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Jon Hopta Phones & Addresses

  • West Columbia, SC
  • 1201 Wiesman Ct, Great Falls, VA 22066 (703) 757-7544 (703) 759-2837
  • Arlington, VA
  • Stamford, CT
  • Falls Church, VA
  • 1201 Wiesman Ct, Great Falls, VA 22066 (703) 862-4378

Work

Company: Icf international - Fairfax, VA 2013 Position: Technical specialist

Education

School / High School: George Washington University 1995 Specialities: Master of Science in Engineering Management

Emails

c***7@aol.com

Resumes

Resumes

Jon Hopta Photo 1

Jon Hopta Great Falls, VA

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Work:
ICF International
Fairfax, VA
2013 to 2014
Technical Specialist

Noblis
Falls Church, VA
1996 to 2013
Senior Principal / Acquisition Specialist

The MITRE Corp
McLean, VA
1985 to 1996
Technical Staff Member / Group Leader

KPMG
New York, NY
1976 to 1985
Consultant / Senior Consultant / Manager

Computer Network Corp
Washington, DC
1974 to 1976
Statistical Support Analyst

ENSCO, Inc
Springfield, VA
1973 to 1974
Statistical Analyst

Centaur Management Consultants
Washington, DC
1972 to 1973
Statistical Research Asst

Education:
George Washington University
1995
Master of Science in Engineering Management

George Washington University
1978
Master of Science in Operations Research

Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
1972
Bachelor of Science in Mathematics

Publications

Us Patents

Driver Alcohol Ignition Interlock

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US Patent:
62299085, May 8, 2001
Filed:
Apr 22, 1997
Appl. No.:
8/837759
Inventors:
Dean Stockett Edmonds - Great Falls VA
Jon William Hopta - Great Falls VA
International Classification:
G06K 900
US Classification:
382124
Abstract:
A method and an ignition interlock for preventing operation of equipment when an operator's blood-alcohol content is above a threshold value. The interlock has a blood-alcohol detector that measures intensities of wavelengths of light emerging from a finger. A microprocessor correlates these intensities with the finger's blood-alcohol content, determines whether this content is above a threshold level, and prevents the equipment from operating unless the blood-alcohol content is below the threshold. The interlock also has a fingerprint image generator which reflects light of the finger and scans the fingerprint to form a scanned image. The microprocessor compares this scanned image to a prestored image of a principal operator and compares the two images to determine whether the images match. The fingerprint and blood-alcohol analyses occur substantially simultaneously.
Jon William Hopta from West Columbia, SC, age ~74 Get Report