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Theodore T Herzog, 5424 Carriage Dr, Irvine, CA 92602

Theodore Herzog Phones & Addresses

24 Carriage Dr, Irvine, CA 92602    714-8325163   

Lancaster, CA   

2679 Dietrich Dr, Tustin, CA 92782   

400 W Orangethorpe Ave #306A, Fullerton, CA 92832    714-8799857   

Miami, FL   

Los Angeles, CA   

24 Carriage Dr, Irvine, CA 92602   

Work

Position: Executive, Administrative, and Managerial Occupations

Education

Degree: Associate degree or higher

Mentions for Theodore T Herzog

Career records & work history

Lawyers & Attorneys

Theodore Herzog Photo 1

Theodore Herzog - Lawyer

Office:
Tonkon Torp LLP
Specialties:
Business, Contracts & Agreements, Real Estate, Land Use
ISLN:
906514687
Admitted:
1989
University:
Washington State University, B.A., 1984
Law School:
University of Texas at Austin School of Law, J.D., 1989
Theodore Herzog Photo 2

Theodore Herzog - Lawyer

Office:
Ecolab Inc.
Specialties:
Contracts & Agreements, Corporate Law, International Law, Corporate Governance, Commercial Law, Securities Law, Ethics and Compliance
ISLN:
913152957
Admitted:
1998
University:
Freie Universitát, Berlin, Germany, 1992; University of Minnesota, M.A., 1995; University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, B.A., 1991; Uniwersytet Jagiellonski, Poland, 1989
Law School:
Stanford University, J.D., 1998

Theodore Herzog resumes & CV records

Resumes

Theodore Herzog Photo 12

Theodore Herzog

Location:
Orange County, California Area
Industry:
Computer Networking
Theodore Herzog Photo 13

Theodore Herzog

Location:
United States

Publications & IP owners

Us Patents

Method And Apparatus For Dns Resolution

US Patent:
7177947, Feb 13, 2007
Filed:
Jun 10, 2002
Appl. No.:
10/166772
Inventors:
Theodore Thomas Herzog - Tustin CA, US
Jie Chu - Los Altos CA, US
Xi Xu - Milpitas CA, US
Assignee:
Cisco Technology, Inc. - San Jose CA
International Classification:
G06F 13/00
US Classification:
709245, 709223, 707 7
Abstract:
A method and apparatus for resolving where to forward DNS (domain name service) requests for a user simultaneously logged into more than one service existing on a data communications network utilizes an active service list (ASL) to keep track of the services that the user is currently logged into. The active service list includes a list of services sorted in a particular order based on information about the service and sometimes the order in which the user logged into the services. Each service has a profile that defines, among other things, the IP Address space for the service and a Domain attribute. To determine the appropriate service and, therefore, the appropriate DNS server for a DNS request, the QName from the DNS request is compared to the configured Domain attribute(s) for each service in the order of the ASL. If a match is found, then the DNS request packet is modified to re-direct the DNS request to the DNS server configured for the matched service. If no domain match is found and the user is logged into an Internet Service, then the DNS request packet is modified to re-direct the DNS request to the DNS server configured for the first Internet Service found in the user's ASL.

Method And Apparatus For Dns Resolution

US Patent:
6425003, Jul 23, 2002
Filed:
Jan 22, 1999
Appl. No.:
09/235940
Inventors:
Theodore Thomas Herzog - Tustin CA
Jie Chu - Los Altos CA
Xi Xu - Milpitas CA
Assignee:
Cisco Technology, Inc. - San Jose CA
International Classification:
G06F 1300
US Classification:
709223, 709203
Abstract:
A method and apparatus for resolving where to forward DNS (domain name service) requests for a user simultaneously logged into more than one service existing on a data communications network utilizes an active service list (ASL) to keep track of the services that the user is currently logged into. The active service list includes a list of services sorted in a particular order based on information about the service and sometimes the order in which the user logged into the services. Each service has a profile that defines, among other things, the IP Address space for the service and a Domain attribute. To determine the appropriate service and, therefore, the appropriate DNS server for a DNS request, the QName from the DNS request is compared to the configured Domain attribute(s) for each service in the order of the ASL. If a match is found, then the DNS request packet is modified to re-direct the DNS request to the DNS server configured for the matched service. If no domain match is found and the user is logged into an Internet Service, then the DNS request packet is modified to re-direct the DNS request to the DNS server configured for the first Internet Service found in the users ASL.

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