
APPLE INC. - Cupertino CA
International Classification:
G06F 9/00
US Classification:
719328
Abstract:
An apparatus for enabling an object-oriented application to access in an object-oriented manner a procedural operating system having a native procedural interface is disclosed. The apparatus includes a computer and a memory component in the computer. A code library is stored in the memory component. The code library includes computer program logic implementing an object-oriented class library. The object-oriented class library comprises related object-oriented classes for enabling the application to access in an object-oriented manner services provided by the operating system. The object-oriented classes include methods for accessing the operating system services using procedural function calls compatible with the native procedural interface of the operating system. The computer processes object-oriented statements contained in the application and defined by the class library by executing methods from the class library corresponding to the object-oriented statements.
Debra Lyn Orton - San Jose CA, US Eugenie Lee Bolton - Sunnyvale CA, US Daniel F. Chernikoff - Palo Alto CA, US David Brook Goldsmith - Los Gatos CA, US Christopher P. Moeller - Los Altos CA, US
Assignee:
APPLE INC. - Cupertino CA
International Classification:
G06F 9/00
US Classification:
719328
Abstract:
An apparatus for enabling an object-oriented application to access in an object-oriented manner a procedural operating system having a native procedural interface is disclosed. The apparatus includes a computer and a memory component in the computer. A code library is stored in the memory component. The code library includes computer program logic implementing an object-oriented class library. The object-oriented class library comprises related object-oriented classes for enabling the application to access in an object-oriented manner services provided by the operating system. The object-oriented classes include methods for accessing the operating system services using procedural function calls compatible with the native procedural interface of the operating system. The computer processes object-oriented statements contained in the application and defined by the class library by executing methods from the class library corresponding to the object-oriented statements.
Michael R. Dilts - Saratoga CA Steven H. Milne - Palo Alto CA David B. Goldsmith - Los Gatos CA
Assignee:
Taligent, Inc. - Cupertino CA
International Classification:
H04M 342 H04M 1100 G06F 100
US Classification:
379201
Abstract:
A method and system for enabling a set of object interface application elements and telephony system elements. Particular objects may be chosen depending on which elements of the telephony system will need to be interfaced. A particular object is capable of interfacing with one or more elements of the telephony system. The elements of the telephony system may be any identifiable aspect of the telephony system. For example, the objects could represent a handset or a line. Less tangible elements can also be represented, such as signals or procedures, including call progress tones, call setup, call hold, conference calls, or other call features.
Debra L. Orton - San Jose CA David B. Goldsmith - Los Gatos CA
Assignee:
Taligent - Cupertino CA
International Classification:
G06F 314
US Classification:
395157
Abstract:
A view system is provided for each application program in a computer system in order to display application-generated information on a display. To increase graphic speed, the view system transfers graphic information directly into the screen buffer into a screen buffer area defined by a visible area definition. In order to handle concurrently-operating view systems, each of which modifies the displayed contents of one of the multiple views, a concurrency control controls access to the visible area definitions. The concurrency control is also used to control access to update requests which are generated when a change to one view affects other views. This mechanism supports animation, tracking feedback and updating invalid areas of the display by multiple threads of execution. This mechanism also provides a framework to support unrelated threads drawing in separate views within a single window.
Los Angeles, CADavid A. Goldsmith has a distinguished background as a broadcast television executive and producer with more than 20 years of continuous work in the Hollywood... David A. Goldsmith has a distinguished background as a broadcast television executive and producer with more than 20 years of continuous work in the Hollywood Entertainment community.
Currently, Mr. Goldsmith operates a strategic marketing company for business development...