Aug 2008 to 2000 Director of Product ManagementNortel
2004 to 2008 Director of Product ManagementNortel
1997 to 2004 Senior Manager Software DevelopmentNortel
1993 to 1997 Senior Software EngineerVirtual Technologies Corp Bohemia, NY 1991 to 1993 Software EngineerLanger Biomechanics Deer Park, NY 1990 to 1991 Software Engineer
Name / Title
Company / Classification
Phones & Addresses
Thomas J. Neary Principal
A Touch of Ice Eating Place
144 Stobe Ave, Staten Island, NY 10306
Thomas J. Neary Principal
TOUCH OF ICE, INC Eating Place
144 Stobe Ave, Staten Island, NY 10306 Thomas J Neary Iii 144 Stobe Ave, Staten Island, NY 10306
Thomas Neary Teacher
Candlewood Middle School Higher Education · Civic/Social Association · Elementary & Secondary Schools
1200 Carlls Straight Path, Dix Hills, NY 11746 6315923300, 6315923921
Thomas Neary Owner, Chairman, Chief Executive Officer
SILVER FIST LTD Eating Place
2109 Wantagh Ave, Wantagh, NY 11793 93 Daniel Rd S, Massapequa, NY 11758 5167834500
Thomas Neary President
CREATIVE LANDSCAPES, INC Landscape Contractor
3280 Sunrise Hwy SUITE 351, Wantagh, NY 11793 5165208733
After implementation of an interactive voice response (IVR) system providing voice prompts (i.e., utterances) to aid a telephone caller, it is desirable to provide call-flow verification to validate system accuracy, particularly under high-volume or saturation calling conditions. An IVR system has a call-flow verification (CFV) mode which can be activated for this purpose. In the CFV mode, the IVR system provides prompt signals which include coded signals representing the content of utterances. An automated call generator (ACG) unit places simulated user calls to the IVR system. The content of utterances is represented by coded signals included in prompt signals sent by the IVR system during the course of the simulated call and stored by the ACG unit. Verification can be applied for all possible paths an application might take (to check all possible go-right and error paths). By comparing content of received utterances represented by such coded signals with previously stored data representative of correct utterances, discrepancies are identified for call-flow verification. DTMF signals can be used to represent characters of an utterance in a coded format.
Ronald Huff, Don Salathe, Lawrence Fredrickson, Charles Landguth, Christine Ennis, Francis Neisius, Virginia Salathe, Lee Zucco, Irene Thielen, Richard Neary, Betty Erlacher