D
Dharmarus Rizal
Researcher at Western Digital
Publications - 10
Citations - 1383
Dharmarus Rizal is an academic researcher from Western Digital. The author has contributed to research in topics: The Internet & Application service provider. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 10 publications receiving 1382 citations. Previous affiliations of Dharmarus Rizal include Stanford University.
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Patent
Managed peer-to-peer applications, systems and methods for distributed data access and storage
TL;DR: In this article, the file may be stored in at least one remote storage device associated with the at least 1 remote computer, respectively, and versions of the file contained on the one or more remote storage devices are synchronized with that on the local device by transmitting over the network connecting the one and more remote devices with the local devices.
Patent
Access and control system for network-enabled devices
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a system for remote access of network-enabled devices that provides seamless, firewall-compliant connectivity between multiple users and multiple devices, that allow collaborative operations by multiple users of remote devices, and that allow point to multipoint control of multiple devices and which allow rapid, secure transmission of data between remote users and devices.
Patent
Control and observation of physical devices, equipment and processes by multiple users over computer networks
TL;DR: In this article, a method and system for enabling multiple clients from different physical locations to access, observe, control and manipulate physical processes and devices over a computer network such as the Internet is disclosed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Stanford CyberLab: Internet Assisted Laboratories
Lambertus Hesselink,Dharmarus Rizal,Eric S. Bjornson,Sandy Paik,Rajesh K. Batra,Peter B. Catrysse,Dan Savage,Anthony Wong +7 more
Patent
Method, system and service model for remote recording of television programs
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a system that enables anyone with Internet access to remotely operate recording equipment to record television programs. But the system is not suitable for the use of remote control units.