1. Technical Field
The invention relates to the storage and dissemination of information in an electronic format. More particularly, the invention relates to the dissemination of such information based on scarcity and authenticity.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Paper trading cards have been popular for over 100 years. Over the course of several generations, children and adults have enthusiastically collected and traded sports cards. Over the last 15 to 20 years the content of trading cards has expanded to include cartoon characters (e.g. The Lion King), fantasy figures (e.g. Star Trek, Dungeons and Dragons), role playing games, wildlife, and even famous criminals.
Very few children's activities have had the generation-after-generation acceptance and popularity of trading cards. Throughout their history, the patterns of use and technology of trading cards have remained constant. Cards have been printed in color on cardboard, serially numbered and sold in retail stores, and more recently in specialty trading card stores. Trading card collecting magazines are published worldwide and trading card conventions are held in all major US cities. Paper cards are even traded over the Internet.
The fundamental appeal of trading and collecting scarce but inexpensive trading cards is an international phenomenon. Trading cards are very popular in Japan and in Europe, and although they contain content of local interest, the ways they are sold, collected, and traded are very similar to the United States. Children buy cards and attempt to collect a complete series of a particular type of card. They trade with their friends to fill gaps in a card series and augment their collections. Within the last 5-10 years, trading card games have emerged (such as Magic—The Gathering) that combine the game play of traditional card games with the activity of trading card collecting. In existing trading card games, the completeness of your card collection gives you advantages in the game against other players.
In parallel with this strong continuing consumer interest in trading cards, several trends have recently become apparent in consumer multimedia technology:
Although these trends may seem loosely related, they converge in a potential product opportunity to create systems for disassociated consumer multimedia, i.e. multimedia products that allow consumers to browse, create, collect, and exchange disassociated pieces of multimedia data. Almost all multimedia software is published today as large, monolithic collections of data that can only be browsed by the consumer—much like the analog publishing model of books and movies.
The trends mentioned above create the potential for electronically literate consumers to take advantage of data compression and affordable high-density storage to create, collect, and exchange disassociated pieces of multimedia information using their multimedia personal computers and video game systems. Collecting and exchanging can occur on physical media such as high density floppy discs or on on-line systems. Early manifestations of this opportunity are seen today in electronic mail and children's electronic paint programs which allow graphics to be created on screen by consumers.
Various alternative format greeting cards and related systems are known in the art. See, for example U.S. Pat. No. 5,120,589, Collectible Promotional Card, which is a method of printing a photographic image on the laminate; U.S. Pat. No. 5,282,651, Trading Cards and Method of Concealing and Revealing Information, which discloses trading cards that are interactive with the user by concealing under a secondary show under a coating, i.e. it is a form of a scratch card; and U.S. Pat. No. 5,036,472, Computer Controlled Machine For Vending Personalized Products Or The Like, provides an electronic vending machine that allows one to compose a greeting card, and then print it on the spot, i.e. it is a machine for vending greeting cards or personalized customized products at the point of sale. Thus, the '472 patent provides a series of electronic forms from which one can select a desired greeting card format and enter personalization information into the form.
Other art that provides a background for the invention includes: U.S. Pat. No. 4,890,229, Electronic Baseball Card, discloses a calculator that stores sports information; U.S. Pat. No. 5,056,029, Method and Apparatus for Manufacturing and Vending Social Expression Cards, discloses a system for point-of-sale card manufacturing and vending; U.S. Pat. No. 5,356,151, Scale Model Game, discloses a game board. U.S. Pat. No. 5,338,043, Cryptographic Guessing Game, discloses a puzzle game which one of several players can play, and that includes cyphertext and indicia, where the cyphertext is an encrypted message that may include hidden information; U.S. Pat. No. 5,091,849, Computer Image Production and System Utilizing First and Second Networks for Separately Transferring Control Information and Digital Image Data, discloses a computer imaging system used to produce animation.
Additionally of interest are related U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,951,203, Computer Card, and 4,965,727 Computer Card. The '203 patent discloses a greeting card created, and readable, by a digital computer, and that requires a magnetic medium means, such as a magnetic card or magnetic disk, for storing a plurality of messages and a plurality of audio selections. The message can be a visual message that is displayed in connection with the reproduction of audio information. The message must include a control file that is used to configure the source computer. Thus, the '203 patent discloses a multimedia format in which audio and video are linked with a run time module and stored on a magnetic medium for use in a computer system.
The '727 patent discloses a system for processing and supervising a plurality of composite intercourse and social communication selections of a product. The “supervising” element of the '727 disclosure is directed to perception by the recipient of the continuous generation of a design, message, and audio output under the supervision of the computer operating system to provide a plurality of multi-media outputs in synchronization, rather than one at a time. The greeting card generated is used to communicate a personal message to another being in a social atmosphere that consists of a preprinted picture and a preprinted message, with an audio portion such as a musical selection added.
The entire interpersonal social communication is stored on a fixed medium in one location. A computer greeting card thus generated can be used at that location as is and modified to improvise a user-created message of a special emotional meaning between the user and the recipient of the greeting card. If the recipient is at a remote location, the user may mail the fixed medium to the recipient. The recipient then inserts the interpersonal social communication into a computer, and the computer produces a synchronized audio/visual presentation.
The invention provides a system for the application of a trading card metaphor to a disassociated computer program and the unique design of several hardware and software systems which support and enhance collecting, trading, game playing, and creating of digital electronic trading cards. Thus, the invention takes the traditional trading card metaphor and uniquely updates and enhances it for application in consumer digital media.
The invention includes an electronic hardware and software architecture for electronic trading cards (ETCs). The invention has a number of components that function together as a system that support making electronic trading cards, trading electronic trading cards, activities (such as game playing) with electronic trading cards, and collecting electronic trading cards.
The Electronic Trading Card format is embodied in all components of the electronic trading card system. These components are designed to generate and accept a shared proprietary electronic trading card format, so that, for example, a card created in a card-making application can be recognized by an electronic trading card album. The card format is also important because it supports the concepts of scarcity and authenticity (essential to card collecting and trading) within a disassociated computer code segment.
ETCs have a proprietary data format made up of a number of components, including:
a) ETC Header Identification, i.e. an ASCII string which uniquely identifies the ETC and a lock and key mechanism to limit access and impose password protection if desired;
b) ETC Graphic Identification, such as audio visual logo, copyright notice, company information;
c) Multimedia Data, such as animation, video, pictures, sounds, text;
d) Pointers to external data and programs embedded in scripts which trigger the display of external media or run external applications;
e) Utility Programs, such as copy protection, printing, telecommunications protocols, self destruction (erasing) routines;
f) Applications, including incomplete linkable code segments, games, puzzles, and utilities; and
g) User Writable Area for personalization, ASCII messages, voice recording, score keeping.
The invention provides a system for the application of a trading card metaphor to a disassociated computer program and the unique design of several hardware and software systems which support and enhance collecting, trading, game playing, and creating of digital electronic trading cards. Thus, the invention takes the traditional trading card metaphor and uniquely updates and enhances it for application in consumer digital media.
The invention provides an electronic hardware and software architecture for electronic trading cards (ETCs). The invention has a number of components that function together as a system that support:
Runtime Engine. Another important component of the ETC architecture is a separate runtime engine that must be present in the local computing device for a user to view and interact with an ETC. The runtime engine is a compact assembly code program that is made up of functions used by most ETCs: media handlers and display routines, a timing mechanism, display management, and input handlers.
The Electronic Trading Card Format.
The card format is also important because it supports the concepts of scarcity and authenticity (essential to card collecting and trading) within a disassociated computer code segment.
The ETC Data Format. ETCs have a proprietary data format 26 made up of a number of components:
Media Independence. In all cases, the ETC software is optimized to be as media-independent as possible, meaning it depends as little as possible on any media-specific data formats. ETCs are intended to be transportable across a wide range of digital media, including CD-ROM, networked servers, fixed discs, floppy discs, data cards, writable optical storage, and RAM.
Platform Independence. In all cases, the ETC software is optimized to be as platform-independent as possible, meaning it depends as little as possible on any machine specific routines or functions. ETCs are intended to be transportable across a wide range of digital computing platforms including personal computers, video game machines, set-top boxes, personal digital communicators, and handheld computing devices. For purposes of the discussion herein, a set top box is defined as a networked or non-networked computing device which uses a consumer television set as a display monitor.
ETC Scarcity. Scarcity is an essential component of the traditional trading card metaphor and it is preserved and significantly enhanced in the ETC invention. ETCs offer a number of new ways to generate card scarcity:
Electronic Trading Cards On-Line. On-line capability is a very important aspect of the ETC invention. When combined with unique software programs that are part of this invention, on-line systems support browsing, trading, buying and selling, auctioning, group and individual collecting, and group and individual creation of ETCs.
ETC collecting on-line significantly extends the traditional metaphor for paper trading card collecting. With access to a computing device and network connection, users are able to browse remote databases in search of particular ETCs and execute purchases and trades of ETCs with individuals and companies worldwide.
Important aspects of the ETC on-line experience are:
Browsing an ETC trading center. Listings of ETCs which are either resident on the server or have been listed there as available by other users or card manufacturers can be browsed and mail can be exchanged between potential buyers and sellers of cards. On-line card trading centers might be of any scale, from two users trading back and forth, to thousands of trades in progress simultaneously, creating an exciting, highly charged atmosphere.
Group and Individual Collecting of ETCs on-line. ETCs are offered for free, for promotional purposes, for sale or for trade on computer servers worldwide. Collectors with access to those servers through commercial services, such as CompuServe or America On-line, and non-commercial services, as the Internet, can search to find ETC files they are interested in collecting and then trade for or purchase those ETC files (see below). Ad hoc teams can be formed to collect ETCs competitively against other teams.
On-line collecting activity can take several forms:
The relationship between on-line ETCs and ETCs available on physical media. Relationships between on-line ETCs and ETC products available on physical media are assumed in the ETC invention. These relationships are manifested in several ways:
A complete series of ETCs might be offered as individual cards across several media, with some of the cards only available in a commercial product series starter kit on CD-ROM, some of the cards offered as promotional give-aways or bundled with related product purchases, such as toys or movie tickets, and some of the cards available only on-line. To complete the series the user must find the series ETCs in a number of disparate locations and bring them together within an ETC collector's album program created for the series.
ETC scarcity on-line. ETC scarcity on-line can be generated by offering ETCs for a limited time, or at a limited number of places, or both. For example an announcement such as this might be posted on-line: “A rare “Blue Wizard Diamond” ETC will be offered at (phone number) for 5 minutes at midnight July 22nd, Tokyo time. Only the first 1000 collectors to log on will be able to download the card.” These example numbers, dates, and times are arbitrary. Additional scarcity could be generated by adding further conditions, such as making a password necessary, even if the user has logged on at the specified time and place.
Buying and Selling of ETCs on-line. Buying and selling is very similar to Trading (below) except that instead of exchanging ETCs for other ETCs, currency is exchanged for ETCS:
Trading of ETCs on-line. Trading can be accomplished through communication between users of an on-line system in a number of ways:
Physical ETC Trading. In addition to the on line trading mentioned above, ETCs may traded in more traditional, low-tech ways. Single or multiple ETCs may be copied onto writable media and the media exchanged physically. To enhance this activity, adhesive labels for portable writable media, such as floppy discs, are included with ETC products. Completed ETC/paper card hybrids (described below) may also be traded physically.
ETC/Paper Trading Card Hybrids. The ETC invention has a functional relationship to paper trading cards. In fact, a special type of incomplete paper trading card is a component of the ETC invention.
Paper incomplete-cards are sold bundled with ETC products and also sold separately. The incomplete-cards are designed in formats that allow them to be used in common computer printers. These incomplete-cards are unique in that they are paper trading cards but some aspect of their printed information is missing. The missing information is provided through the use of a computer-based ETC product. When the information is found, it can be printed onto designated areas of the card in a printer attached to the computing device in which the ETC program is resident. In this way, disassociated information from the ETC computer program completes the incomplete paper card, creating a hybrid ETC/traditional paper trading card.
This ability to create hybrid ETC/paper trading cards has several applications within the ETC invention:
Trends cited above note the growing popularity of multimedia personal computers and video game systems among consumers. When combined with a unique software program that is a part of this invention, these systems can become platforms for the end-user creation of electronic trading cards. Electronic card creation, as taught by the invention, significantly extends the metaphor of traditional paper trading cards, where card creation is not feasible for the individual end-user.
One important feature of the invention is the provision of an integrated electronic trading card architecture that may produce electronic trading cards that incorporate any desired content in a consistent format, such that the act of trading is seamless and trivial exercise without regard to content. Therefore, the invention provides the various reusable modules discussed above, as shown on
End User Creation of ETCs.
The user then organizes and/or edits the ETC contents (320) and previews the ETC (330). If the user is satisfied with the ETC (340), he may optionally add user data (350), password protection (360), and links to another ETC (370). The user then copies the finished ETC to a writable medium or posts the ETC on-line (380).
If the user is not satisfied with the ETC (342), he continues to edit (320) and preview (330) the ETC until he is satisfied (340).
The invention includes an electronic trading card making engine, which is a software program hereafter called the ETC-making engine. This engine is a platform-independent software program authored in C++ that allows users to select from digital libraries of content materials, e.g. photographs, text, sound effects, music, animation, illustration and motion pictures, to create customized and or personalized electronic trading cards. Users may invoke built-in copy protection functions to create scarcity and use password protection in conjunction with public/private key encryption to allow recipients of the card to confirm the authenticity and source of the ETC.
By interacting with a graphical user interface, commercial creators of ETCs as well as end-users can organize, sequence, and customize content materials from the digital content libraries. The ETC-making engine then compiles the associated files into an ETC which conforms to the proprietary ETC file format. The resulting ETC is then saved and/or copied to writable storage media, and/or transmitted through computer or telecommunications networks to facilitate ETC collecting, trading, or gaming activities, which are described below.
The ETC-making engine and content database. An important concept of this design is the independent and modular nature of the ETC-making engine and associated content database. Once content materials are digitized into pre-specified digital formats, they can be loaded into the ETC-making engine database without modification to the ETC-making engine itself. This supports fast and efficient creation of ETC-making products using a wide variety of content materials such as athletes, cartoon characters, fictional characters, reference and educational materials, historical figures, movie actors, collectible items, games, personal photographs, maps, products for sale, museum pieces, and nature.
ETC-based Activities. The ETC architecture supports number of card-based activities, primary among them being games:
ETC games. ETC games are distinct from existing computer or video games in that the game architecture includes disassociated components in the form of ETCs. Examples of this functionality:
ETC Adventure Games. ETC adventure games are similar in structure to existing video and computer games except for a unique distinction: they require ETCs to move the action of the game forward and in some cases also generate ETCs in the course of a game.
Disassociated ETCs can serve a number of functions in an adventure game:
As an example, a user might purchase an ETC adventure game on CD-ROM. This game is structured with increasing levels of difficulty. As clues are collected and each level of the game is solved, a previously hidden ETC is revealed which gives a clue to the next level of play. When all levels of the game are solved, the user has a complete set of ETCs from that game that prove each level was solved and are time stamped and personalized with the user's name or other personal data.
ETC Interactive Movie Games.
An ETC interactive movie released in digital format requires disassociated ETC plot and character cards to advance or effect the plot of the movie. ETC interactive movies may be created by restructuring existing popular movies or may be new movies especially produced with ETC enhancement in mind. Because the movie is released as digital data, it is possible to create ETC video and sound that is compatible with the movie data format and can be inserted into it.
Example. A movie is released in digital format. As released, the movie plays in a linear fashion from beginning to end. However, if the user adds specific ETC plot or character cards to the movie at specified points in the story, the story is enhanced by:
Example. An electronic “Diamond Card” could effect the plot by placing a gigantic diamond in a certain scene. The diamond then distracts a greedy character who steals it. If the diamond is not placed in the scene there is no distraction and no theft. An electronic “Key Card” could allow an otherwise trapped prisoner to escape. In a two-player scenario, each player could use their “Warrior” cards to add soldiers to each of two opposing armies that are about to fight in a battle scene. The addition of soldiers via ETCs determines the outcome of the fictional on-screen battle.
Character cards can renew a movie. Once an audience grows familiar with a movie, a disassociated ETC movie card released after the movie could be added and cause surprising changes in the story.
ETC Series Games. Example. These cards distributed as a series of increasingly difficult puzzle challenges, with each ETC in the series containing a unique software puzzle. As you solve each puzzle, a score number displayed on the card increments and hidden clue graphics are revealed. Since attaining high scores are difficult, the higher the score, the scarcer the card. However, if the user makes a mistake when solving the puzzle the score decrements, or in the case of serious errors the card self-destructs and erases itself. The game is won when a user has a complete, unbroken series of cards with all puzzles completely solved and maximum scores displayed. When the user wins the game they earn the privilege of personalizing the ETC game cards with their name or other personal data.
ETC Linking Games.
Example. A complete game, or game in progress, is distributed as disassociated code segments in the form of a series of ETCs. As the user collects ETCs in the series, they link together automatically and the resulting game grows, becoming deeper, more robust, and more complex. The scale of ETC linked games can range from games built from a series of as little as two ETCs or as many as hundreds that are developed, distributed, collected, and assembled into a game which grows and constantly evolves over a period of years. When the user wins the game they earn the privilege of personalizing the ETC game cards with their name or other personal data.
ETC Collecting.
ETC collecting is strongly supported by a number of features of the ETC invention discussed elsewhere in this document, including ETC scarcity, authenticity, compatibility with consumer on-line services, and the ETC Header Identification. ETC collecting is also supported by another unique feature of the invention, Electronic Trading Card Collection Albums. These albums are software programs designed to allow end users to integrate specific disassociated ETCs into an electronic album as they build a collection of ETCs. Although all ETC albums share this basic functionality, a number of unique attributes related to the content of the ETCs can be built into the albums:
1. Tim puts an ETC “collector's Album” CD into his multimedia player. Each album comes with a unique assortment of “starter cards” for the collection. This album is in the form of a haunted house, where each room requires a specific set of cards to complete the collection.
2. Tim needs one more card to complete the twelve card Dungeon Set.
3. He finds the missing card at a local trading card store.
4. Completing the Dungeon Set makes Tim eligible for a special award. The prisoner shows Tim the details.
5. Next week Tim's friend Jerry gives him a rare Movie Card at school. Tim's friends have been searching for this card for weeks and Jerry is the first to find it. (It was hidden in an ETC game called Castle Quest.)
6. Some electronic albums have movies on them, and the missing cards unlock key scenes from the movie. The person who originally finds the missing movie card in its hiding place can personalize it. That way, their name always appears in the credits of that movie when it is played.
Card Activity Scenario.
1. Jason puts an ETC “Castle Quest” game into his CD-ROM drive. In Castle Quest, players solve puzzles having increasing levels of difficulty. When each level is solved, the player can print out a card proving they have solved the current level and giving a clue to the next level.
2. Jason has solved four levels of the game and printed the first four clue cards. the clue cards come pre-printed in color along with the game. When Jason feeds them through his printer, his name and the date and time appear on the card. He is now working on level five.
3. Jason finally solves level five and escapes from the tower! He prints out the level six clue card.
4. On the card there is a map of Dark Valley. When Jason feeds the card through his printer a special route appears printed on the valley.
5. After three weeks Jason solves all ten levels of Castle Quest.
6. He now has a set of ten completed Castle Quest cards—each personalized with his name. Only those who have solved Castle Quest have such a set of ten clue cards. Jason is the envy of his friends at school.
Card Trading Scenario.
1. Julie and Kristin trade their favorite ETCs on a floppy disc. They are each trying to make a full set of their favorite cards.
2. They can also trade on-line with kids all over the world. Some cards have phone number built in and dials them on command.
(Michael: #3 below is kind of an unrelated idea. Will it weaken the application?)
No!
3. Some very special cards come with their own display system, so the “card” is a small plastic case housing software, a battery, a CPU, and LCD display.
4. ETC files can also be output onto paper cards, traded, and used in card games, much like traditional paper trading cards.
End User Card Making Scenario.
1. Emily wants to make a special personal ETC for her friend Amy. She puts a Card Maker CD with her favorite characters into her multimedia player.
2. She goes to the Magic Writing Desk where she will assemble and personalize her card. First, she chooses a format and setting for her card. She decides Amy's card will be a Game Card.
3. She adds a character from her favorite TV show. The character says “Hello from your best friend.”
4. Emily picks a Tarot game from an assortment of small games that will fit on cards.
5. She types a secret message, hidden inside the animated magic heart where Amy will find it.
6. Emily puts the card on a floppy disc and prints a special label for the disc on colorful preformatted sheets that come with the Card Maker program.
Although the invention is described herein with reference to the preferred embodiment, one skilled in the art will readily appreciate that other applications may be substituted for those set forth herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the invention should only be limited by the Claims included below.
This application is a divisional of U.S. Ser. No. 09/735,586 filed Dec. 12, 2000.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09735586 | Dec 2000 | US |
Child | 11932177 | Oct 2007 | US |