Apple patents involve Thunderbolt cables
TweetFollow Us on Twitter

Apple patents involve Thunderbolt cables




Three Apple patents involving cables -- and apparently Thunderbolt technology -- have appeared at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office.

Thunderbolt is an interface for connecting peripheral devices to a computer via an expansion bus. Thunderbolt was developed by Intel and brought to market with technical collaboration from Apple.

Patent number 20120005496 involves power distribution inside a cable. The invention -- shown in the first graphic -- involves circuits, methods, and apparatus that provide for the powering of active components in connector inserts at each end of a cable may in various ways. For example, where a host is coupled to a device that is not self-powered, the host may provide power for circuitry at each end of the cable.

In various embodiments of the present invention, the device may request higher voltage from the host, such that more power can be delivered. In these cases, the device may regulate the voltage received from the host to a lower voltage, and then provide the lower voltage to circuitry at one or both ends of the cable. Where the host is connected to a device that is self-powered, the host and the self-powered device may power their respective connector insert circuits. The inventors are Paul A. Baker, William O. Ferry and James Orr.

Patent number 2012000705 is for circuitry for an active cable. Circuits, methods, and apparatus that allow signals that are compliant with multiple standards to share a common connector on an electronic device are provided. An exemplary embodiment of the present invention -- shown in the second graphic -- provides a connector that provides signals compatible with a legacy standard in one mode and a newer standard in another mode.

Apple says "what is needed are circuits, methods, and apparatus that allow various standards to share a common connector."The inventors are William P. Cornelius, William O. Ferry and James E. Orr.

Patent number 2012000703 involves high-speed connector inserts and cables. Per the patent -- shown in the third graphic -- high speed connector inserts and cables having improved heat conduction, high strength, and may be manufactured in a reliable manner. One example may provide a connector insert having several paths by which heat may be removed from circuitry in the cable insert. In one example, heat may be removed from one or more circuits by forming a thermal path between a circuit and a shield of the connector insert.

Another path may include one or more pads on a side of an integrated circuit board that are soldered directly to the shield. A braiding surrounding a cable may be soldered or otherwise thermally connected to the shield. Another example may provide a cable having a braiding that includes one or more types of fibers, such as aramid fibers. Another example may provide for increased manufacturability by using a wire comb and a solder bar.

Apple says what is needed are circuits, methods, and apparatus for high-speed cables that can reliably convey signals in high-speed communications. The cable inserts may be able to transfer heat in a way to improve user experience and cable reliability. The cables may have increased strength. The cables and connector inserts may be arranged in such a way as to provide improved manufacturability. The inventors are Min Chul Kim, Paul Yuan, Josh Pong and Joseph Tang.

Also appearing at the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office today is a patent (number 20120001933) for computations of power functions using polynomial approximations. Per the patent a power function is approximated over an applicable data interval with polynomials determined by means of a Chebyshev minimax approximation technique. In some cases, multiple polynomials may be used to approximate the function over respective ranges of the desirable interval, in a piecewise manner.

The appropriate polynomial that approximates the power function over the range of interest is derived and stored. When the power function is to be applied to a particular data value, the data value is first evaluated to determine where it lies within the applicable interval. The constants for the polynomial associated with that range of the interval are then retrieved and used to calculate the power of that data value. Ali Sazegari and Ian Ollmann are the inventors.

 
AAPL
$546.08
Apple Inc.
-7.10
GOOG
$628.93
Google Inc.
+17.82
MSFT
$29.90
Microsoft Corpora
-0.31
MacNews Search:
Community Search:
view counter

view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter

Adobe Proto Review
Adobe Proto Review By Jennifer Allen on May 16th, 2012 Our Rating: :: SHALLOWiPad Only App - Designed for the iPad A great app to demonstrate around potential clients, but lacking in functionality.   | Read more »
Adobe Collage Review
Adobe Collage Review By Jennifer Allen on May 16th, 2012 Our Rating: :: LIMITINGiPad Only App - Designed for the iPad A nice idea and easy to use but far too limited.   | Read more »
Fish Runner Review
Fish Runner Review By Jennifer Allen on May 16th, 2012 Our Rating: :: SIMPLEUniversal App - Designed for iPhone and iPad A simple endless runner that isn’t quite as welcoming as it could be.   | Read more »
Shake Out Review
Shake Out Review By Jason Wadsworth on May 16th, 2012 Our Rating: :: SHAKEN BUT NOT STIRRINGiPhone App - Designed for the iPhone, compatible with the iPad A simple game where players shake a bunch of balls around to crush ticking time bombs before they explode.   | Read more »
Exponential Invasion Review
Exponential Invasion Review By Kevin Stout on May 16th, 2012 Our Rating: :: MORE LEVELS!Universal App - Designed for iPhone and iPad Exponential Invasion is a math-based puzzle game slightly reminiscent of Sudoku.   | Read more »
Dance Like a Dingo with Frisky’s New Ele...
Frisky, the electronic music internet radio station, is now available on iOS with an eponymous app. Frisky comes with two distinct flavors of stations to listen to: Frisky and Chill. Frisky is for high-energy dance music, boasting the same shows from the DJs scheduled on the Frisky website. Chill is programmed to slow things down, keep things cool... | Read more »
Track 8 Review
Track 8 Review By Kevin Stout on May 16th, 2012 Our Rating: :: BEAUTIFUL Track 8 is a Metro-style music player for the iPad.   Developer: Ender Labs Price: $1.99 Version Reviewed: 1.0.1 Device Reviewed On: iPad (third-generation) | Read more »
See The Effects Of Pregnancy With Preggo...
The App Store is far from low on filtering apps that adjust users’ images in numerous quirky ways. PreggoBooth is one such new addition but it does so with some pretty neat results. The app enables the user to see how they’d look if they were pregnant and at various stages of pregnancy. Refreshingly for such an app, there aren’t any freak results... | Read more »
HungrySquid Review
HungrySquid Review By Sinan Kubba on May 16th, 2012 Our Rating: :: TENTACLASSiPhone App - Designed for the iPhone, compatible with the iPad Clever-looking hexagonal twist on Pipe Mania, but…   | Read more »
The Portable Podcast, Episode 137
Kickstart my heart! On This Episode: Carter and Brett Nolan discuss the recent uprising of Kickstarter projects around iOS and the gaming world in general. Carter talks about the new game Damn You Dragons! with developer Mark Peterson, discussing their launch strategy and thoughts on Android as well. Episode Cast: Host: Carter Dotson Co-Host:... | Read more »
All contents are Copyright 1984-2010 by Xplain Corporation. All rights reserved. Theme designed by Icreon.