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Leonard J Nevulis

from Woodinville, WA
Age ~58

Leonard Nevulis Phones & Addresses

  • 17800 199Th Ave NE, Woodinville, WA 98077 (425) 788-3250
  • 23122 27Th Ave SE, Bothell, WA 98021
  • 2218 18Th St, Houston, TX 77008 (713) 864-0891
  • 13131 Fallsview Ln, Houston, TX 77077
  • 20161 Vikings Crst, Poulsbo, WA 98370 (360) 779-8690
  • Kiona, WA

Work

Company: Ekos corporation Mar 2013 Address: Bothell WA Position: Firmware engineer

Education

Degree: Bachelor Science School / High School: University of Toledo 1984 to 1988 Specialities: Electrical Engineering

Industries

Medical Devices

Resumes

Resumes

Leonard Nevulis Photo 1

Firmware Engineer At Ekos Corporation

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Position:
Firmware Engineer at Ekos Corporation, SDET at Microsoft
Location:
Greater Seattle Area
Industry:
Medical Devices
Work:
Ekos Corporation - Bothell WA since Mar 2013
Firmware Engineer

Microsoft - Redmond, WA since Apr 2010
SDET

Microsoft Corporation Apr 2006 - Nov 2008
Firmware Engineer

EKOS Corporation Sep 2005 - Apr 2006
SDET

Jacobs Electronics Inc Sep 2003 - Apr 2005
Firmware Engineer
Education:
University of Toledo 1984 - 1988
Bachelor Science, Electrical Engineering

Publications

Us Patents

Noncontact Digitizing Imaging System

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US Patent:
58867759, Mar 23, 1999
Filed:
Mar 12, 1997
Appl. No.:
8/815092
Inventors:
Guy M. Houser - Bainbridge WA
Leonard J. Nevulis - Poulsbo WA
Michael Ajemian - Seattle WA
William E. Maness - Everett WA
Assignee:
M+IND - Poulsbo WA
International Classification:
G01L 308
G01B 1124
G01J 346
US Classification:
356 401
Abstract:
An apparatus and method for imaging a surface of a target object that produces a three-dimensional image of the target object without mechanical contact from a hand-held, free-motion scanner. In one embodiment, the apparatus has a scanner that an operator manually moves about the target object substantially without restriction. A noncontact distance measuring device is attached to the scanner to measure the distance between the scanner and the target object without mechanically contacting the target object. Additionally, a position tracking system detects the position and orientation of the scanner within the position reference field without mechanically restricting the scanner. In operation, a computer is operatively coupled to the position tracking system and the noncontact distance measuring device to correlate position measurements of the scanner with corresponding distance measurements between the scanner and the target object. The computer generates a three-dimensional image of the target object from surface point measurements of the target object.
Leonard J Nevulis from Woodinville, WA, age ~58 Get Report