The present invention relates to a system for administrating the use of various types of office equipment, such as printers, copiers, and facsimiles, which are connected over a network.
In the office equipment industry, it is common that different types of office equipment, such as copiers, printers, and facsimiles, exist on a network in order to communicate with various computers. In the case of a printer or digital copier, image data often originates at a computer and is communicated over the network to the copier or printer. In addition to basic functions, administrative functions relating to the office equipment take place over the network as well. A key administrative function in any office is the apportionment of billing for the various functions performed by various machines. If a selected printer within a large office outputs a certain number of prints, it is desirable to assign the cost of the printing either to the human user who requested the prints, to a particular client of the office for whom the prints were made, and/or to a particular job being fulfilled for the client. In other words, it is desirable to assign costs of various activities, such as printing or copying, either by user, by customer, by job, by another category, or by a combination of these categories.
At the same time, in certain office situations, it is desirable to make occasional exceptions to a standard billing policy. It may be desired to permit certain functions of certain equipment to be unbilled, such as short jobs in machines at certain locations. It may be desired to permit a color-capable printer to output monochrome prints free to the user, while requiring billing for color prints. Also, in a realistic office situation, the necessary user, client, and job ID's may not be easily available to a user at the time the job is requested. It may be desirable to allow jobs to be output without entry of the necessary billing information, and allow the billing information to be submitted after the job is done.
The present invention relates to a flexible system for administrating a plurality of office equipment machines, enabling a system administrator to specify what types of billing information are required for each of a variety of machines, and also specify, to individual machines in a system, what the machine should do when the required billing information is not entered at the time of job submission.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,694,222 discloses a system for controlling access to various office equipment machines on a network. As can be seen in FIGS. 6A-D and 7of the patent, there is displayed to an administrator a matrix in which the administrator can select, for each machine, the level of password protection for individual functions in the machine. For instance, as shown in FIG. 7, the administrator can require entry of a password number for color prints, while allowing monochrome prints to be made without a password.
According to one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of administrating a plurality of machines, each machine capable of performing at least one function selected from a group of functions comprising printing, copying, finishing, scanning to a memory, sending a facsimile, and receiving a facsimile. For each function available from a selected machine of the plurality of machines, there is selected at least one type of code required for using the function. For a desired function at the selected machine, a request for entering a code of the type of code required for using the function is displayed. The machine carries out a preselected course of action if the code required for using the function is not entered.
The administrator computer 14 is used to control administrative functions relating to the various machines on the network. As such, the administrator computer 14 is able to access particular control programs within each machine 12, to send or receive service messages. According to the present invention, a system administrator at administrator computer 14 is able to control the billing requirements of individual functions within individual machines 12 on the network 10.
With particular reference to the window shown in
Across the top of the matrix in
The matrix in
Further to the right in the window shown in
With regard to the “delete job” and “hold job” options shown in the window of
In the case of the “hold job” option, if a particular function is requested without at least one of the required codes being entered, the image data relating to the job can nonetheless be retained in a memory at the particular machine selected for use. This image data can be retained in the machine in any number of forms: in the case of printing, the image data can be retained its basic PDL format, such as in PCL or Adobe® PostScript™, or alternately can be decomposed by the printer and held in an uncompressed or lightly compressed form for essentially immediate submission to printing hardware once the necessary codes are entered. The image data can similarly be held in situations where some functions are authorized while other functions are not. For instance, if the system administrator has selected that basic printing functions can be performed without a certain code, but access to advanced finishing options, such as booklet making or using deluxe cover stock, require a particular code, a print job may be submitted to the machine which is suitable for printing but not for finishing. In such a case, a design option is to permit the machine to decompose the image data and retain it temporarily but not output sheets until the appropriate codes are entered for finishing, or the finishing option request is withdrawn.
With the “hold job” option, provision is made (such as in further windows, not shown) for allowing the administrator to specify how long data is retained at a particular machine in expectation of receiving all of the required billing codes. This retention period, which depends highly on the overall capacity of a system relative to its user population, can conceivably range from an hour to several days. After the particular time for retaining data is expired, the machine can either delete the data, or simply allow the data to be overwritten within a buffer memory. Indeed, it is conceivable that a system can be set up wherein certain users or accounts, as identified by an input user ID or account numbers, can be given longer or shorter image data holding times than others.
As mentioned above, a selectable option for the administrator in cases where a particular function is requested from a machine but the necessary codes have not been entered is entering a predetermined default code in place of the code that was not entered, and running the job anyway. According to aspects of the present invention, this system of using default codes can be brought to a sophisticated level in order to meet the business requirements surrounding a particular system. In the most basic implementation of using default codes, if a job is requested and a particular code, such as the user ID, is not entered, a default code is read from a memory within administrator computer 14 and placed in the user ID field for billing purposes. A slightly more sophisticated system can make the particular default code for the user ID dependent on the identity of the particular machine being operated; the assumption being that, if the printer in Mr. X's office is being used, it is probably being used by Mr. X. Similarly, if the user ID is entered but no account number or a matter number is entered, default values for the account number or matter number can be selected based on a the user ID: once again, the assumption is that, because Mr. X usually works for account ABC, if Mr. X is using the printer, he is probably working on account ABC.
According to a particular aspect of the present invention, there may be provided, within administrator computer 14, provision to set up what can be called “super users,” “super accounts,” “super matters,” and so forth. In the case of a “super user,” who might be, for example, the owner of the company, submission of the owner's user ID may in itself enable unbilled access to all functions (or at least more functions than are normally available). A similar concept can attach to certain account numbers, wherein entry of certain account numbers enable access to certain functions which are not generally available. In either case, the particular properties of a super user or super account may depend on the machine ID of the particular machine being used, the machine ID being typically communicated to an administrator in a manner invisible to users whenever the machine is used. For instance, a particular super user, as identified by his user ID, may be permitted unbilled access to the one machine near his office, but would not enjoy such privileges with regard to other machines in the building. Setting up these super user and super account relationships with regard to particular machines could be made the subject of another matrix-type display similar to that shown in FIG. 2.
In the above discussion of the present invention, a distinction must be made between entering codes purely for purposes of access, and entering codes relating to a final billing report. When mere access to a particular function within a machine is the only requirement, typically only a user ID would be necessary: either a particular human user is authorized to use a particular machine, or not. In the billing context, however, not only is the identity of the human user requesting a particular job relevant, but also the associated client and account codes, and any other metric may be relevant. These “accounting codes,” as described in the claims, can be used to identify a user, a job, an account to which the job will be billed, and a matter to which the job is relevant, a particular client perhaps having a number of matters ongoing simultaneously. All of these account codes will eventually appear in one or another billing statement, either as a printed document or at the very least as a file in a computer memory. Thus, according to the present invention, a key step is organizing data relating to various jobs by a plurality of codes, not only a user ID, but by account, client, matter, and so forth. Also, within the billing context of the present invention, access in itself need not be restricted, as evidenced by the fact that the administrator can select the “do anyway” option when required codes are not entered. In other words, the present invention relates to a system of administrating the use of office equipment, such that individual jobs are properly billed to suitable entities; while this function may effectively overlap a restriction of access to certain machines, by the terms of the claims, the present invention is related to billing of functions and not purely access to functions.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5694222 | Yamada | Dec 1997 | A |
6064839 | Nakamura | May 2000 | A |
6266693 | Onaga | Jul 2001 | B1 |
6697806 | Cook | Feb 2004 | B1 |