1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a digital loyalty camera and a method for recovering the pictures stored on a digital loyalty camera.
2. Description of the Related Art
Retailer loyalty programs are intended to provide incentives to consumers to return to and continue doing business with such retailers. Loyalty programs for film cameras are known. For example, the Assignee of the present invention introduced a film based loyalty system that is the subject of U.S. Pat. No. 6,658,206 to Urs Stampfli, entitled “35 mm promotional camera and a system for promoting consumer loyalty”. Additionally, film cameras are known that require a tool or key to access and/or rewind the film. U.S. Pat. No. 6,862,406 to Franco Yik, assigned to the present assignee, discloses a loyalty camera wherein a particular tool is required to rewind the exposed film and assist in manipulating the film door latch. See also, U.S. Pat. No. 6,490,411 to Mazzacani et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,325,555 to Zawodny et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,752,085 to Cloutier et al., U.S. Pat. No. 5,708,856 to Cloutier. CVS Pharmacy, Inc. has recently introduced a digital camera program including a digital one-time-use camera. In the CVS Pharmacy, Inc., system, a digital camera, with or without an LCD display is sold to a consumer. On one side of the CVS digital camera, a label covers a non-standard female connector. A warning label on the camera states:
The CVS digital camera has the ability to store a preset number of photographs, in the camera, at a preset level of resolution and quality.
In the CVS digital camera system, the consumer is encouraged to take pictures, which are stored digitally within the camera. The consumer has the ability to delete images stored within the CVS camera, prior to processing. When the consumer wants to print the images stored in the camera, the consumer returns the entire digital camera to a CVS Pharmacy. A store attendant receives the digital camera from the consumer, peels back the label to expose the female connector located therebelow and inserts the entire camera body into specialized equipment located at the pharmacy. The specialized equipment includes a guide channel, which accepts the body of the digital camera, in order to mate the female connector on the camera to a corresponding male connector in the specialized equipment. Each store location participating in the CVS digital camera program must have installed therein the specialized photo-processing equipment including the guide channel and male connector to mate with the digital loyalty camera. Once the camera is mated with the specialized equipment, photographs are printed by the equipment for the consumer, for an additional fee. Further, a photo-CD including digital copies of the photographs is produced and additionally provided to the consumer. The actual digital camera used by the consumer to take the photographs is retained by the attendant.
One disadvantage to a loyalty program having specialized equipment that mates only with one particular digital camera is that the retail location must have additional equipment on site to process photographs taken with standard digital cameras. Additionally, the specialized equipment must be produced and purchased at significant cost and provided to every participating retail location, thus multiplying the cost by the number of retail locations, in addition to the cost of the necessary standard digital picture printing equipment purchased for the retail location. Another disadvantage to the use of specialized equipment is that it takes up space in the retail location, which space could otherwise be used for actual merchandise.
What is needed is a digital camera capable for use with standard digital printing apparatus at a retail location, thereby not requiring any additional proprietary photo-processing equipment. Any such digital camera should include means for deterring the consumer from downloading the digital image files stored therein, but should be easily accessed and downloaded by an attendant located at the retail outlet. What is additionally needed is a digital camera and system that encourages a consumer to revisit a particular retailer.
It is accordingly an object of the invention to provide a digital camera loyalty system and method, which overcomes the above-mentioned disadvantages of the heretofore-known devices and methods of this general type.
A digital loyalty camera is provided which includes internal memory for storing digital image files. Additionally, the digital loyalty camera includes a standard interface for transferring the stored image files from the camera's internal memory to the photo processing equipment. In the present invention, the standard interface is rendered inaccessible to the consumer.
In one particular embodiment of the present invention, a standard memory card slot is provided to allow access to the standard interface for transferring the stored image files. A non-recordable (dummy) memory card that is not removable by the consumer is inserted into the card slot. A tool is additionally provided which can be used to remove the dummy card to provide access to the standard interface. The tool may be provided only to the personnel of a retail outlet affiliated with the digital camera loyalty program, who, using the tool, can remove the dummy card, insert a standard, recordable memory card into the card slot and download the image files onto the recordable memory card. The images can then be processed from the second card and prints made, using standard processing equipment.
A method for inexpensively accessing a digital loyalty camera is additionally provided.
Other features which are considered as characteristic for the invention are set forth in the appended claims.
Although the invention is illustrated and described herein as embodied in a digital camera loyalty system and method, it is nevertheless not intended to be limited to the details shown, since various modifications and structural changes may be made therein without departing from the spirit of the invention and within the scope and range of equivalents of the claims.
The construction of the invention, however, together with additional objects and advantages thereof will be best understood from the following description of the specific embodiment when read in connection with the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the figures of the drawing in detail and first, particularly, to
Referring now to
In the present embodiment of the digital loyalty camera, access to an internal memory card slot 23 is provided through the battery compartment access door 30. Note that this is not meant to be limiting, as access to the memory card slot 23 can be located elsewhere through the housing of the camera 10.
Battery compartment access door 30, when opened by any means (i.e., spring contact, slide and/or tool) exposes a cavity within the camera 10 for receiving the batteries 35. Additionally, a memory card slot 23 is exposed by opening the battery compartment access door 30. In accordance with the present embodiment, the memory card slot 23 is a memory card slot sized to receive a standard memory card, for example, an Secure Digital (SD) memory as made by SanDisk. Note that other types of memory cards are available and can be used with a digital loyalty camera 10, in accordance with the concepts of the present invention.
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Additionally, although the dummy card 50 engages the memory card interface 140, there is no electrical contact with the dummy card 50. As such, while the dummy card 50 is entrapped in the memory card slot 23, images present on the image sensor 110 are, when indicated by a signal from the image capture button 12, processed by the image processor 120 and stored in the internal camera memory 130 of the camera 10. Internal camera memory 130 can be chosen to be of any desired size, but in one embodiment, has been chosen to store at least 24 images. In such an embodiment, 16 MB of internal flash memory can be included with the camera 10.
While in the possession of a consumer, images are captured on the digital loyalty camera 10 and automatically stored in the cameras internal camera memory. Note that, in the present invention, the terms images and/or image files are intended to include captured still images, as well as captured digital video image files. Optionally, if an image review display 26 is included on the camera, the consumer may review the captured images and, using the buttons 24, delete any undesired images, replacing them with other captured images.
Once the internal memory 130 of the camera 10 is full, the consumer is prompted to return the camera 10 to the retail outlet affiliated with the digital camera 10 loyalty program. The consumer cannot access the memory card slot 23 and the memory card interface 140 of the camera 10 because the dummy card 50 is configured such that it is not removable from the memory card slot 23 without the use of the tool 40. Additionally, the camera 10 has no direct computer interface that would permit the consumer to download the image files stored in the internal camera memory 130. Accordingly, to obtain prints or digital copies of the images stored on the camera 10, the consumer must return the camera 10 to a retail outlet affiliated with the digital loyalty camera 10 program.
Personnel of the retail outlet affiliated with the digital loyalty camera 10 program will be provided with the tool 40. Once the digital loyalty camera 10 is returned to the retail outlet, personnel at the retail outlet will use the tool 40 to remove the dummy card 50 from the memory card slot 23. As shown in
As shown in
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While the preferred embodiment of the present invention discloses the use of a dummy memory card 50, it should be appreciated that other means for preventing the user from gaining access to the memory card slot 23 or memory card interface 140 may, alternatively, be employed.
In accordance with the preferred embodiment of the present invention, once the dummy card 50 has been removed from the slot 23, a standard memory card 160, in the possession of the personnel of the retail outlet, can be easily inserted into and removed from the memory card slot 23. In one embodiment of the present invention, the firmware of the camera 10 can be programmed such that merely inserting the memory card into the memory card slot 23 and turning the camera 10 on will cause the camera firmware to automatically transfer the image files stored in the internal camera memory 130 to the memory card 160. The memory card 160, with all image files stored thereon, can then be removed from the memory card slot 23 by the retail outlet personnel, and the images can be printed and/or written to another form of media, such as a CD-ROM, using standard photoprocessing equipment located in the retail outlet. As such, no special interface or equipment is needed at the retail outlet.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the firmware of the camera 10 may require the input of a password or other proprietary control, using the user interface of the camera 10 in order to transfer the image files stored in the internal camera memory 130 to the standard memory card 160. Referring now to
If the camera 10 is turned on in the “safe mode”, while a real memory card 160 is engaged with the memory card interface 140, the camera 10 enters a file transfer mode. Step 68. In the file transfer mode, the camera can optionally, prompt the user to enter a password, using the camera user interface 24 and 28. Alternatively, the firmware may just await the entry of a password, without prompting the user. Step 70. To ensure security, in one particular embodiment of the invention, the firmware awaits the entry of a 6 digit password. The firmware checks the received password against a password set in the firmware. Step 72. If the proper password is not entered, the camera 10 continues to await entry of the proper password. Alternatively, if after a period of time or a predetermined number of password tries, the correct password is still not entered, the camera 10 can power off, or enter normal operation mode.
If the password entered in step 70 is the correct password, determined in step 72, the firmware checks to ensure that the personnel of the retail outlet has inserted a memory card 160 of a proper size to receive the image files from the internal camera memory 160 (i.e. 16 MB, in one particular example). Step 74. If the memory card 160 is too small, the firmware prompts the retail personnel to insert a card with enough memory. Step 76. The camera may then automatically power off, to permit the retailer to swap the memory cards 160. Step 78. Otherwise, the firmware may permit the memory card 160 to be hot swapped.
If the memory card 160 is sufficient to receive the image files stored on the camera 10's internal camera memory 130, the firmware checks to see if the memory card 160 has been write-protected. Step 80. If so, the firmware of the camera 10 informs the retailer that the inserted memory card 160 is write-protected, via the display 26. Step 80. The camera may then automatically power off, to permit the retailer to swap the memory cards. Step 78.
If the memory card 160 is not write-protected, the camera 10 firmware prompts the retailer to input whether the card should be formatted. Step 84. If the retailer indicates that the memory card 160 should not be formatted, the camera may then automatically power off, to permit the retailer to swap the memory cards. Step 78. If the retailer concurs with the request to format the memory card 160, the firmware of camera 10 proceeds to format the memory card 160. If an error is encountered while formatting the memory card 160, an error message may be displayed to the retailer. Step 88. The camera 10 may then automatically power off, to permit the retailer to swap the memory cards 160. Step 78.
If the memory card 160 formats without an error, the image files stored in the internal camera memory 130 are transferred to the formatted memory card 160 and a “file transfer completed” message is displayed to alert the retailer that it is now safe to remove the memory card 160 from the memory card slot 23. Step 90. After which, the camera 10 firmware may, optionally turn the camera off. Step 78. Upon writing the digital image files to the memory card 160, the firmware of the camera 10 may delete the images from the internal camera memory 130.
As noted above, once the image files have been transferred from the internal camera memory 130 to the memory card 160, the retailer may use standard processing equipment to read the image files from the memory card 160 and print the pictures. The standard equipment may additionally be used to burn a photo-CD containing the digital image files (i.e., still or video) for the consumer.
In a first digital camera loyalty method 200 of the present invention illustrated in
In a second digital camera loyalty method 200′ illustrated in
The above embodiments are described in connection with a dummy card entrapped in a standard memory card slot. Note however that, in another embodiment of the present invention, it would be possible to engage a dummy plug with a different type of standard interface, for example, a standard USB interface on the camera, instead of a memory card slot. It can be seen how, if the plug were fabricated to fit the standard USB port seamlessly, it would require a tool, such as tool 40 to remove. In such an embodiment, a tool could be used to remove the plug, and the image files could be downloaded to the mini-labs using existing photo-processing equipment, via the standard USB interface. It should also be appreciated that the dummy card or dummy plug concept may be used with digital cameras having any other means for retrieving images from the camera.
While the invention has been described with reference to certain embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications can be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to the particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.