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Yung-Chieh Lo
Researcher at Google
Publications - 4
Citations - 288
Yung-Chieh Lo is an academic researcher from Google. The author has contributed to research in topics: State (computer science). The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 4 publications receiving 288 citations.
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Patent
Transferring application state across devices
Jason Parks,Nicholas Julian Pelly,Jeffrey William Hamilton,Cheng-Hsueh Andrew Hsieh,Chinyue Chen,Yung-Chieh Lo +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, a first client device or system performs a method that includes retaining in memory registration information for a respective application indicating the respective application is registered for sharing application state with other client devices or systems.
Patent
Transferring application state across devices with checkpoints.
Cheng-Hsueh Andrew Hsieh,Chinyue Chen,Yung-Chieh Lo,Jason Parks,Nicholas Julian Pelly,Jeffrey William Hamilton +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, a first client device executes a plurality of actively running applications, each having one or more checkpoints, each checkpoint identifying an execution breakpoint at which a respective application can be suspended and subsequently resumed.
Patent
Transferring application state across devices by using checkpoints at which applications can be suspended and resumed
Cheng-Hsueh Andrew Hsieh,Chinyue Chen,Yung-Chieh Lo,Jason Parks,Nicholas Julian Pelly,Jeffrey William Hamilton +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, a first client device executes a plurality of actively running applications, each having one or more checkpoints, each checkpoint identifying an execution breakpoint at which a respective application can be suspended and subsequently resumed.
Patent
Transferring application state of a plurality of running applications each including checkpoints between client devices
Cheng-Hsueh Andrew Hsieh,Chinyue Chen,Yung-Chieh Lo,Jason Parks,Nicholas Julian Pelly,Jeffrey William Hamilton +5 more
TL;DR: In this article, a first client device executes a plurality of applications, each application has one or more checkpoints which identify an execution breakpoint at which the application can be suspended and subsequently resumed.