This application claims the benefit of priority from Israel Patent Application No. 242196, filed Oct. 21, 2015, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to the field of drinking. More particularly, the invention relates to a method and apparatus for inspecting sufficient drinking of each person of a group.
WO2015/017702 discloses a tool for inspecting that a single user drinks enough.
However, inspection that each person in a group, such as in kindergarten, in the hospital, in sport facilities, etc., drinks enough is applied by human inspection.
There is a long felt need to accompany group inspection by technological means.
The invention provides a solution to the above-mentioned and other problems of the prior art.
In one aspect, the invention is directed to a drinking consumption inspection apparatus, including:
Embodiments, features, and aspects of the invention are described herein in conjunction with the following drawings:
The drawings are not necessarily drawn to scale.
The invention will be understood from the following detailed description of embodiments of the invention, which are meant to be descriptive and not limiting. For the sake of brevity, some well-known features, methods, systems, procedures, components, circuits, and so on, are not described in detail.
The reference numbers have been used to point out elements in the embodiments described and illustrated herein, in order to facilitate the understanding of the invention. They are meant to be merely illustrative, and not limiting. Also, the foregoing embodiments of the invention have been described and illustrated in conjunction with systems and methods thereof, which are meant to be merely illustrative, and not limiting.
A drinking consumption inspection apparatus 10 includes a plurality of compartments, namely 12A, 12B, etc., each for housing a drinking cup, associated thereto. The compartments form together a cart having wheels 20 and 22.
Thus, drinking consumption inspection apparatus 10 allow drinking cup 14A to be housed by compartment 12A only, drinking cup 14B to be housed by compartment 12B, etc.
The association may be mechanical, such as that the cups and the compartments have complementary shapes. For example, the bottom of cup 14A and the bottom of compartment 12A are round, whereas the bottom of cup 14B and the bottom of compartment 12B are triangle.
According to another embodiment, the association may be electronic, such as that there is a communication of codes therebetween. Thus drinking consumption inspection apparatus 10 does not allow insertion of cup 12A into compartment 14B.
Each of cups 14A and 14B may include a standard cup unit 64, being attached to a base 70, which may provide the different shape and electronic characteristic, such as by an electronic circuit 72.
According to another embodiment, the association may be visual, for example each compartment has a photograph 54 of the child owning the cup. According to this embodiment even though drinking consumption inspection apparatus 10 does allow insertion of cup 12A into compartment 14B, the manager of drinking consumption inspection apparatus 10 is responsible for applying the association.
Each of compartments 12A and 12B includes a weight 44, for weighing the cup.
A controller 40 records each insertion, each drawing out of a cup, and the weight of the cup for each insertion, for tracking the filling into the cup and the drinking therefrom. Due to the association between the compartments and the cups, controller 40 can estimate whether the drinking of each bottle owner is reasonable.
Since rise in the weight indicates filling of the cup, controller 40 accumulates decrease of the weight over time, since only the decease indicates drinking.
For example, suppose weight 44 weighs, as depicted by graph 80 the sequential weights of: 150 CC at hour 0; and an hour later, being hour 1, weighs 50 CC; and at hour 2 weighs 150 CC; and at hour 3 weighs 100 CC. Controller 40 accumulates the decreases of the weight only, and thus calculates, as depicted by graph 82, 150−50=100 CC at hour 1 and 2, and (150−50)+(150−100)=150 CC at hour 3.
Suppose the drinking rate is to be 60 CC per hour, then controller 40 should alert at point 84 (at hour 100/60=1.66) of graph 82 that the child of cup 14A is not sufficiently drinking.
The display of the amounts may be in any units of measurement, such as CC (cubic centimeters), liters, milliliters,
Referring again to
The compartment may alert upon sensing that it is empty.
Alerts may be transmitted to a phone 56 of the manager.
Thus, in one aspect, the invention is directed to a drinking consumption inspection apparatus (10), including:
The association of each of the cups (14A, 14B) to a different and only to one of the compartments (12A, 12B) may include insertability of each of the cups (14A, 14B) into a different and only to one of the compartments (12A, 12B).
The insertability of each of the cups (14A, 14B) into a different and only to one of the compartments (12A, 12B), may include a different fitting shape for each cup and compartment pair, for physically allowing the insertability of each of the cups (14A, 14B) into a different and only to one of the compartments (12A, 12B).
The insertability of each of the cups (14A, 14B) into a different and only to one of the compartments (12A, 12B), may include a different fitting electronic fitting, for alerting upon insertion of each of the cups (14A, 14B) into one of the compartments (12A, 12B), not being associated thereto.
The association of each of the cups (14A, 14B) to a different and only to one of the compartments (12A, 12B) may include visual association.
The plurality of compartments (12A, 12B) may constitute a cart.
The drinking consumption inspection apparatus (10) may further include:
The drinking consumption inspection apparatus (10) may further include:
The drinking consumption inspection apparatus (10) may further include:
In another aspect, the invention is directed to a drinking consumption inspection method, including the steps of:
The method may further include the step of:
In the figures and/or description herein, the following reference numerals (Reference Signs List) have been mentioned:
The foregoing description and illustrations of the embodiments of the invention has been presented for the purposes of illustration. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the above description in any form.
Any term that has been defined above and used in the claims, should to be interpreted according to this definition.
The reference numbers in the claims are not a part of the claims, but rather used for facilitating the reading thereof. These reference numbers should not be interpreted as limiting the claims in any form.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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242196 | Oct 2015 | IL | national |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20080093357 | Norman | Apr 2008 | A1 |
20130029298 | Batsikouras | Jan 2013 | A1 |
20160015602 | Panzini | Jan 2016 | A1 |
20160166096 | DiMaria-Ghalili | Jun 2016 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2015017702 | May 2015 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170112314 A1 | Apr 2017 | US |