The present invention relates generally to portable electronic displays, as are commonly used to view data and images, and in particular to electronic capture and display devices which display written material and capture the movements of a stylus, pen or finger over the surface of a touch screen/display component.
Current electronic book viewers are generally small format devices, about the size of a paperback book. For the most part, the devices either support viewing written material (“books”) only in a proprietary format or are actual handheld computers with a complicated user interface. A few larger format devices exists but are expensive and have limited battery life (typically about three hours). Moreover, current devices are not particularly rugged and thus prone to damage from being dropped or subjected to moisture or liquids.
Thus, there is a need for a simple to use, affordable, rugged, large format viewing device which displays information stored in standard electronic media formats and which may allow users to annotate the material they are viewing. There is also a need for a device which will allow users to “print” material to the display system from a computer or a network and then remove the device and access the material independent of any computer or network. There is also a need for a device which is capable of accessing material stored on flash ROM cards.
The present invention allows a user to acquire data and images on a personal computer or purchase data and images on removable media, such as flash ROM, download the material to a portable display system and “consume” the material wherever (s)he chooses.
The present invention provides a portable, stand alone, display and capture system. The user interfaces with the device via “soft” buttons shown on the display and captured by the touch screen. Marks captured by the touch screen may also be stored as annotations associated with the content being displayed during capture.
The user interface is simple and straightforward. Commands are presented in the form of icons and text on the display and the user executes these commands by touching the area of the display where the icon is shown. There is little need to enter textual data.
Data and applications may be loaded onto the device via a Universal Serial Bus (USB) port, an infrared (IR) port or other wireless interface or through a FLASH ROM port (such as Smart Media, Compact FLASH or Secure Digital/Multi-Media).
A collection of applications are provided which run on a personal computer to facilitate configuring the device and downloading content and applications to the device via the USB or IR port. A wireless or other data communication medium may also be employed.
The internal battery may be charged by inductive charging or may be powered by being plugged directly into a wall outlet.
The USB connector and the FLASH ROM sockets are secured behind a “door”, which forms a water tight seal when closed.
The device is housed in a shock absorbent enclosure, assembled so as to be water proof.
The present invention is a portable, stand alone, display and capture system designed to be low power, light weight, inexpensive, simple to use, water proof, rugged and large format.
Consequently, the tablet 100 is ruggedized to prevent damage due to physical shock or liquids (such as water, coffee and other common household fluids). The top, sides and back of the enclosure 1 are preferably constructed of pliable, shock absorbing material. A thin plastic sheeting over the display/touch screen surface may be used as protection from shock and scratches. The momentary contact switch 4 is preferably constructed with thick pliable plastic, designed to withstand tens of thousands of pushes. A battery access panel (see
A high frequency pick up coil 17 for the inductive charging system is shown inside the tablet 100. It is preferably situated near a corner of the device so that an auxiliary charging coil can be easily clamped over the side of the device and lay over the pick up coil 17.
A display 2 and touch screen 5 are coupled to the system IC 800 through the display controller 824 and touch screen controller 826, respectively. The backlight (not shown) for the display 2 and the ambient light detector(s) 18 are coupled to the system IC 800 through the backlight controller 842. The rechargeable battery 830, inductive pickup coil 17 and a battery 832 for the internal clock 806 are coupled to the system IC 800 through the power management controller 818. If a DC adapter is used instead to operate and/or charge the tablet 100 through a conventional AC wall outlet, it may be coupled through the power management controller 818; such an adapter may plug into the tablet 100 through an appropriate connector situated behind the water tight sliding door 3. The IR emitter/detector 23 is coupled to the system IC 800 through the IR controller 816. Other wireless communications devices, if used, would be coupled to the system IC 800 through appropriate controllers. The USB connector 22 is coupled to the system IC 800 through the USB controller 814. The on/off/reset switch 4 and other like switches and sensors, such as a door-open detector 834, are coupled to the system IC 800 through the GPIO controller 822. Diagnostics and debugging may be performed via a debug connector 836 coupled to the system IC 800 through the debug controller 828, Internal DRAM 838 is coupled to the system IC 800 through the DRAM controller 812. Internal flash ROM 840 as well as the connectors 19, 20 and 21 for external flash media are coupled to the system IC 800 through the flash memory controller 820.
The electronic tablet 100 allows a user to acquire data and images (collectively referred to as “content”) and applications on a personal computer or network or purchase data and images on removable flash media. Applications may be provided to run on a personal computing system to facilitate configuring the tablet 100 and downloading content and applications to the tablet 100. When the tablet 100 is connected to the computer, software provided with the tablet 100 and executed on the embedded processor 802 configures the computer to see the device as both a networked storage device and as a networked printer. When the tablet 100 is used as a storage device, the user of the computer can cause data to be stored in the internal memory 838 or 840 of the tablet 100. When used as a printer, a print driver installed on the computer causes the information being printed to be formatted for display on the tablet 100 and then copies the formatted data file to the tablet 100. Applications, data and images (electronic books, magazines, newspapers, text files, sheet music and “printed” files; that is, anything that can be printed to a printer) may be downloaded to the tablet 100 via the USB connector 22, or via one of the flash ROM connectors 19, 20 and 21. Appropriate hardware and software may also be employed to enable downloading applications and content via wireless infrared or radio frequency (RF) transmission or other data communication medium. The user may then “consume” the information distant from computers and computer networks. Once loaded into the internal memory 838 or 840 of the tablet 100, written material (such as e-books) may be read, and still and video images may be viewed, wherever the user chooses, independent of the computer or network.
As illustrated in
The device is preferably powered by the internal rechargeable battery 830. Although charging may be effected by plugging the unit into a wall outlet, charging may also be effected with the inductive charger 17, transmitting power through the case 1. A microprocessor based control system regulates the battery charging process. A small, clamp-on charging device may be provided to radiate the energy into the case 1 at a frequency of approximately 100 KHz although other inductive charging means may also be used.
The objects of the invention have been fully realized through the embodiments disclosed herein. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the various aspects of the invention may be achieved through different embodiments without departing from the essential function of the invention. The particular embodiments are illustrative and not meant to limit the scope of the invention as set forth in the following claims.