LARRY EUGENE LONG
Engineers in Washington

License number
Pennsylvania PE027337E
Category
Engineers
Type
Professional Engineer
Address
Address 3
Washington
Fayetteville, AR 72701
Pennsylvania

Personal information

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Name
Address
Phone
Larry Long
4901 Lake Washington Blvd S, Seattle, WA 98118
Larry Long
508 Richardson St, Bald Knob, AR 72010
Larry Long
5110 N Visscher St, Tacoma, WA 98407
Larry Long
4610 N Calispel St, Spokane, WA 99205
Larry Long
425 State Route 356, Apollo, PA 15613

Professional information

Larry Long Photo 1

Managing Partner, Long And Associates/3Keyit

Position:
Managing Partner at Long and Associates
Location:
Fayetteville, Arkansas Area
Industry:
Computer Software
Work:
Long and Associates - Northwest Arkansas since 1978 - Managing Partner Lehigh University - Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 1976 - 1990 - Tenured Associate Professor International Business Machines - Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 1967 - 1970 - Systems Engineer
Education:
University of Oklahoma 1971 - 1974
Ph.D., Industrial engineering
University of Oklahoma 1970 - 1971
M.S., Industrial engineering
University of Oklahoma 1963 - 1967
B.S., Industrial engineering
Interests:
I enjoy tennis, cycling, and hiking for my exercise. I sing with the Singing Men of Arkansas and the Cog Hogs barbershop quartet, and I play the guitar and fiddle. I ride my motorcycle, travel quite a bit, and work on my retirement projects.


Larry Long Photo 2

Method And System For Intuitive Coding To Enter Text Expansions

US Patent:
2009021, Aug 27, 2009
Filed:
Feb 21, 2008
Appl. No.:
12/070804
Inventors:
Larry Long - Fayetteville AR, US
International Classification:
G06F 3/00, G06F 17/30
US Classification:
710 2, 707 3, 707E17108
Abstract:
The present invention relates generally to a keyboarding productivity system for expanding a number of characters entered into a computing device. The present invention expands a first predefined set of characters to a second predefined set of characters, an expansion associated with a matching code. A user of the present invention inputs a user entry into a program that accepts user input. The present invention then compares the user entry to at least one code to identify a matching code that matches the user entry. The present invention then expands the user entry to the expansion associated with the matching code. If a matching code is not found, the present invention allows the user entry to remain as input.