This patent application claims the benefit of commonly assigned Indian Provisional Patent Application Serial No. IN/217/DEL/2007, entitled “Community Journaling Using Mobile Devices,” filed on Feb. 2, 2007, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
Short Message Service (“SMS”) is a very popular mechanism that mobile telephone users employ to send electronic messages to others. SMS is often used by users of older mobile telephone technology, such as mobile phones that are not enabled with General Packet Radio Service (“GPRS”). Mobile telephones that are enabled with GPRS can provide advanced digital features, such as Internet browsing, but older mobile telephones that do not provide GPRS cannot provide these advanced digital features. GPRS is unavailable in many areas and very expensive for some people in other areas.
Many Internet users participate in Web Logs (“blogs”). Blogs are user-generated Web sites in which journal entries can be made. People who participate in blogs by posting journal entries are referred to as “bloggers.” Generally, a blog has a limited number of bloggers and many readers, who are referred to as subscribers. Subscribers often expect bloggers to update their blogs regularly—sometimes even daily.
So that mobile telephone users can post entries in blogs, several SMS-to-blog services exist. To use these SMS-to-blog services, mobile telephone users key in SMS messages using their mobile telephone keypads and send the message to a specified telephone number. An SMS-to-blog service receives the SMS messages sent to such telephone numbers and posts the messages to a specified blog. However, such SMS-to-blog services do not offer their users much flexibility.
A community journaling system is described. The community journaling system enables users of mobile devices to share journal entries, such as by using a blog service or other data communications service. The blog service enables multiple users to create and maintain blogs. The mobile devices can be small, portable devices (e.g., conventional mobile telephones) that support simple messaging, such as SMS. Bloggers and subscribers can use the community journaling system to interact with various blog services or other data communications services using their mobile devices. Bloggers can post journal entries to various blogs to which they have access and subscribers can read journal entries from blogs to which they subscribe. The community journaling system can function with virtually any blog service and mobile telephone network service provider. The community journaling system can receive a message containing a journal entry and a command to post the journal entry to a journal, identify a sender of the received message, determine whether the journal entry should be posted to the journal, and when the journal entry should be posted, convert the journal entry into a journal format that can be posted to the journal, cause the converted journal entry to be posted to the journal, and provide the identification of the sender in association with the posted journal entry.
This Summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts in a simplified form that are further described below in the Detailed Description. This Summary is not intended to identify key features or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used as an aid in determining the scope of the claimed subject matter.
A community journaling system is described. In various embodiments, the community journaling system enables users of mobile devices to share journal entries, such as by using a blog service or other data communications service. A journal entry can include text, audio, video, images, or any multimedia content that one user (e.g., a blogger) may want to share with other users (e.g., subscribers). The blog service enables multiple users to create and maintain blogs. The mobile devices can be small, portable devices (e.g., conventional mobile telephones) that support simple messaging, such as SMS. Bloggers and subscribers can use the community journaling system to interact with various blog services or other data communications services using a mobile device. Bloggers can post journal entries to various blogs to which they have access and subscribers can read journal entries from blogs to which they subscribe. The community journaling system can receive a message containing a journal entry and a command to post the journal entry to a journal, identify a sender of the received message, determine whether the journal entry should be posted to the journal, and when the journal entry should be posted, convert the journal entry into a journal format that can be posted to the journal, cause the converted journal entry to be posted to the journal, and provide the identification of the sender in association with the posted journal entry. The community journaling system can function with virtually any blog service and mobile telephone network service provider. In some embodiments, the community journaling system includes an SMS computing device. The SMS computing device can be a general use (or special-purpose) computing device that is connected to both a mobile device carrier network (e.g., using an SMS port connected via a mobile device, SIM daughter-card with a radio, etc.) and to a data communications network, such as the Internet. Users can employ their mobile devices to send an SMS message to the SMS computing device. The SMS computing device may be associated with a mobile telephone number and users can indicate this phone number as the destination for the SMS message. Upon receiving an SMS message, software executing on the SMS computing device can determine whether the SMS message is from a registered user. If so, the executing software can parse the SMS message to determine whether the SMS message contains a command. If the SMS message contains a command, the software can invoke a function associated with the command, such as to post a blog journal entry, provide menu commands, provide a blog entry for a subscriber user to read, or take other action. If the SMS message is not from a registered user, the software may send a responsive SMS message to the sender indicating how to subscribe and/or register.
In various embodiments, users of the community journaling system can employ mobile devices to post to their own blogs; read the latest posts on their own blogs; post to a blog; read the latest posts on blogs; subscribe and unsubscribe to blogs for the latest journal entries; post and read blogs owned by people in their social networks; subscribe to posts from specific bloggers or posts made for identified mobile phone numbers; receive alerts from people in their social networks (e.g., relating to “events'”) marked on a community calendar; register, set up, and customize blog-related options from their SMS-enabled phones, and so forth.
The community journaling system in some embodiments can enable menu-driven navigation of blogs using SMS. Using the menus, users can view multiple blogs, retrieve a specified number of blog entries at a time, etc. The community journaling system can provide a menu using SMS messages. As an example, the community journaling system may provide numbers or letters associated with menu or navigation commands. When the user responds with an identified number or letter, the community journaling system can take an indicated action. As an example, the community journaling system may associate “1” or “R” with a “read” command.
The community journaling system in some embodiments may associate a time-based session with phone numbers associated with mobile devices that send SMS messages to the community journaling system. As an example, the community journaling system may associate a session with a mobile device until the user of the mobile device sends a quit (or goodbye) SMS message or the session times out, such as after an hour. During a session, the community journaling system can maintain contextual information so that it can determine what commands to associate with various numbers or letters that are sent as commands in SMS messages the system receives. A session begins when a user first sends a command to the community journaling system and expires after a period of inactivity. When the session expires, the user may be returned to a particular point (e.g., a top menu). When the user sends some commands (e.g., “R” for read), the community journaling system may still be able to take an appropriate action, such as to send the latest blog, whether or not a session has been established or has expired.
The community journaling system in some embodiments enables community blogging. Conventional blogs enable specified individuals to add entries to a blog. The community journaling system enables anyone (or members of a specified community) to post to blogs if the owner of the blog (e.g., a “blogger”) enables this feature. When a user sends an SMS message from a mobile device to an SMS computing device, the SMS computing device can post the message to a blog, such as by copying the text of the SMS message to an email message and sending the email message to a server component that converts text the email contains into a journal entry on a blog. In various embodiments, the SMS computing device may be able to retrieve from a storage (e.g., a database) the sender's name, such as by associating the sender's telephone number with the name in a database. In such cases, the SMS computing device may identify the sender by name when causing the text the sender sent to be posted to the blog. Alternatively, the sender may be identified by the telephone number or as an anonymous poster of the journal entry.
Publishers of digital content sometimes employ Rich Site Summary (“RSS”), which is also referred to as Really Simple Syndication, to publish digital content, including blogs. In various embodiments, the community journaling system provides an RSS-like mechanism that publishes blogs to users of the community journaling system. A computing device can collect blog entries, such as from blogs the user has specified an interest in, and periodically publish the blog entries by sending SMS messages containing the blog entries. As an example, the computing device may send the latest blog entry or the latest five blog entries and provide menu navigation commands that the user can use to receive additional blog entries, such as from the same or a different blog. The computing device can optionally filter the blog entries, such as based on the user's prior indications of one or more criteria. The computing device can filter blog entries based on the blog user (or mobile telephone number) that created the blog entry, text within the blog entry, the time of the blog entry, and so forth. As an example, a user may indicate to receive all blog entries made by a specified blogger. The user may thus filter which blog entries are received by optionally specifying criteria.
In some embodiments, the community journaling system enables users to invite others to a blog via SMS. A blogger can invite an SMS user to the blog by providing the invited user's mobile telephone number. The community journaling system can then send an SMS message that provides instructions for joining the blog; instructions for sending commands; a telephone number to which to send SMS messages containing commands; and so forth. The blogger can invite SMS users by employing a user interface on a Web page, by sending an SMS message, or using other means. As an example, the blogger can request an invitation message from the community journaling system and then forward the received invitation to others.
In various embodiments, the community journaling system recognizes commands sent via SMS by using a flexible syntax. When a user sends an SMS message to an SMS computing device, the community journaling system can employ a syntax checker component to check the commands so that an appropriate action can be taken based on the command. The following are examples of the syntax that the community journaling system may send when the user requests help, first sends a command via SMS (e.g., an incorrect command), or completes a registration process:
The following are examples of features that the community journaling system may make available to users employing a Web interface to configure the community journaling system for their use:
1. Posting:
2. Notifications:
3. Invitation action:
You can send out an invite to your friends by giving us their
or by contacting those on your
4. Unsubscribing:
The following are examples of features that the community journaling system may make available to users when sending SMS messages to an SMS computing device:
1. Scrapbook features:
2. Unsubscribing:
When a user registers at a Web site to enable SMS blogging, the community journaling system may provide the following features:
1. Give us your name, spaceid+mobile
2. Sign into your Spaces and select E-mail Publishing in the Options menu
3. Give us your secret name in the box provided.
4. Great, you're done! You will now receive an SMS with all the cool SMSBlogging options you can use.
The following describes a possible user interaction flow when a user interacts with the community journaling system in various embodiments:
b 1. From a registered mobile phone, the user sends an SMS to the Blog Access Number provided by the SMS computing device.
2. The message may be parsed by a component of the SMS computing device in the following manner:
The community journaling system will now be described with reference to the figures.
In various embodiments, the routines described herein can be modified in various ways. As examples, additional logic can be combined, some logic can be ignored, logic associated with the blocks can be performed in a different order than illustrated, and so forth.
A user can navigate a Web browser to a home page and select a blogs link (
Although the subject matter has been described in language specific to structural features and/or methodological acts, it is to be understood that the subject matter defined in the appended claims is not necessarily limited to the specific features or acts described above. Rather, the specific features and acts described above are disclosed as example forms of implementing the claims. Accordingly, the invention is not limited except as by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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IN/217/DEL2007 | Feb 2007 | IN | national |