The present disclosure relates to a method and a portable electronic device.
In conventional wireless communication approaches, such as Bluetooth and Bluetooth Low Energy (also known as Bluetooth Smart Technology), individual devices can be operated as nodes taking the role of masters or slaves in a particular communication relationship. Thus each node adopts the role of master or the role of slave. Accordingly, in a communication pair, one node acts as master and the other acts as slave. In the context of Bluetooth Low Energy, the master may be referred to as the central and the slave as the peripheral. One master (or central) node can be a master to several slaves (the exact number often limited by a particular chipset implementation) and although a node can be registered as a slave (or peripheral) to multiple masters, it can only be active as a slave to one master at any one time.
Bluetooth and Bluetooth Low Energy are fundamentally different in operation to other Low-rate wireless personal area networks (LR-WPANs) such as Zigbee™ and Thread™, which are both based upon the IEEE 802.15.4 wireless protocol.
Publications WO 2017/020188 and US 2014/0107815 described examples of exchanging information between an aerosol provision device and another electronic device.
Some specific aspects and embodiments are set out in the appended claims.
Viewed from a first aspect, there can be provided a method comprising: receiving, via a wireless communication interface capable of supporting paired interaction, a data packet from an aerosol provision device via a wireless communication network, wherein the data packet contains information relating to at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device; determining the identity of the aerosol provision device based at least in part on the at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device; and changing an aspect of a user interface based on the determined identity of the aerosol provision device.
Viewed from another aspect, there can be provided a portable electronic device comprising: at least one processor; a display; a wireless communication interface capable of supporting paired interaction; memory comprising instructions which, when executed by the at least one processor cause the at least one processor to: receive, via the Bluetooth low energy communication interface, a data packet from an aerosol provision device, wherein the data packet contains information relating to at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device; determine, based at least in part on the at physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device, the identity of the aerosol provision device; and change an aspect of a user interface displayed on the display to be changed based on the determined identity of the aerosol provision device.
Embodiments of the present teachings will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to accompanying drawings, in which:
While the presently described approach is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments are shown by way of example in the drawings and are herein described in detail. It should be understood, however, that drawings and detailed description thereto are not intended to limit the scope to the particular form disclosed, but on the contrary, the scope is to cover all modifications, equivalents and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope as defined by the appended claims.
The present disclosure relates to a modified form of wireless communication behavior. According to the present teachings, a device can be configured to use a Bluetooth or Bluetooth-like communications protocol and can, in a manner that may be transparent to other devices using the communications protocol for communication with the device, operate as both a master/central and a slave/peripheral in different communication relationships at the same time on a time division basis.
In some examples, the devices can be aerosol provision devices such as so-called “E-cigarettes”, sometimes also known as Electronic Nicotine Delivery devices (END devices), provided with electronics that allow them to communicate with other communication devices. As used herein, the term “aerosol provision device” refers either to a device including an aerosol source material (e.g., a device part and a disposable cartomizer part containing the aerosol source material) and/or a device not including an aerosol source material (e.g., just the device part of the previous example).
In the present examples, the devices use Bluetooth Low Energy (“BTLE”), but other Bluetooth protocols or Bluetooth-like protocols can take advantage of the present teachings. Bluetooth is a wireless technology standard for short distance communication between appropriately enabled devices. BTLE is a variant on the original Bluetooth system, designed to draw less power in use for extended battery life and/or small battery applications. Both Bluetooth and BTLE operate in the UHF radio industrial, scientific and medical (ISM) band from 2.4 to 2.485 GHz and are designed for creating so-called wireless personal area networks (PANs) for interconnecting devices over short distances. BTLE uses a modified version of the Bluetooth stack for communication such that a BTLE device and a traditional Bluetooth device are not directly compatible unless one device implements both protocols. Both Bluetooth and BTLE standards are maintained by the Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG). The present disclosure is provided in the context of a BTLE implementation using the part of the Bluetooth v4 specification that relates to BTLE. However, the skilled reader will appreciate that the present teachings can be applied to other Bluetooth approaches, such as the so-called Classic Bluetooth definitions that are also set out in the Bluetooth v4 specification. It will be further appreciated that the present teachings can be applied to technologies that are not in accordance with an entire Bluetooth specification, but which nevertheless behave in a Bluetooth-like manner.
For example, non-Bluetooth systems that nevertheless use an advertising setup based on the Bluetooth Low Energy Generic Access Profile (GAP) and thus have an advertising structure substantially as set out in
A first example of a devices environment 1 in which the present teachings can be utilized is shown in
To achieve such a mesh-like communication structure, a device consistent with the present teachings can take on more than one persona and thus can belong to more than one BTLE communication relationship and furthermore, the device can act as a central or a peripheral in one BTLE communication relationship and as a peripheral in another BTLE communication relationship. To manage the simultaneous nature of these different personas, the device of the present teachings can be operated to switch between the two personas, such that at any one time the device adopts only one persona. The switching back and forth between personas happens often enough that each communication relationship is maintained without the devices with which those communication relationships are formed concluding that the device has become unavailable and closing those communication relationships.
Switching between the personas within a given device would take place on a timescale consistent with the demands a particular application for the device. There is some random element to the switching, as illustrated with respect to
Additionally, a device according to the present teachings can have multiple central personas, which can be used to communicate in different meshes or to increase the total number of peripherals with which it can hold bond relationships at any one time above a limit imposed by the particular Bluetooth chipset deployed. These multiple central personas can be implemented by using the persona switching approach outlined above, or by implementing multiple BTLE MCUs.
By using such a technique, for example, the interconnections between the aerosol provision devices 2 could occur in the form of aerosol provision device 2a acting as central and aerosol provision device 2b acting as peripheral in a first BTLE relationship. Aerosol provision device 2b may also act a central in a second BTLE relationship that features aerosol provision device 2c as a peripheral. Aerosol provision device 2c may in turn be the central in a third BTLE relationship that includes aerosol provision devices 2d and 2e as peripherals. Further, aerosol provision device 2d may be also be central in a fourth BTLE relationship that includes aerosol provision device 2e as a peripheral. As will be appreciated, other orderings of which aerosol provision devices function as central and peripheral in various possible aerosol provision device relationships can be implemented. For example, the connectivity shown in
The mesh approach set out in the present disclosure allows the passing of small data packets or tokens between aerosol provision devices without a need to establish full BTLE bond relationships between the aerosol provision devices. Thus such tokens may be flooded through a mesh of any two or more aerosol provision devices based upon transient or impermanent aerosol provision device to aerosol provision device relationships where the peripheral to central relationship lasts just long enough to transmit and receive the token. This approach does not prevent some or all of the aerosol provision devices in the mesh establishing bond relationships (also known as pairing). Such a bond-based approach may be used for example in circumstances where volumes of data larger than can be accommodated using tokens need to be transmitted between aerosol provision devices in the mesh.
As also illustrated in
Accordingly, it will be seen that the approach of the present teachings allows a Bluetooth or BTLE-based mesh to be established without a controlling device that provides a core node for a star-type topology. The mesh can interact with a non-meshed device, but this interaction can be either continuous or intermittent and the non-meshed device need not have any role in establishing, controlling or configuring the mesh.
Therefore, by establishing such a mesh network, the various aerosol provision devices 2 can communicate with each other and pass information on to other devices within range using an existing communication protocol such as BTLE. However, as will be appreciated from the discussion, the device uses a modified form of the Bluetooth hardware implementation with Generic Attribute Profile (GATT) Notification to achieve this ad-hoc meshable behavior. As will be appreciated from the present teachings, this modification can be achieved by implementing a modified hardware, firmware or software implementation of the protocol, for example by using an implementation of a controller circuit that complies in many respects with the standard communication protocol, but includes additional functionality provided for example using a script to achieve the device-to-device interactions described herein. The additional functionality may be introduced using modified hardware which, while this involves using non-standard hardware, does provide that the hardware could provide both modes on a full time basis without the need for time-divided sharing of the personas. The controller circuit may be a hardware circuit with functionality provided by its configuration, such as an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) or may be a programmable microprocessor (μR) or microcontroller (MCU) operating under firmware and/or software control.
With regard to the functional components relating to the core computing functionality of the aerosol provision device 2, it will be appreciated that the nature and usage of these components may differ depending upon the nature of the device itself. In the example of the aerosol provision device 2, the core computing functionality may include passing or information tokens between aerosol provision device devices, monitoring and reporting of device charge and/or nicotine fluid levels, lost and found interactions, and usage recording. Thus it will also be appreciated that the core computing functionality may differ from a user-perceived core functionality of the device. For example, in the case of an aerosol provision device, the user-perceived core functionality will likely be that of aerosol generation for nicotine delivery, with the computing functionalities being additional, supplementary or secondary to that user-perceived core functionality.
The layer implementations relevant to understanding the present teachings include the link layer, the L2CAP, the GAP and the low energy attribute protocol.
The link layer controller is responsible for low level communication over a physical interface. It manages the sequence and timing of transmitted and received frames, and using link layer protocol, communicates with other devices regarding connection parameters and data flow control. It also handles frames received and transmitted while the device is in advertising or scanner modes. The link layer controller also provides gate keeping functionality to limit exposure and data exchange with other devices. If filtering is configured, the link layer controller maintains a “white list” of allowed devices and will ignore all requests for data exchange or advertising information from others. As well as providing security functionality, this can also help manage power consumption. The link layer controller uses a host controller interface (HCI) to communicate with upper layers of the stack if the layer implementations are not co-located.
The logical link control and adaptation layer protocol (L2CAP) component provides data services to upper layer protocols like security manager protocol and attribute protocol. It is responsible for protocol multiplexing and data segmentation into small enough packets for the link layer controller, and de-multiplexing and reassembly operation on the other end. The L2CAP's has a backend interface is for the GAP that defines the generic procedures related to the discovery of BTLE devices and link management aspects of connecting to other BTLE devices. The GAP provides an interface for the application to configure and enables different modes of operation, e.g. advertising or scanning, and also to initiate, establish, and manage connection with other devices. The GAP is therefore used control connections and advertising in Bluetooth. GAP controls device visibility and determines how two devices can (or cannot) interact with each other.
The low energy attribute protocol (ATT) is optimized for small packet sizes used in Bluetooth low energy and allows an attribute server to expose a set of attributes and their associated values to an attribute client. These attributes can be discovered, read, and written by peer devices. The GATT provides a framework for using ATT.
As will be apparent from the discussions above, the present teachings use the advertising process to facilitate the meshed interaction of multiple devices, for example to permit scattering information between an unlimited number of devices for the purpose of disseminating data over distances and time.
In the context of the present examples, an application running on a device communicating via the meshed structure described herein may request or watch for specific scan response payloads, responsive to a scan response being sent by that device. This approach is used in conventional Bluetooth implementations to transmit the device name and other identification details. However in the present approaches, this scan response, which is defined as a 31 byte data packet, also referred to as a token, is used to share ID information related to a variable that when read by an application will trigger a particular response or action. The timing of such requests is illustrated in
By implementing the approach of the present teachings, data passing over the physical layer is indistinguishable at that level from ordinary BTLE traffic. Also, although higher-level layers are modified to accept the present meshable-interaction of devices, a non-meshable enabled application can communicate over BTLE using a device consistent with the present teachings.
Also, a device that utilizes only a conventional BTLE stack (such as device 6 illustrated in
Thus an aerosol provision device configured to provide the meshable-interaction of the present example uses the standard BTLE GATT (Generic Attribute Profile) specification in combination with a modified GAP to adopt the two operation modes associated with the dual-persona nature of the aerosol provision device. As will be discussed below, the aerosol provision device alternates between advertising as a peripheral and listening as a central so as to facilitate being able to connect to other aerosol provision devices in both central and peripheral modes. Typically the device already has an indication of the identity of the mesh in that the devices can be pre-programmed to use a particular UUID tied to the particular device mesh (“service” in BTLE terms) that the devices are intended to participate in. For example all END devices from a particular brand, range, or manufacturer may be programmed to use the same UUID. Within this context, to identify the active persona or mode, the aerosol provision device uses an ID code that uniquely identifies the aerosol provision device within the mesh. The ID and UUID (in effect mesh ID or group ID) codes are held in the firmware of the device and inserted into the advertising packets along with the data that makes up the token and may also be referenced in scan response requests and scan response messages as part of the advertising under GAP interactions with and between the devices.
While operating as a central, the aerosol provision device can adopt the states Scanner, Initiator and Master, and while operating as a peripheral the aerosol provision device can adopt the states Advertiser and Slave.
When an aerosol provision device is observing with a view to establishing a role as a central in a mesh, the aerosol provision device acts no differently to an aerosol provision device with no meshing capability when listening for advertisement from a potential peripheral aerosol provision device. Thus an aerosol provision device operating in this mode can also become a central to a conventional BTLE device without the meshing capability of the present teachings.
When an aerosol provision device is advertising with a view to establishing a role as a peripheral in a mesh, it advertises using a structure based upon the BTLE GAP data. However the BTLE GAP structure is modified to include mesh-specific information that can be recognized by a mesh-capable device which receives the advertisement. The mesh-specific information can include fields such as:
In accordance with the BTLE data handling approach, if a given application payload item is too large for a single packet, that payload item is broken down and distributed within multiple packets before reassembly at the/each destination aerosol provision device. In such applications a bond may be established between aerosol provision devices so as to provide for more transmission management for this larger data volume.
In the example of
It should be noted that in this implementation, the advertising data is effectively flooded across the mesh. Thus, if N1 happens to be listening as central at the same time that N2 is advertising as peripheral, the advertising data will return to N1 as well as passing onward through the mesh to N3. In this circumstance either the aerosol provision device N1 or some application running at or associated with N1 may simply discard the returning advertising data. In some implementations, the aerosol provision device or application may make use of the returned advertising data in some way, for example using the time between transmission and receipt as some form of random interval generator or for mesh diagnostics.
As has been explained above, it is possible for the transmission over the mesh to be in the more structured format of using established bonds between the aerosol provision devices. In such a circumstance, each pair of aerosol provision devices will interact over an established bond and the persona switching at each aerosol provision device will provide for data received in a bond of which one persona is a member can then be onwardly transmitted using a bond of which the other persona is a member.
Control as to whether the data is transmitted to every aerosol provision device (flooding) or whether the data is transmitted only to selected aerosol provision devices (routing) can be achieved in several ways. If the data is to be automatically communicated to all aerosol provision devices without restriction, then this can be a default state configured into the aerosol provision devices. If the data is to be transmitted only to aerosol provision devices currently active in the mesh, then this can be achieved either as default behavior set in the aerosol provision devices or on an application-specific basis where the application is mesh-aware and provides control information to the communication stack to indicate the data transmission extent. If the data is only to be transmitted to specific aerosol provision devices, this can be achieved on an application-specific basis where the application is mesh-aware and provides control information to the communication stack to indicate the data transmission extent. The present examples are configured to operate on the basis of a flooding approach such that data is automatically forwarded to all presently-meshed devices.
As will be understood from the discussion above, the meshes can change dynamically based upon changes to the numbers and positions of aerosol provision devices in the mesh. For example as aerosol provision devices move away from the remainder of the mesh, eventually they will lose contact with all aerosol provision devices in the mesh and leave the mesh. Likewise, an aerosol provision device that is deactivated or enters a power saving non-wireless mode will lose contact with the other aerosol provision devices in the mesh and leave the mesh. Further, new aerosol provision devices not previously a part of the mesh will be able to join the mesh as and when they come within range of an aerosol provision device in the mesh or when they are powered while within range of an aerosol provision device in the mesh. Also, as will be understood from the discussion of persona switching above, an aerosol provision device already within the mesh and operating as a peripheral within the mesh will also operate at a different time as a central within the mesh. In an implementation in which the mesh adopts bond relationships such that particular aerosol provision devices have defined roles as centrals in some bonds and peripherals in others, if an aerosol provision device then changes location relative to the aerosol provision devices in the mesh it may in effect leave the mesh as all established bonds may cease to operate of the range to the new location. Such an aerosol provision device would then resume attempting both observing and advertising until it establishes one or more new bond relationships into other aerosol provision devices of the bond-linked mesh.
As the skilled reader will appreciate, Bluetooth and BTLE provide for securing of an inter-node communication bond. This is not applicable to the purely advertising-based transmission of tokens in the form of advertising data unless such transmission of tokens leads to the establishment of bond relationships. In the present examples, even where bond relationships are used, the aerosol provision devices can be configured to establish such bonds without requiring user input to confirm trust between the different aerosol provision devices or other devices. Rather, in the present examples, aerosol provision devices of a particular type can be configured to pre-trust all other aerosol provision devices of that particular type. For example, each aerosol provision device can be configured to trust all other devices that identify as being aerosol provision devices from a given manufacturer, group of manufacturers, brand, group of brands, model, group of models or as being compliant with a given aerosol provision device standard or group of standards.
Such a trust pattern can be supplemented with inherent controls on the amount of personal data that the device stores/is permitted to transmit. For example, an aerosol provision device may be configured by the owning user to not hold or to be prevented from sharing any information that identifies the owner. This would not preclude the END device from interacting with other END devices to pass on information that can be used for lost/found functionality or from passing on information about the END device itself to provide for group interactions between END devices of the same brand or model, for example as discussed below.
In other examples, trust may be a user-explicit functionality, such that a user may be required to actively accept or request a communication bond to be established with another aerosol provision device.
Where a particular aerosol provision device or other device is being configured by the user, for example to communicate with a conventional BTLE device of the user such as a smartphone, phablet or tablet device, the trust relationship between the user's meshable device and conventional BTLE device may be secured in the same manner as other conventional BTLE pairings to establish a communication bond.
Thus it will be understood that by using the approach of the present teachings, a device can be provided that is capable of meshed interaction with other similar devices by adopting a dual-persona structure in which the device is able to operate on a time-division basis as both a master (central) and slave (peripheral) for communication with those other like devices while also operating as a slave/peripheral to a conventional device without the dual persona capability.
This approach can be used to facilitate device-to-device interactions between a range of devices for a range of purposes. As discussed above, examples of devices that can be equipped for such device-to-device interactions using the meshed or PICONET topology approach of the above examples include electronic nicotine delivery devices (END devices).
The meshable interconnectivity of the aerosol provision devices 2A and one or more other devices as described above may be considered a connectionless-state interaction, wherein connectionless-state packets are created, transmitted and received by each device in accordance with the examples described above with reference to
In the present example, the wireless communication interface 12 of an aerosol provision device 2a is used to create a connectionless-state advertising packet that contains information relating to at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device 2a. The at least one physical characteristic may include the color of the aerosol provision device 2a. The at least one physical characteristic may also include other physical characteristics such as the shape of the aerosol provision device 2a, the size of the aerosol provision device 2a and the type of the aerosol provision device 2a. For example, the at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device 2a may include the length, width and thickness of the aerosol provision device 2a, and/or an indication that the aerosol provision device 2a is substantially cylindrical in shape, pebble shaped, oval shaped or another geometric shape.
The color of the aerosol provision device 2a may be conveyed as a hex color code, which could be either a hex code approximating to the actual color of the device or a code illustrating very generally the color property. For example, if the aerosol provision device 2a was a red device, as a general approximation of “red” this could be represented by the hex color code FF0000, while a specific hex code for the actual color could correspond to a pantone or other color identifier of the device (as one example a device colored in Pantone 2347 U, would be represented by the hex code E74536 or for simplicity of representation of the color on a display device could be approximated to the so-called websafe color FF3333). In the example of a yellow device, the general approximation of “yellow” could be represented by the hex color code FFFF00, while a specific hex code for an actual color might correspond for example to Pantone 114 C would be represented by the hex code FBDD40 (or for simply display of the color on a display device could be approximated to the so-called websafe color FFCC33). Conveying the color of the aerosol provision device 2a as a hex color code allows any of the colors in the RGB color model to be conveyed in the advertising packet using 3 bytes. Alternatively, the color of the aerosol provision device 2a could be conveyed using a predetermined code. For example, if a particular type of aerosol provision device 2a were only manufactured in a finite number of different colors, such as eight, a code would be used to convey the color of the device, such as 001 for red, 010 for yellow, 011 for blue, etc., through the available color extent. In this way, only three bits in a single byte of the advertising packet is required to convey the color of the aerosol provision device 2a, thereby saving space in the advertising packet.
In the present example, the advertising packet generated by the wireless communication interface 12 of an aerosol provision device 2a optionally includes additional information about the aerosol provision device 2a, such as the batch number (batch ID) of the aerosol provision device 2a, the serial number of the aerosol provision device 2a and/or the product identification number (product ID) of the aerosol provision device 2a. For example, the advertising packet may include a UUID corresponding to the aerosol provision device 2a.
The wireless communication interface 12 of an aerosol provision device 2a may be a Bluetooth low energy (BLE) communication interface.
The advertising packet 100 illustrated in
The wireless communication interface 12 of the aerosol provision device 2a is then used to transmit the generated advertising packet via a wireless communication network. For example, if the wireless communication interface 12 is a BLE communication interface, the advertising packet 100 may be in the format illustrated in
In the present example, the portable electronic device 6 receives a data packet via the wireless communication interface 62 from an aerosol provision device 2a via a wireless communication network. The data packet may contain information relating to at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device 2a, for example an advertising packet 100 as described above in relation to
In response to receiving a data packet from an aerosol provision device 2a, the processor 64 of the portable electronic device 6 is configured to determine the identity of the aerosol provision device 2a based at least in part on the at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device 2a. For example, the processor 64 of the portable electronic device 6 may read the data packet to extract the color of the aerosol provision device 2a. In the example where the data packet is an advertising packet 100 as described above in relation to
The memory 66 of the portable electronic device 6 may contain a database of physical characteristics of known aerosol provision devices. As part of the determination of the identity of the aerosol provision device 2a, the processor 64 of the portable electronic device 6 may compare the information relating to at least one physical characteristic of the electronic nicotine delivery device 2a, and contained in the received data packet, to information contained in the database stored in the memory 66 of the portable electronic device 6. For example, if the at least one physical characteristic in the data packet includes the shape and/or size of the aerosol provision device 2a, this information may be cross-referenced against information in the database in order to determine the type of aerosol provision device the data packet was sent from. Alternatively, or in addition, if the color of the aerosol provision device 2a is conveyed in the data packet using a predetermined code, the processor 64 may use the information in the database to translate the code sent in the data packet into a color of the aerosol provision device 2a.
In the present example, the processor 64 of the portable electronic device 6 is configured to change an aspect of a user interface based on the determined identity of the aerosol provision device 2a. This allows the user to easily identify the aerosol provision device when communicating with it for the first time using the portable electronic device. For example, the processor 64 may be configured to present a pictorial or graphical representation which indicates the aerosol provision device 2a on the user interface, where the graphical representation is based on the determined identity of the aerosol provision device 2a.
Alternatively or in addition, the processor 64 may change another aspect of the user interface, such as playing an animation or video, playing a sound, changing the display settings of the user interface, such as the brightness, contrast or resolution of the user interface, or changing one or more colors displayed on the user interface. Changing an aspect of the user interface based on the determined identity of the aerosol provision device informs the user as to the identity of the aerosol provision device 2a from which data has been received. This allows the user to determine what action to take, for example to request commencement of a pairing process between the portable electronic device 6 and the aerosol provision device 2a, or to block the aerosol provision device 2a from further communication with the portable electronic device 6.
The identity of the aerosol provision device 2a may be determined based on the color of the aerosol provision device 2a and the processor 64 is configured to change the color of at least a portion of user interface to match the color of the aerosol provision device 2a. For example, if the color of the aerosol provision device 2a is conveyed as a hex color code, the processor 64 is configured to change the color of at least a portion of user interface to the RGB color corresponding to the hex color code. Alternatively, the processor 64 may be configured to present the physical characteristic used to identify the aerosol provision device 2a on the user interface, such as in text form. In the example illustrated in
The identity of the aerosol provision device 2a may also be determined based on one or more of the UUID, the product ID and the batch ID of the aerosol provision device 2a, and the processor 64 is configured to display this information on the user interface, for example as text or in one or more images. If the identity of the aerosol provision device 2a is also determined based on the color of the aerosol provision device 2a, the processor 64 may be configured to change the color of at least a portion of user interface to match the color of the aerosol provision device 2a and to display the additional information, such as the UUID, the product ID and/or the batch ID, in text form in or near the portion of the user interface where the color has been changed. In the example illustrated in
The memory 66 of the portable electronic device 6 optionally contains a database of physical characteristics of known aerosol provision devices. Each entry in the database may include a picture or graphical representation which indicates the corresponding aerosol provision device. Accordingly, when the identity of the aerosol provision device from which the data packet was received is determined based on a comparison with entries in the database stored in the memory 66 of the portable electronic device 6, the processor 64 may be configured to change an aspect of the user interface by displaying the picture or graphical representation which indicates the entry in the database corresponding to the identity of the aerosol provision device 2a in a portion of the user interface.
Any combination of the change of an aspect of the user interface described above may be combined. For example, the processor 64 may be configured to display a graphical representation which indicates the aerosol provision device 2a on at least a portion of the user interface, where the shape and size of the graphical representation is based on shape and size information in the received data packet, the color of the graphical representation is based on the color information in the received data packet and any additional information in the received data packet, such as the UUID, product ID and batch ID of the aerosol provision device is displayed in text form next to the graphical representation or as part of the graphical representation, for example as text on the body of the aerosol provision device in the graphical representation.
The portable electronic device 6 optionally receives a data packet via the wireless communication interface 62 from a second aerosol provision device 2b via a wireless communication network. The data packet may contain information relating to at least one physical characteristic of the second aerosol provision device 2b, for example an advertising packet 100 as described above in relation to
In response to receiving a data packet from the second aerosol provision device 2b, the processor 64 of the portable electronic device 6 is configured to determine the identity of the second aerosol provision device 2b based at least in part on the at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device 2b, as described above with respect to the identity of the first aerosol provision device 2a.
The processor 64 is then configured to change an aspect of the user interface based on the determined identity of the first aerosol provision device 2a and the second aerosol provision device 2b such as to enable a selection from a user of one of the first aerosol provision device 2a or the second aerosol provision device 2b. For example, the processor 64 may be configured to display information relating to the identity of the first aerosol provision device 2a on a first portion of the user interface and to display information relating to the identity of the second aerosol provision device 2b on a second portion of the user interface. The user is then able to select either the first aerosol provision device 2a or the second aerosol provision device 2b, for example by touching the portion of a touchscreen display corresponding to either the first portion of the user interface or the second portion of the user interface, by using a pointing device to position the pointer in the first portion of the user interface or the second portion of the user interface and making a selection, by pressing a button or other input element, by uttering an expression or making a gesture.
The order of the steps of the method illustrated in
By displaying the representations and/or associated text for the two devices, as discussed above with respect to
Therefore, from one perspective, there has been described a method and a portable electronic device. The method comprises receiving, via a wireless communication interface capable of supporting paired interaction, a data packet from an aerosol provision device via a wireless communication network. The data packet contains information relating to at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device. An identity of the aerosol provision device is determined based at least in part on the at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device and an aspect of a user interface is changed based on the determined identity of the aerosol provision device.
It should be appreciated that although the embodiments described above have been primarily described in relation to a wireless communication interface that uses Bluetooth LE, the principles of the present disclosure are not limited to using a particular wireless communication interface. For example, other implementations may be based on a Wi-Fi direct communication interface, or any other radio communication interface.
The various embodiments described herein are presented only to assist in understanding and teaching the claimed features. These embodiments are provided as a representative sample of embodiments only, and are not exhaustive and/or exclusive. It is to be understood that advantages, embodiments, examples, functions, features, structures, and/or other aspects described herein are not to be considered limitations on the disclosure scope defined by the claims or limitations on equivalents to the claims, and that other embodiments may be utilized and modifications may be made without departing from the scope and/or spirit of the claims.
Further examples consistent with the present teachings are set out in the following numbered clauses:
1. A method comprising:
The method of clause 1, wherein the wireless communication interface is a Bluetooth low energy communication interface.
The method of clause 2, wherein the data packet is a Bluetooth low energy data packet and the information relating to at least one physical characteristic of first and second aerosol provision device is contained within a packet data unit of the Bluetooth low energy data packet.
The method of any one of clauses 1 to 3, wherein the at least one physical characteristic comprises the color of the aerosol provision device.
The method of clause 4, wherein the color of the aerosol provision device is conveyed as a hex color code.
The method of clause 4, wherein the color of the aerosol provision device is conveyed as a predetermined code.
The method of clause 6, wherein determining the identity of the aerosol provision device comprises using information stored in a database in a memory to translate the predetermined code received in the data packet into a color of the aerosol provision device.
The method of any one of clauses 1 to 7, wherein the at least one physical characteristic comprises one or more of the shape of the aerosol provision device, the size of the aerosol provision device, the type of aerosol provision device.
The method of any one of clauses 1 to 8, wherein the data packet received from the aerosol provision device includes at least one of a batch number, a serial number and a product identification number of the aerosol provision device.
The method of any one of clauses 1 to 9, wherein determining the identity of the aerosol provision device comprises comparing the at least one physical characteristic of the aerosol provision device to a database of physical characteristics of aerosol provision devices stored in a memory.
The method of claim any one of clauses 1 to 10, wherein changing an aspect of the user interface comprises one or more of displaying a graphical representation of the aerosol provision device on the user interface, playing a video, playing a sound, changing one or more display settings of the user interface, and changing one or more colors displayed on the user interface.
The method of any one of clauses 1 to 11, further comprising:
The method of clause 12, wherein changing an aspect of the user interface comprises displaying a first graphical representation which indicates the first aerosol provision device on a first portion of the user interface and a second graphical representation which indicates the second aerosol provision device on a second portion of the user interface.
A portable electronic device comprising:
Various embodiments of the claimed scope may suitably comprise, consist of, or consist essentially of, appropriate combinations of the disclosed elements, components, features, parts, steps, means, etc., other than those specifically described herein. In addition, this disclosure may include other concepts not presently claimed, but which may be claimed in future either in combination with or separately to the presently claimed features.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20230300586 A1 | Sep 2023 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 15733325 | US | |
Child | 18322834 | US |