Dr. Nemec graduated from the Ohio State University College of Medicine in 1982. He works in Winchester, VA and specializes in Gastroenterology. Dr. Nemec is affiliated with Winchester Medical Center.
Agile Methodologies Java Enterprise Edition Distributed Systems Software Engineering Java Cloud Computing XML Enterprise Software Ant Web Services Software Development JUnit Weblogic Websphere Unix
License Records
Richard A Nemec
License #:
ID0000821 - Active
Category:
Interior designer
Issued Date:
Feb 15, 1990
Effective Date:
Dec 8, 2000
Expiration Date:
Feb 28, 2019
Us Patents
System Using Content Generator For Dynamically Regenerating One Or More Fragments Of Web Page Based On Notification Of Content Change
N. Isaac Rajkumar - Hyderabad, IN Mark McCalister - Austin TX, US Expeditus Bolanos - Pflugerville TX, US Peter Hale - San Francisco CA, US Mark Martin - Cedar Park TX, US Richard Nemec - North Andover MA, US Puhong You - Cedar Park TX, US Daun DeFrance - Austin TX, US Ching-Fu Chang - Austin TX, US Priya Reddy - Austin TX, US Ladislav Kis - North Andover MA, US Robert L. Patterson - Leawood KS, US Tony Zgarba - Round Rock TX, US Jeffrey M. Collins - San Mateo CA, US Michael C. Tulkoff - Austin TX, US Miles Chaston - San Francisco CA, US Dean Moses - Berkeley CA, US John Petersen - San Francisco CA, US Ian Stahl - Austin TX, US Lara Long - Mountainview CA, US
Assignee:
Open Text S.A. - Luxembourg
International Classification:
G06F 7/00
US Classification:
707769, 707737, 709203, 709219
Abstract:
Disclosed herein are embodiments of a system and method for the provisioning of dynamically generated content. One embodiment can interface a content delivery system and a content management system at the fragment level. Depending upon how a page is organized, a fragment may refer to a block within the page, a portion of the page, or a content item presented on the page. When a content item is updated and published onto the content management system, one embodiment of the invention can operate to track dependencies of managed pages and invalidate/validate fragment(s) affected by the change(s) accordingly. The updated fragment(s) may then be dynamically assembled on-the-fly or on-demand. The updated fragment(s) may or may not be cached. In this way, changes made to a piece of content can be reflected in all pages which utilize this content almost simultaneously with the changes to the content itself.
System Using Content Generator For Dynamically Regenerating One Or More Fragments Of Web Page Based On Notification Of Content Change
N. Isaac Rajkumar - Hyderabad, IN Mark McCalister - Austin TX, US Expeditus Bolanus - Pflugerville TX, US Peter Hale - San Francisco CA, US Mark Martin - Cedar Park TX, US Richard Nemec - North Andover MA, US Puhong You - Cedar Park TX, US Daun DeFrance - Austin TX, US Ching-Fu Chang - Austin TX, US Priya Reddy - Austin TX, US Ladislav Kis - North Andover MA, US Robert L. Patterson - Leawood KS, US Tony Zgarba - Round Rock TX, US Jeffrey M. Collins - San Mateo CA, US Michael C. Tulkoff - Austin TX, US Miles Chaston - San Francisco CA, US Dean Moses - Berkeley CA, US John Petersen - San Francisco CA, US Ian Stahl - Austin TX, US Lara Long - Mountainview CA, US
Assignee:
Open Text S.A. - Luxembourg
International Classification:
G06F 7/00
US Classification:
707769, 707737, 709203, 709219
Abstract:
Disclosed herein are embodiments of a system and method for the provisioning of dynamically generated content. One embodiment can interface a content delivery system and a content management system at the fragment level. Depending upon how a page is organized, a fragment may refer to a block within the page, a portion of the page, or a content item presented on the page. When a content item is updated and published onto the content management system, one embodiment of the invention can operate to track dependencies of managed pages and invalidate/validate fragment(s) affected by the change(s) accordingly. The updated fragment(s) may then be dynamically assembled on-the-fly or on-demand. The updated fragment(s) may or may not be cached. In this way, changes made to a piece of content can be reflected in all pages which utilize this content almost simultaneously with the changes to the content itself.
System And Method For Fragment Level Dynamic Content Regeneration
- Luxembourg, LU Mark McCalister - Austin TX, US Expeditus Bolanus - Pflugerville TX, US Peter Hale - San Francisco CA, US Mark Martin - Cedar Park TX, US Richard Nemec - North Andover MA, US Puhong You - Cedar Park TX, US Daun DeFrance - Austin TX, US Ching-Fu Chang - Austin TX, US Priya Reddy - Austin TX, US Ladislav Kis - North Andover MA, US Robert L. Patterson - Leawood KS, US Tony Zgarba - Round Rock TX, US Jeffrey M. Collins - San Mateo CA, US Michael C. Tulkoff - Austin TX, US Miles Chaston - San Francisco CA, US Dean Moses - Berkeley CA, US John Peterson - San Francisco CA, US Ian Stahl - Austin TX, US Lara Long - Mountain View CA, US
Assignee:
Open Text S.A. - Luxembourg
International Classification:
H04L 29/08
US Classification:
709217
Abstract:
A system and method for provisioning dynamically generated content. One embodiment can interface a content delivery system and a content management system at the fragment level. Depending upon how a page is organized, a fragment may refer to a block within the page, a portion of the page, or a content item presented on the page. When a content item is updated and published onto the content management system, one embodiment can operate to track dependencies of managed pages and invalidate/validate fragment(s) affected by the change(s) accordingly. The updated fragment(s) may then be dynamically assembled on-the-fly or on-demand. The updated fragment(s) may or may not be cached. In this way, changes made to a piece of content can be reflected in all pages which utilize this content almost simultaneously with the changes to the content itself.
System Using Content Generator For Dynamically Regenerating One Or More Fragments Of Web Page Based On Notification Of Content Change
N. Isaac Rajkumar - Hyderabad, IN Mark McCalister - Austin TX, US Expeditus Bolanos - Pflugerville TX, US Peter Hale - San Francisco CA, US Mark Martin - Cedar Park TX, US Richard Nemec - North Andover MA, US Puhong You - Cedar Park TX, US Daun DeFrance - Austin TX, US Ching-Fu Chang - Austin TX, US Priya Reddy - Austin TX, US Ladislav Kis - North Andover MA, US Robert L. Patterson - Leawood KS, US Tony Zgarba - Round Rock TX, US Jeffrey M. Collins - San Mateo CA, US Michael C. Tulkoff - Austin TX, US Miles Chaston - San Francisco CA, US Dean Moses - Berkeley CA, US John Petersen - San Francisco CA, US Ian Stahl - Austin TX, US Lara Long - Austin TX, US
Assignee:
Vignette Software, LLC - Austin TX
International Classification:
G06F 7/00
US Classification:
707 3, 707201, 709203, 709219
Abstract:
Disclosed herein are embodiments of a system and method for the provisioning of dynamically generated content. One embodiment can interface a content delivery system and a content management system at the fragment level. Depending upon how a page is organized, a fragment may refer to a block within the page, a portion of the page, or a content item presented on the page. When a content item is updated and published onto the content management system, one embodiment of the invention can operate to track dependencies of managed pages and invalidate/validate fragment(s) affected by the change(s) accordingly. The updated fragment(s) may then be dynamically assembled on-the-fly or on-demand. The updated fragment(s) may or may not be cached. In this way, changes made to a piece of content can be reflected in all pages which utilize this content almost simultaneously with the changes to the content itself.
System And Method For The Dynamic Provisioning Of Static Content
- Halifax, CA Mark McCalister - Austin TX, US Expeditus Bolanos - Pflugerville TX, US Peter Hale - Walnut Creek CA, US Mark Martin - Cedar Park TX, US Richard Nemec - North Andover MA, US Puhong You - Austin TX, US Daun DeFrance - Deerfield NH, US Ching-Fu Chang - Austin TX, US Priya Reddy - Austin TX, US Ladislav Kis - North Andover MA, US Robert L. Patterson - Minnetonka MN, US Tony Zgarba - Round Rock TX, US Jeffrey M. Collins - San Mateo CA, US Michael C. Tulkoff - Austin TX, US Miles Chaston - Mountain View CA, US Dean Moses - Berkeley CA, US John Petersen - San Francisco CA, US Ian Stahl - Austin TX, US Lara Long - Woodinville WA, US
International Classification:
G06F 16/958 H04L 29/08 G06F 16/957 G06F 16/93
Abstract:
Disclosed herein are embodiments of a system and method for the dynamic provisioning of static content. In one embodiment, information presented on a content delivery system can be refreshed based on information published on a content management system. One embodiment can interface the content delivery system and the content management system at the page level. More specifically, content dependencies across pages employing the same content or portion(s) thereof can be tracked in a timely, accurate manner. Upon receiving a notification of a change to the content or a portion thereof from the content management system, a content generation system may operate to determine, based on the dependencies, what pages are affected by the change and, based on the determination, dynamically regenerate any and all affected pages. The regenerated pages may then be stored and/or pushed to the web tier for delivery to end users.
System And Method For Fragment Level Dynamic Content Regeneration
- Luxembourg, LU Mark McCalister - Austin TX, US Expeditus Bolanos - Austin TX, US Peter Hale - San Francisco CA, US Mark Martin - Cedar Park TX, US Richard Nemec - North Andover MA, US Puhong You - Cedar Park TX, US Daun DeFrance - Deerfield NH, US Ching-Fu Chang - Austin TX, US Priya Reddy - Austin TX, US Ladislav Kis - North Andover MA, US Robert L. Patterson - Minnetonka MN, US Tony Zgarba - Round Rock TX, US Jeffrey M. Collins - San Mateo CA, US Michael C. Tulkoff - Austin TX, US Miles Chaston - Mountain View CA, US Dean Moses - Berkeley CA, US John Petersen - San Francisco CA, US Ian Stahl - Austin TX, US Lara Long - Mountain View CA, US
International Classification:
H04L 29/08 H04L 29/06
Abstract:
A system and method for provisioning dynamically generated content. One embodiment can interface a content delivery system and a content management system at the fragment level. Depending upon how a page is organized, a fragment may refer to a block within the page, a portion of the page, or a content item presented on the page. When a content item is updated and published onto the content management system, one embodiment can operate to track dependencies of managed pages and invalidate/validate fragment(s) affected by the change(s) accordingly. The updated fragment(s) may then be dynamically assembled on-the-fly or on-demand. The updated fragment(s) may or may not be cached. In this way, changes made to a piece of content can be reflected in all pages which utilize this content almost simultaneously with the changes to the content itself.
System And Method For The Dynamic Provisioning Of Static Content
- Luxembourg, LU Mark McCalister - Austin TX, US Expeditus Bolanos - Pflugerville TX, US Peter Hale - San Francisco CA, US Mark Martin - Cedar Park TX, US Richard Nemec - Marlborough MA, US Puhong You - Cedar Park TX, US Daun DeFrance - Austin TX, US Ching-Fu Chang - Austin TX, US Priya Reddy - Austin TX, US Ladislav Kis - North Andover MA, US Robert L. Patterson - Austin TX, US Tony Zgarba - Round Rock TX, US Jeffrey M. Collins - Austin TX, US Michael C. Tulkoff - Austin TX, US Miles Chaston - San Francisco CA, US Dean Moses - Berkeley CA, US John Petersen - San Francisco CA, US Ian Stahl - Austin TX, US Lara Long - Mountain View CA, US
International Classification:
G06F 17/30 H04L 29/08
US Classification:
715234
Abstract:
Disclosed herein are embodiments of a system and method for the dynamic provisioning of static content. In one embodiment, information presented on a content delivery system can be refreshed based on information published on a content management system. One embodiment can interface the content delivery system and the content management system at the page level. More specifically, content dependencies across pages employing the same content or portion(s) thereof can be tracked in a timely, accurate manner. Upon receiving a notification of a change to the content or a portion thereof from the content management system, a content generation system may operate to determine, based on the dependencies, what pages are affected by the change and, based on the determination, dynamically regenerate any and all affected pages. The regenerated pages may then be stored and/or pushed to the web tier for delivery to end users.
System And Method For The Dynamic Provisioning Of Static Content
N. Isaac Rajkumar - Hyderabad, IN Mark McCalister - Austin TX, US Expeditus Bolanos - Pflugerville TX, US Peter Hale - San Francisco CA, US Mark Martin - Cedar Park TX, US Richard Nemec - North Andover MA, US Puhong You - Cedar Park TX, US Daun DeFrance - Austin TX, US Ching-Fu Chang - Austin TX, US Priya Reddy - Austin TX, US Ladislav Kis - North Andover MA, US Robert L. Patterson - Leawood KS, US Tony Zgarba - Round Rock TX, US Jeffrey M. Collins - San Mateo CA, US Michael C. Tulkoff - Austin TX, US Miles Chaston - San Francisco CA, US John Petersen - San Francisco CA, US Ian Stahl - Austin TX, US Lara Long - Mountain View CA, US
International Classification:
G06F 17/22
US Classification:
715234
Abstract:
Disclosed herein are embodiments of a system and method for the dynamic provisioning of static content. In one embodiment, information presented on a content delivery system can be refreshed based on information published on a content management system. One embodiment can interface the content delivery system and the content management system at the page level. More specifically, content dependencies across pages employing the same content or portion(s) thereof can be tracked in a timely, accurate manner. Upon receiving a notification of a change to the content or a portion thereof from the content management system, a content generation system may operate to determine, based on the dependencies, what pages are affected by the change and, based on the determination, dynamically regenerate any and all affected pages. The regenerated pages may then be stored and/or pushed to the web tier for delivery to end users.
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