This disclosure relates to adding social networking to devices.
Devices designed to facilitate social network include the wearable tag (or badge) developed by nTAG Interactive Corporation, which can be worn, for example, by an attendee at a convention and electronically communicates with tags worn by other attendees, for example, when two attendees face each other. Examples of such social networking tags and their uses are described in U.S. patent application Ser. Nos. 10/396,064, filed Mar. 24, 2003, 10/729,696, filed Dec. 5, 2003, 11/069,716, filed Feb. 28, 2005, 11/359,878, filed Feb. 22, 2006, and 11/397,032, filed Mar. 31, 2006, all incorporated here by reference.
In general, in one aspect, a communication interface of a device communicates with a personal electronic device, and a processor associated with the communication interface automatically directs the personal electronic device, through the communication interface, either to operate in a first mode in which the personal electronic device interacts with a wearer of the personal electronic device or to operate in a second mode in which the wearable personal electronic device interacts with a person other than the wearer, based on how the wearable device is being used.
Implementations may include one or more of the following features. The communication interface and the processor include a module to be coupled to the personal electronic device. A sensor detects how the personal electronic device is being used. The sensor includes an electronic device to generate signals in response to an external event indicative of a change in how the wearable device is being used. The sensor includes an accelerometer. The processor also receives a signal from the personal electronic device through the communication interface indicating how the personal electronic device is being used. A second communication interface communicates with another apparatus. The second communication interface includes a radio transceiver. The second communication interface has a limited directionality and is oriented to transmit and receive signals in a direction generally orthogonal to a graphic display of the personal electronic device when the apparatus is mechanically coupled to the personal electronic device.
A surface accommodates a printed label. The surface is positioned to be visible to a viewer of a graphic display on the personal electronic device when the apparatus is mechanically coupled to the personal electronic device. The surface is positioned not to be visible to the wearer of the personal electronic device when a graphic display of the personal electronic device is visible to the wearer. The surface is also positioned to be visible to a viewer of a graphic display of the personal electronic device when the viewer is other than the wearer. A first graphic display is positioned to be visible to a viewer of second a graphic display on the personal electronic device when the apparatus is physically coupled to the personal electronic device. The device includes a network communication interface. A coupling mechanically couples the device to the personal electronic device. An element of the device makes the personal electronic device wearable. The element to make the electronic device wearable includes an extendable lanyard, and how the device is being used includes an amount to which the lanyard is extended.
Detecting how the personal electronic device is being used includes detecting whether the wearer is interacting with the wearable personal electronic device. Detecting how the personal electronic device is being used includes detecting whether the person other than the wearer is interacting with the wearable personal electronic device. Detecting how the personal electronic device is being used includes receiving a signal from the personal electronic device through a communication interface. Detecting how the personal electronic device is being used includes receiving a communication from a third electronic device. The electronic device uses a network communication interface of the personal electronic device.
In general, in one aspect, an add-on device includes a mechanical coupling to couple to a portable personal electronic device that includes a display and a communication port to carry communications between the add-on device and the portable personal electronic device. The communications relate to use of the electronic device and its display for social networking when the electronic device is being worn.
Other features and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and the claims.
Attendees at conferences and other events often carry small personal electronic devices, such as personal digital assistants, smart phones, and music players. By attaching an electronic accessory module, as shown, for example, in
In some examples, as shown in
In some examples, as shown in
In some examples, as shown in
In some examples, the accessory modules 110, 120, and 130 each include a data connector 112 for electronically coupling to the data connector 102 on the personal electronic device 100 when the electronic device 100 and accessory module 110, 120, or 130 are mechanically coupled. An accessory module may also use a wireless interface to communicate with the personal electronic device 100, instead of or in addition to the electronic connection. In some examples, the accessory modules 110, 120, and 130 each include an attachment 114 that allows the user to wear the personal electronic device 100, with the module 110, 120, or 130 attached, as one would wear a name tag. The attachment 114 is shown as a lanyard, but could also be a belt clip, pin, or any other mechanism that allows a user to wear the enhanced device. In some examples, the modules 110, 120, and 130 include a mechanical coupling feature 116, 126, 136 to connect to the personal electronic device 100. The coupling feature 116, 126, 136 can have any suitable form, for example, hooks, snaps, magnets, or hook-and-loop pads. In some examples, there is no wired or mechanical connection between the electronic device 100 and the accessory module 110, 120, or 130. Instead, a wireless data connection is used, and the accessory module is kept out of the way, such as in the user's bag or pocket. The attachment 114 may be provided by the electronic device 100 itself or by an additional part, such as a lanyard with a clip
Each of the accessory modules 110, 120, and 130 may have an electronic design as shown in
When the module 200 is coupled to an electronic device 100, the module 200 uses a combination of its on-board electronics and those of the device 100 to provide new features to the device 100. This enables the user to use the device 100 for social networking, for example, in the ways that the user can use the interactive tags mentioned previously. For example, a user can be informed of similarities between himself and another tag wearer, the user's actions can be tracked and rewarded, and the user can receive messages and provide feedback about his activities at the event. The social networking features that can be provided include all of those described in the identified patent applications.
The module 200 allows the device 100 to operate in new modes. That is, electronic devices 100 such as PDAs, music players, and cellular telephones are typically “personal.” This means that the user interface of such a device is meant to enable the device to interact with a single individual. Such attributes as text size, orientation, and the type of input expected are all selected to be suitable for a user who is holding the device and looking at it from a shorter distance. Nametags, on the other hand, whether electronic or not, are meant to be read from a longer distance by people other than the wearer. The interactive tags mentioned above operate in two modes-a social mode, as shown in
When the module 200 is coupled to the device 100, the module enables or instructs the device to operate in the social mode through the communication interface 204. In some examples, depending on the capabilities of the device 100, operating in the social mode and switching between modes only requires loading appropriate software onto the device 100. In some examples, operating in the social mode and switching between modes uses electronics in the module 200 to provide added features to the device 100.
For example, the module can determine whether to operate in the social mode or the personal mode based on its orientation, as determined by accelerometers, gyroscopes, or other orientation sensors. If the device is right-side-up, it may be operating in its personal mode, and if it is upside down (for example, because a lanyard is attached at the bottom), it may be operating in the social mode. If the device 100 has its own sensors that can detect its orientation, the module 200 may use those, but if the device 100 lacks such sensors, then sensors 212 in the module 200 can provide this feature. The communication port 204 allows the device 100 to share orientation or other sensor information with the module 200.
In some examples, the device 100 already has two modes, and the module 200 provides an additional input to cause the device to switch between them.
Another aspect of some interactive tags is that they communicate with each other, in addition to communicating with a network. The interactive tags communicate using short-range methods such as IR or Bluetooth®. In some examples, the module 200 takes advantage of facilities already present in the device 100, if the device is able to share those facilities through the connection 204. In some examples, the module 200 provides an additional communication channel through the second communications interface 210. In some examples, personal electronic devices have directional IR ports (e.g., the port 108 in
In some examples, the mode in which the device is being used is sensed based on user input—if the user is providing input, the device is probably being used in a personal mode, not in a social mode. As mentioned, in some examples, mode is detected based on physical sensors that detect the position and orientation of the device, and in some examples mode is detected based on whether the module is in communication with another similar module.
In some examples, the number of features included in the module 200 varies with the number of features that may be expected to be provided by the device 100. At one extreme, if the device 100 is known or expected to have all the circuitry needed to detect its mode and operate in the social mode, the module 200 may be implemented entirely in software. In some examples, it is not known in advance which features will be available in a given electronic device 100, so the module 200 includes features that may be redundant. Extra or redundant features are deactivated to conserve power, in some examples. In some examples, extra or redundant features are used to replace or supplement features already present in the electronic device 100. In some examples, the module 200 is able to be used with a variety of different devices 100, and is equipped to identify the device 100 and provide appropriate software and data based on the identification.
In some examples, the module 200 includes additional features to supplement the features that are provided by the device 100. As shown in
In some examples, the module 200 includes its own wireless communication interface for connection to a network (in addition to or as an enhancement to the interfaces 208, 210). The module 200 may share that connection with the device 100, for example, if the device 100 lacks a wireless network connection or the module's connection is in some way superior.
The module 200 also includes various physical features, also shown in
In some examples, the attachment 114 includes a lanyard 230. The lanyard allows the electronic device 100, once coupled to the module 200, to be worn as a nametag. In some examples, as shown in
In some examples, the module 200 includes a space 240 for a printed label 242. Such a label 242 is used, for example, for a printed or handwritten nametag that supplements whatever dynamic information is displayed on the screen 104. A fixed nametag label 242 frees up space on the screen 104 for displaying supplemental information, as opposed to taking up a large amount of space to display the wearer's name. In some examples, the space 240 is attached to the module 200 in such a way that the label 242 remains visible to others when the wearer is using the device in the personal mode. As shown in
Other implementations are within the scope of the following claims and other claims to which the applicant may be entitled.