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John Planow Phones & Addresses

  • Erie, CO
  • 4854 Wind Creek Dr, Sacramento, CA 95838
  • 2055 Donovan Dr, Lincoln, CA 95648 (916) 543-9792
  • 400 Rocky Pt, Roseville, CA 95678 (916) 784-8514
  • Rochester, NY
  • Rocklin, CA

Resumes

Resumes

John Planow Photo 1

Principal Software Engineer

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Location:
2617 H St, Sacramento, CA 95816
Industry:
Computer Software
Work:
Major League Baseball
Principal Software Engineer

Parchment Inc. Apr 2019 - Jun 2019
Senior Manager, Software Engineering

Parchment Inc. Apr 2017 - Apr 2019
Manager and Technical Lead, Software Engineering

Parchment Inc. Sep 2016 - Apr 2017
Software Development Engineer

Alivetribe Fitness Jan 2008 - Aug 2016
Owner and Head Coach
Education:
Rochester Institute of Technology 1995 - 2000
Bachelors, Computer Engineering
Skills:
Coaching
Management
Fitness
Small Business
Leadership
Software Development
Sports
Social Networking
Fitness Training
Personal Development
Unix
Public Speaking
Training
Personal Training
Functional Training
Strength and Conditioning
Customer Service
Olympic Lifting
Agile Methodologies
Online Marketing
C
Fitness Instruction
Software Design
Java
C++
Paleo Diet
Tomcat
Shell Scripting
Agile and Waterfall Methodologies
Php
Sql
Ruby
Python
Html
Uml
Jboss Application Server
Mysql
Vmware
Jms
Eclipse
Junit
Jmx
Intellij Idea
Javaee
Assembly Language
Websphere Application Server
Netbeans
Ant
Crossfit
Pose Running
John Planow Photo 2

John Planow

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Business Records

Name / Title
Company / Classification
Phones & Addresses
John Planow
Managing
Crossfit Genesis LLC
Health & Fitness · Strength and Conditioning Training · Nonclassifiable Establishments
215 Kenroy Ln, Roseville, CA 95678
2565 Macero St, Roseville, CA 95747
(916) 797-0682

Publications

Us Patents

Method And System For Handling Interrupts Within Computer System During Hardware Resource Migration

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US Patent:
20090083467, Mar 26, 2009
Filed:
Sep 26, 2007
Appl. No.:
11/861846
Inventors:
Chris M. Giles - Lafayette CO, US
Russ W. Herrell - Fort. Collins CO, US
John A. Morrison - Fort. Collins CO, US
John R. Planow - Sacramento CA, US
Joseph F. Orth - Fort. Collins CO, US
Andrew R. Wheeler - Fort. Collins CO, US
Assignee:
Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. - Houston TX
International Classification:
G06F 13/24
US Classification:
710268, 710263
Abstract:
A method and system for handling interrupts within a computer system during hardware resource migration are disclosed. In at least some embodiments, the method includes (a) programming an address conversion component so that incoming interrupt signals are directed to a control component rather than to a source processing resource, and (b) accumulating the incoming interrupt signals at the control component. Additionally the method also includes, subsequent to the migration of the partition from the source processing resource to a destination processing resource, (c) sending the accumulated incoming interrupt signals to the destination processing resource, and (d) reprogramming the address conversion component so that further incoming interrupt signals are directed to the destination processing resource.

Method And System For Migrating Critical Resources Within Computer Systems

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US Patent:
20090089787, Apr 2, 2009
Filed:
Sep 28, 2007
Appl. No.:
11/863842
Inventors:
Chris M. Giles - Ft. Collins CO, US
Russ W. Herrell - Ft. Collins CO, US
John A. Morrison - Ft. Collins CO, US
John R. Planow - Roseville CA, US
Joseph F. Orth - Ft. Collins CO, US
Andrew R. Wheeler - Ft. Collins CO, US
Daniel Zilavy - Ft. Collins CO, US
International Classification:
G06F 9/46
US Classification:
718104
Abstract:
A method and system for migrating at least one critical resource during a migration of an operative portion of a computer system are disclosed. In at least some embodiments, the method includes (a) sending first information constituting a substantial copy of a first of the at least one critical resource via at least one intermediary between a source component and a destination component. The method further includes (b) transitioning a status of the destination component from being incapable of receiving requests to being capable of receiving requests, and (c) re-programming an abstraction block to include modified addresses so that at least one incoming request signal is forwarded to the destination component rather than to the source component.
John R Planow from Erie, CO, age ~48 Get Report