Consumers utilize electronic vapor cigarettes, pipes, and modified vapor devices to enjoy what is commonly known as “vaping.” Vaping is an increasingly popular market segment, which has been steadily gaining market share over the last several years, and continues to do so. In general, currently available vaporizers are characterized by heating a solid to a smoldering point, vaporizing a liquid by direct or indirect heat, or nebulizing a liquid by heat and/or by expansion through a nozzle. Such devices are designed to release aromatic materials held in a solid or liquid form, while avoiding high temperatures that may result in combustion and associated formation of tars, carbon monoxide, or other harmful combustion byproducts. It would be desirable, therefore, to integrate transaction processing (e.g., credit card, debit card, etc.) functionality within electronic vapor device to improve the vaping experience and lifestyle.
The following presents a simplified overview of the example embodiments in order to provide a basic understanding of some embodiments of the example embodiments. This overview is not an extensive overview of the example embodiments. It is intended to neither identify key or critical elements of the example embodiments nor delineate the scope of the appended claims. Its sole purpose is to present some concepts of the example embodiments in a simplified form as a prelude to the more detailed description that is presented hereinbelow. It is to be understood that both the following general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory only and are not restrictive.
In accordance with the embodiments disclosed herein, the present disclosure is directed to an electronic vaporizing device with a multifunctional transaction processing component. One embodiment may be a system, method, and device deployment of an electronic vaporizing hybrid device that comprises an electronic vaping system with a multifunctional transaction processing component capable of operating as a stand-alone device or in connection with a second electronic communication device.
Another embodiment may be an apparatus comprising a card reader configured for reading data from a card and a vapor device, coupled to the card reader, wherein the vapor device may comprise a processor, coupled to the card reader, configured for receiving the data from the card reader and for determining a transaction amount, and a network access element configured for transmitting the data and the transaction amount to a remote computing device to process a financial transaction based on the data and the transaction amount, and receiving an approval message or a denial message from the remote computing device. The vapor device may further comprise an air intake; a vapor output, configured for receiving inhalation from an associated user; one or more containers for storing a vaporizable material; a mixing element, coupled to the processor, configured for withdrawing a selectable amount of the vaporizable material from the one or more containers; a mixing chamber coupled to the air intake for receiving air and coupled to the mixing element for receiving the selectable amount of the vaporizable material from the one or more containers; and a heating element, coupled to the mixing chamber, configured for heating the selectable amount of the vaporizable material from the one or more containers and the received air to generate a vapor expelled through the vapor output.
In another embodiment, an apparatus may be provided comprising a detachable vaporizer/transaction processing device comprising, a card reader configured for reading data from a card, and a processor, coupled to the card reader, configured for receiving the data from the card reader and for determining a transaction amount. The detachable vaporizer/transaction processing device may further comprise an air intake, a vapor output, configured for receiving a user inhalation, one or more containers for storing a vaporizable material, a mixing element, coupled to the processor, configured for withdrawing a selectable amount of the vaporizable material the one or more containers, a mixing chamber coupled to the air intake for receiving air, the mixing element for receiving the selectable amount of the vaporizable material the one or more containers, and a heating element, coupled to the mixing chamber, configured for heating the selectable amount of the vaporizable material the one or more containers and the received air to generate a vapor expelled through the vapor output. The apparatus may further comprise an electronic communication device, coupled to the detachable vaporizer/transaction processing device via an input/output port, comprising, a user input interface for controlling one or more functions of the detachable vaporizer/transaction processor, a network access element configured for, transmitting the data and the transaction amount to a remote computing device to process a financial transaction based on the data and the transaction amount, and receiving an approval message or a denial message from the remote computing device.
In an embodiment, a method may be provided comprising the steps of providing, by an electronic vapor device, a first option to enter a vaping mode and a second option to enter a transaction processing mode, receiving, by the electronic vapor device, a selection of the second option; receiving, by a card reader coupled to the electronic vapor device, a plurality of first data related to a financial account, providing the plurality of first data to an electronic communication device, receiving, by the electronic communication device, a transaction amount, transmitting, by the electronic communication device, the plurality of first data and the transaction amount to a financial transaction processing system, receiving, by the electronic communication device, an approval message or a denial message, and displaying, by the electronic communication device, the approval message or the denial message.
In various implementations, the electronic vaporizing device may comprise a payment object reader or card reader for obtaining payment information for a card to be processed thereby. The payment object reader may read payment object information (card number, expiration date, bank issuer, etc.) from the payment object (credit card, debit card, etc.) and at least a portion of the payment object information is transmitted by a network access component of the electronic vaporizing device to a remote computing system, such as credit card processing system, for further processing thereof. In the case of a credit card, the credit card processor may route the credit card information to a card network, such as Visa®, MasterCard®, American Express®, and the like, which in turn may route the credit card information to the card issuer, e.g., a bank. Assuming the card issuer approves a requested transaction, the authorization information may be routed back to the electronic vaporizing device for processing the transaction. Personal identification information (such as a PIN, password, security code, etc.) and a plurality of payment transaction data (amount, credit limits, etc.) may be provided by a user associated with the payment object or card and transmitted to the remote computing system for processing thereof.
In accordance with the embodiments disclosed herein, the present disclosure may comprise an electronic vaporizing device. The electronic vaporizing device may comprise a device processor operable for controlling the electronic vaporizing device, at least one container configured to store vaporizable material, a vaporizing component operatively coupled to the processor and controlled in part by the processor. Preferably, the vaporizing component may be in fluid communication with the at least one container for receiving at least a portion of the vaporizable material therefrom, wherein the vaporizing component is preferably operable to vaporize materials received therein. The electronic vaporizing device may further comprise at least one vapor outlet coupled to the vaporizing component and configured to receive vapor generated by vaporizing component, the at least one vapor outlet may be operable to expel the generated vapor from the vaporizing device. The electronic vaporizing device may further comprise at least one power source operatively coupled to the vaporizing component, wherein the at least one power source may be operable to generate power for at least the operation of the vaporizing component. The electronic vaporizing device may also comprise a payment object reader component operatively coupled to the device processor and controlled in part by the device processor, wherein the payment object reader may include at least one of a contactless object reader configured to communicate with a contactless enabled payment object, a chip object reader having one or more electrical contacts and configured to contact a chip of a chip payment object to read the chip payment object, a magnetic strip object reader configured to communicate with a magnetic strip of a magnetic strip payment object, of and combinations thereof. The payment object reader may be operable to receive payment object information from the contactless object reader, the chip object reader, the magnetic strip object reader.
In one embodiment, the payment object reader may comprise an input/output port operatively coupled to the device processor of the electronic vaporizing device and configured to exchange payment object information between the device processor and the payment object reader component, wherein the input/output port may be operable to transmit the payment object information to the device processor for further processing thereof.
In another embodiment, electronic vaporizing device may further comprise an input/output device operatively coupled to the device processor, and wherein the device processor may be further operable to receive at least one of a plurality of personal identification data of a user associated with a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, a plurality of payment transaction data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, and combinations thereof.
In another embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device may further comprise a network access component operatively coupled to the device processor and configured to connect to at least one network, wherein the network access component is operable to provide at least one of payment object information, personal identification data, payment transaction data, and combinations thereof via the at least one network to a remote computing system for further processing thereof.
In yet another embodiment, network access component may be further operable to receive from the remote computing system, via the at least one network, at least one of a plurality of authorization data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, a plurality of status data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, and combinations thereof.
In one embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device may further comprise a display operatively coupled to the device processor, wherein the display is operable to display at least a portion of at least one of payment object information, personal identification data, payment transaction data, authorization data, status data, and combinations thereof. In another embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device may further comprise a memory operatively coupled to the device processor, wherein the memory may be operable to store at least a portion of at least one of payment object information, personal identification data, payment transaction data, authorization data, status data, and combinations thereof. In another embodiment, the processor may be further operable to generate encrypted data for at least a portion of the payment object information, personal identification data, payment transaction data, and combinations thereof, wherein the network access component is operable to transmit the encrypted data.
In one embodiment, the payment object reader may comprise the payment object reader comprises a frame, wherein the frame includes a top surface, a bottom surface, a first side surface, and a second side surface opposite the first side surface. The payment object reader may further comprise a groove located on one of the first side surface and the second side surface, wherein the groove is configured to receive a swipe of a magnetic strip enabled payment object, a slot located on one of the first side surface and the second side surface, wherein the slot is configured to receive a chip of a chip payment object, a magnetic strip reader interface including magnetic heads positioned in the frame operable to read a stipe of the magnetic strip enabled payment object as it is swiped through the groove, and a chip reader interface including electrical contacts positioned in the frame and operable to contact contacts of the chip payment object when it is inserted in the slot. The input/output port of the payment object reader may be configured to transmit payment object information received from at least one of the magnetic strip reader interface, the chip reader interface, and combinations thereof.
In one embodiment, the groove is located on the first side surface of the payment object reader and the slot is located on the second side surface of the payment object reader. In another embodiment, the groove of the payment object reader and the slot of the payment object reader are located on the same side surface of the payment object reader.
In one embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device may further comprise a power output control component operatively coupled to the device processor and controlled in part by the device processor, wherein the power output control component may be operatively coupled to the at least one power source and may be operable to regulate a generated supply of power provided to the vaporizing component and to the payment object reader component.
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device is selected from the group of electronic vaporizing devices consisting of: an electronic cigarette, an electronic cigar, an electronic vapor device integrated with an electronic communication device, a robotic vapor device, and a micro-size electronic vapor device.
In accordance with the embodiments disclosed herein, a method may be provided for operating a dual mode electronic vaporizing/transaction processing device having a vaporizing mode and a transaction processing mode. The dual mode electronic vaporizing/transaction processing device comprises a vaporizing component operable to vaporize a plurality of materials received therein and expel a generated vapor from the vaporizing component, at least one power source operatively coupled to the vaporizing component; and a payment object reader component comprising at least one of a contactless object reader configured to communicate with a contactless enabled payment object, chip object reader having one or more electrical contacts and configured to contact a chip of a chip payment object to read the chip payment object, and a magnetic strip reader configured to communicate with a magnetic strip of a magnetic strip payment object, wherein the payment object reader is operable to is operable to read payment object information from at least one of a contactless payment object, a chip payment object, a magnetic strip payment object, and combinations thereof. The method may comprise the steps of receiving a command to activate a transaction processing mode, activating the payment object reader component in response to the received command to activate the transaction processing mode, processing a payment object by the payment object reader component, reading payment object information from the payment object by one of the contactless object reader and the chip object reader, and transmitting at least a portion of the payment object information via at least one network to a remote computing system for further processing thereof.
In one embodiment, the method may further comprise receiving at least one of a plurality of personal identification data of a user associated with a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, a plurality of payment transaction data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, and combinations thereof, from an associated user via at least one input/output interface, and transmitting at least a portion of the plurality of personal identification data, plurality of payment transaction data, and combinations thereof via at least one network to the remote computing system for further processing thereof.
In one embodiment, the method may further comprise receiving from the remote computing system, via at least one network, at least one of a plurality of authorization data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, a plurality of status data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, and combinations thereof. In another embodiment, the method may comprise processing a payment transaction using the payment object in accordance with the plurality of authorization data.
In accordance with the embodiments disclosed herein, a system may be provided for operating an electronic vaporizing device in conjunction with a payment object reader device. The system may comprise an electronic vaporizing device having a first processor operable for controlling the electronic vaporizing device; at least one container configured to store a vaporizable material; a vaporizing component operatively coupled to the first processor and controlled in part by the first processor, wherein the vaporizing component may be in fluid communication with the at least one container for receiving at least a portion of the vaporizable material therefrom, wherein the vaporizing component may be operable to vaporize the vaporizable material received therein; at least one vapor outlet coupled to the vaporizing component and configured to receive a vapor generated by the vaporizing component, the at least one vapor outlet operable to expel the generated vapor from the vaporizing device; at least one vaporizing power source operatively coupled to the vaporizing component, wherein the at least one vaporizing power source may be operable to generate a supply of power for operation of the vaporizing component; and an input/output device operatively coupled to the first processor. The system may further comprise a payment object reader device having a second processor operable for controlling the payment object reader device; a payment object reader component operatively coupled to the second processor and controlled in part by the second processor, wherein the payment object reader component includes at least one of a contactless object reader configured to communicate with a contactless enabled payment object, a chip object reader having one or more electrical contacts and configured to contact a chip of a chip payment object to read the chip payment object, a magnetic strip payment object reader configured to communicate with a magnetic strip payment object, and combinations thereof, wherein the payment object reader component may be operable to receive payment object information from the contactless object reader and the chip object reader; and an input/output port operatively coupled to the second processor and configured operatively connect the second processor and the electronic vaporizing device, wherein the input/output port is configured to transmit the at least a portion of the plurality of payment object information to the electronic vaporizing device for further processing thereof.
In one embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device may further comprise an input/output device operatively coupled to the first processor, and wherein the first processor may be further operable to receive at least one of a plurality of personal identification data of a user associated with a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, a plurality of payment transaction data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, and combinations thereof.
In another embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device may further comprise a network access component operatively coupled to the first processor and configured to connect to at least one network, wherein the network access component may be operable to provide at least one of payment object information, personal identification data, payment transaction data, and combinations thereof via at least one network to a remote computing system for further processing thereof. In another embodiment, the network access component may be further operable to receive from the remote computing system, via at least one network, at least one of authorization data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, status data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, and combinations thereof.
Still other advantages, embodiments, and features of the subject disclosure will become readily apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art from the following description wherein there is shown and described a preferred embodiment of the present disclosure, simply by way of illustration of one of the best modes best suited to carry out the subject disclosure As it will be realized, the present disclosure is capable of other different embodiments and its several details are capable of modifications in various obvious embodiments all without departing from, or limiting, the scope herein. Accordingly, the drawings and descriptions will be regarded as illustrative in nature and not as restrictive.
The drawings are of illustrative embodiments. They do not illustrate all embodiments. Other embodiments may be used in addition or instead. Details which may be apparent or unnecessary may be omitted to save space or for more effective illustration. Some embodiments may be practiced with additional components or steps and/or without all of the components or steps which are illustrated. When the same numeral appears in different drawings, it refers to the same or like components or steps.
Before the present methods and systems are disclosed and described, it is to be understood that the methods and systems are not limited to specific methods, specific components, or to particular implementations. It is also to be understood that the terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting.
As used in the specification and the appended claims, the singular forms “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural referents unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. Ranges may be expressed herein as from “about” one particular value, and/or to “about” another particular value. When such a range is expressed, another embodiment includes from the one particular value and/or to the other particular value. Similarly, when values are expressed as approximations, by use of the antecedent “about,” it will be understood that the particular value forms another embodiment. It will be further understood that the endpoints of each of the ranges are significant both in relation to the other endpoint, and independently of the other endpoint.
“Optional” or “optionally” means that the subsequently described event or circumstance may or may not occur, and that the description includes instances where said event or circumstance occurs and instances where it does not.
Throughout the description and claims of this specification, the word “comprise” and variations of the word, such as “comprising” and “comprises,” means “including but not limited to,” and is not intended to exclude, for example, other components, integers or steps. “Exemplary” means “an example of” and is not intended to convey an indication of a preferred or ideal embodiment. “Such as” is not used in a restrictive sense, but for explanatory purposes.
Disclosed are components that may be used to perform the disclosed methods and systems. These and other components are disclosed herein, and it is understood that when combinations, subsets, interactions, groups, etc. of these components are disclosed that while specific reference of each various individual and collective combinations and permutation of these may not be explicitly disclosed, each is specifically contemplated and described herein, for all methods and systems. This applies to all embodiments of this application including, but not limited to, steps in disclosed methods. Thus, if there are a variety of additional steps that may be performed it is understood that each of these additional steps may be performed with any specific embodiment or combination of embodiments of the disclosed methods.
The present methods and systems may be understood more readily by reference to the following detailed description of preferred embodiments and the examples included therein and to the Figures and their previous and following description.
As will be appreciated by one skilled in the art, the methods and systems may take the form of an entirely hardware embodiment, an entirely software embodiment, or an embodiment combining software and hardware embodiments. Furthermore, the methods and systems may take the form of a computer program product on a computer-readable storage medium having computer-readable program instructions (e.g., computer software) embodied in the storage medium. More particularly, the present methods and systems may take the form of web-implemented computer software. Any suitable computer-readable storage medium may be utilized including hard disks, CD-ROMs, optical storage devices, or magnetic storage devices.
Embodiments of the methods and systems are described below with reference to block diagrams and flowchart illustrations of methods, systems, apparatuses and computer program products. It will be understood that each block of the block diagrams and flowchart illustrations, and combinations of blocks in the block diagrams and flowchart illustrations, respectively, may be implemented by computer program instructions. These computer program instructions may be loaded onto a general-purpose computer, special purpose computer, or other programmable data processing apparatus to produce a machine, such that the instructions which execute on the computer or other programmable data processing apparatus create a means for implementing the functions specified in the flowchart block or blocks.
These computer program instructions may also be stored in a computer-readable memory that may direct a computer or other programmable data processing apparatus to function in a particular manner, such that the instructions stored in the computer-readable memory produce an article of manufacture including computer-readable instructions for implementing the function specified in the flowchart block or blocks. The computer program instructions may also be loaded onto a computer or other programmable data processing apparatus to cause a series of operational steps to be performed on the computer or other programmable apparatus to produce a computer-implemented process such that the instructions that execute on the computer or other programmable apparatus provide steps for implementing the functions specified in the flowchart block or blocks.
Accordingly, blocks of the block diagrams and flowchart illustrations support combinations of means for performing the specified functions, combinations of steps for performing the specified functions and program instruction means for performing the specified functions. It will also be understood that each block of the block diagrams and flowchart illustrations, and combinations of blocks in the block diagrams and flowchart illustrations, may be implemented by special purpose hardware-based computer systems that perform the specified functions or steps, or combinations of special purpose hardware and computer instructions.
In the following description, certain terminology is used to describe certain features of one or more embodiments. For purposes of the specification, unless otherwise specified, the term “substantially” refers to the complete or nearly complete extent or degree of an action, characteristic, property, state, structure, item, or result. For example, in one embodiment, an object that is “substantially” located within a housing would mean that the object is either completely within a housing or nearly completely within a housing. The exact allowable degree of deviation from absolute completeness may in some cases depend on the specific context. However, generally speaking, the nearness of completion will be so as to have the same overall result as if absolute and total completion were obtained. The use of “substantially” is also equally applicable when used in a negative connotation to refer to the complete or near complete lack of an action, characteristic, property, state, structure, item, or result.
As used herein, the terms “approximately” and “about” generally refer to a deviance of within 5% of the indicated number or range of numbers. In one embodiment, the term “approximately” and “about”, may refer to a deviance of between 0.001-10% from the indicated number or range of numbers.
Various embodiments are now described with reference to the drawings. In the following description, for purposes of explanation, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of one or more embodiments. It may be evident, however, that the various embodiments may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well-known structures and devices are shown in block diagram form to facilitate describing these embodiments.
The electronic vaporizing device may include a payment object reader or card reader for obtaining payment information for a card to be processed thereby. The payment object reader may read payment object information (card number, expiration date, bank issuer, etc.) from the payment object (credit card, debit card, etc.) and at least a portion of the payment object information is transmitted by a network access component of the electronic vaporizing device to a remote computing system, such as credit card processing system, for further processing thereof. In the case of a credit card, the credit card processor may route the credit card information to a card network, such as Visa®, MasterCard®, American Express®, and the like, which in turn may route the credit card information to the card issuer, e.g., a bank. Assuming the card issuer approves a requested transaction, the authorization information may be routed back to the electronic vaporizing device for processing the transaction. Personal identification information (such as a PIN, password, security code, etc.) and payment transaction data (amount, credit limits, etc.) may be provided by a user associated with the payment object or card and transmitted to the remote computing system for processing thereof.
In one embodiment, disclosed is a next generation electronic vaporizing device (e.g., e-cigarette) enabled with a broad range of functionality options. These functionalities are enabled by a microprocessor controller utilized to execute commands for system functionality, along with a memory, transmitter, software, storage, and power system. The electronic vaporizing device itself may be outfitted with a heating element, cooling element, eLiquid soaked batting capable of being refilled, locked, or unlocked, and a variety of attendant functionality options. Such options include networking and communication services, device monitoring, mixing, heating, cooling, refilling, aromatic and other distribution functions, external monitoring, testing, powering options, portability, device effects including sound, imaging, light and graphical effects, remote and third party control, symbiotic characteristics with other devices, and synchronicity among devices.
In one embodiment, there may be provided a multifunction electronic vaporizing device wherein a user may choose to utilize the electronic vaporizing device as either a transaction processing device or as a vaporizing device. The electronic vaporizing/transaction processing device may function as a standalone unit or by being physically and/or electronically connected to a second electronic communication device.
In one embodiment, the electronic vaporizing/transaction processing device may be a hybrid component of an electronic communication device, such as a cellular telephone or electronic tablet device. The hybrid electronic vaporizing/transaction processing device add-on may be a single rechargeable component, continuous with the electronic communication device, or may be portable, disposable, recyclable, removable, and combinations thereof.
In another embodiment, one or more of the electronic communication device, the electronic vapor device, and/or the transaction processing device may be either hard-wired together via an electric an electronic connection at the edges of the devices, and in some instances, with some designed overlap, depending on how the devices will optimize continuity and function. The electrical connections between devices may be flush, or at least one of the devices may deploy internal connections into the other device as are known in the art. In one embodiment, the devices are connected via a protruding port penetrating precise fit positioning of the electrical connection leading from one device inside the other device to engage the electrical connection. A locking system may keep the devices firmly in place, as though the devices were one.
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing/transaction processing device add-on may act as a multi-function processor by handling a physical card swipe, a chip reader, and a network connection to process transactions. For physical card swipe transactions, the electronic vaporizing/transaction processing device may be outfitted with one or more card swiping units or contactless reading units (e.g., one on the top of the device and one on the side). Data from the card swipe may be passed from the card swiping unit to a system processor and software where the data may be transmitted to a clearing bank system for approval or denial. The approval or denial is then received by the electronic vaporizing/transaction processing device and communicated to the customer who may then receive a printed receipt from a micro printer embedded in the device or may have the receipt emailed or texted.
A chip reader performs a similar function as the card swiping unit except the purchasing information is delivered via a chip, which is read by the chip reader. The processing of the transaction may be substantially the same as for the card swiping unit in terms of the validation and communication elements. All data which is transferred to and from the electronic vaporizing/transaction processing device may be encrypted. Various methods may be employed to confirm a card holder identity, such as a signature on a touchscreen, a code, a biometric imprint (e.g., fingerprint, eye scan, etc.).
In another embodiment, transactions may take the form of a third party electronic payment, which may be made from a buyer to a requesting party through the payment system. The third party may remit verifiable, secure payment through the system to complete a transaction. Biometric/image verification of third party payees may be implemented for security.
The electronic vaporizing device 100 may comprise a memory device 104 coupled to the processor 102. The memory device 104 may comprise a random access memory (RAM) configured for storing program instructions and data for execution or processing by the processor 102 during control of the electronic vaporizing device 100. When the electronic vaporizing device 100 is powered off or in an inactive state, program instructions and data may be stored in a long-term memory, for example, a non-volatile magnetic optical, or electronic memory storage device (not shown). At least one of the RAM or the long-term memory may comprise a non-transitory computer-readable medium storing program instructions that, when executed by the processor 102, cause the electronic vaporizing device 100 to perform all or part of one or more methods and/or operations described herein. Program instructions may be written in any suitable high-level language, for example, C, C++, C# or the Java™, and compiled to produce machine-language code for execution by the processor 102.
In one embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may comprise a network access device 106 allowing the electronic vaporizing device 100 to be coupled to one or more ancillary devices (not shown) such as via an access point (not shown) of a wireless telephone network, local area network, or other coupling to a wide area network, for example, the Internet. In that regard, the processor 102 may be configured to share data with the one or more ancillary devices via the network access device 106. The shared data may comprise, for example, usage data and/or operational data of the electronic vaporizing device 100, a status of the electronic vaporizing device 100, a status and/or operating condition of one or more the components of the electronic vaporizing device 100, text to be used in a message, a product order, payment information, and/or any other data. Similarly, the processor 102 may be configured to receive control instructions from the one or more ancillary devices via the network access device 106. For example, a configuration of the electronic vaporizing device 100, an operation of the electronic vaporizing device 100, and/or other settings of the electronic vaporizing device 100, may be controlled by the one or more ancillary devices via the network access device 106. For example, an ancillary device may comprise a server that may provide various services and another ancillary device may comprise a smartphone for controlling operation of the electronic vaporizing device 100. In some embodiments, the smartphone or another ancillary device may be used as a primary input/output of the electronic vaporizing device 100 such that data may be received by the electronic vaporizing device 100 from the server, transmitted to the smartphone, and output on a display of the smartphone. In an embodiment, data transmitted to the ancillary device may comprise a mixture of vaporizable material and/or instructions to release vapor. For example, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may be configured to determine a need for the release of vapor into the atmosphere. The electronic vaporizing device 100 may provide instructions via the network access device 106 to an ancillary device (e.g., another vapor device) to release vapor into the atmosphere.
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may also comprise an input/output device 112 coupled to one or more of the processor 102, the vaporizer 108, the network access device 106, and/or any other electronic component of the electronic vaporizing device 100. Input may be received from a user or another device and/or output may be provided to a user or another device via the input/output device 112. The input/output device 112 may comprise any combinations of input and/or output devices such as buttons, knobs, keyboards, touchscreens, displays, light-emitting elements, a speaker, and/or the like. In an embodiment, the input/output device 112 may comprise an interface port (not shown) such as a wired interface, for example a serial port, a Universal Serial Bus (USB) port, an Ethernet port, or other suitable wired connection. The input/output device 112 may comprise a wireless interface (not shown), for example a transceiver using any suitable wireless protocol, for example Wi-Fi (IEEE 802.11), Bluetooth®, infrared, or other wireless standard. For example, the input/output device 112 may communicate with a smartphone via Bluetooth® such that the inputs and outputs of the smartphone may be used by the user to interface with the electronic vaporizing device 100. In an embodiment, the input/output device 112 may comprise a user interface. The user interface user interface may comprise at least one of lighted signal lights, gauges, boxes, forms, check marks, avatars, visual images, graphic designs, lists, active calibrations or calculations, 2D interactive fractal designs, 3D fractal designs, 2D and/or 3D representations of vapor devices and other interface system functions.
In an embodiment, the input/output device 112 may comprise a touchscreen interface and/or a biometric interface. For example, the input/output device 112 may include controls that allow the user to interact with and input information and commands to the electronic vaporizing device 100. For example, with respect to the embodiments described herein, the input/output device 112 may comprise a touch screen display. The input/output device 112 may be configured to provide the content of the exemplary screen shots shown herein, which are presented to the user via the functionality of a display. User inputs to the touch screen display are processed by, for example, the input/output device 112 and/or the processor 102. The input/output device 112 may also be configured to process new content and communications to the electronic vaporizing device 100. The touch screen display may provide controls and menu selections, and process commands and requests. Application and content objects may be provided by the touch screen display. The input/output device 112 and/or the processor 102 may receive and interpret commands and other inputs, interface with the other components of the electronic vaporizing device 100 as required. In an embodiment, the touch screen display may enable a user to lock, unlock, or partially unlock or lock, the electronic vaporizing device 100. The electronic vaporizing device 100 may be transitioned from an idle and locked state into an open state by, for example, moving or dragging an icon on the screen of the electronic vaporizing device 100, entering in a password/passcode, and the like. The input/output device 112 may thus display information to a user such as a puff count, an amount of vaporizable material remaining in the container 110, battery remaining, signal strength, combinations thereof, and the like.
In an embodiment, the input/output device 112 may comprise an audio user interface. A microphone may be configured to receive audio signals and relay the audio signals to the input/output device 112. The audio user interface may be any interface that is responsive to voice or other audio commands. The audio user interface may be configured to cause an action, activate a function, etc., by the electronic vaporizing device 100 (or another device) based on a received voice (or other audio) command. The audio user interface may be deployed directly on the electronic vaporizing device 100 and/or via other electronic devices (e.g., electronic communication devices, such as a smartphone, a smart watch, a tablet, a laptop, a dedicated audio user interface device, other personal computing devices, and the like). The audio user interface may be used to control the functionality of the electronic vaporizing device 100. Such functionality may comprise, but is not limited to, custom mixing of vaporizable material (e.g., eLiquids) and/or ordering custom made eLiquid combinations via an eCommerce service (e.g., specifications of a user's custom flavor mix may be transmitted to an eCommerce service, so that an eLiquid provider may mix a custom eLiquid cartridge for the user). The user may then reorder the custom flavor mix anytime or even send it to friends as a present, all via the audio user interface. The user may also send via voice command a mixing recipe to other users. The other users may utilize the mixing recipe (e.g., via an electronic vapor device having multiple chambers for eLiquid) to sample the same mix via an auto-order to the other users' devices to create the received mixing recipe. A custom mix may be given a title by a user and/or may be defined by parts (e.g., one part liquid A and two parts liquid B). The audio user interface may also be utilized to create and send a custom message to other users, to join electronic vaporizing clubs, to receive electronic vaporizing chart information, and to conduct a wide range of social networking, location services and eCommerce activities. The audio user interface may be secured via a password (e.g., audio password) which features at least one of tone recognition, other voice quality recognition and, in one embodiment, may utilize at least one special cadence as part of the audio password.
The input/output device 112 may be configured to interface with other devices, for example, exercise equipment, computing equipment, communications devices and/or other vapor devices, for example, via a physical or wireless connection. The input/output device 112 may thus exchange data with the other equipment. A user may sync their electronic vaporizing device 100 to other devices, via programming attributes such as mutual dynamic link library (DLL) ‘hooks’. This enables a smooth exchange of data between devices, as may a web interface between devices. The input/output device 112 may be used to upload one or more profiles to the other devices. Using exercise equipment as an example, the one or more profiles may comprise data such as workout routine data (e.g., timing, distance, settings, heart rate, etc.) and vaping data (e.g., eLiquid mixture recipes, supplements, vaping timing, etc.). Data from usage of previous exercise sessions may be archived and shared with new electronic vapor devices and/or new exercise equipment so that history and preferences may remain continuous and provide for simplified device settings, default settings, and recommended settings based upon the synthesis of current and archival data.
As shown in
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may comprise a mixing element 122. The mixing element 122 may be coupled to the processor 102 to receive one or more control signals. The one or more control signals may instruct the mixing element 122 to withdraw specific amounts of fluid from the one or more containers 110. The mixing element may, in response to a control signal from the processor 102, withdraw select quantities of vaporizable material to create a customized mixture of different types of vaporizable material. The liquid withdrawn by the mixing element 122 may be provided to the vaporizer 108.
In an embodiment, input from the input/output device 112 may be used by the processor 102 to cause the vaporizer 108 to vaporize the one or more vaporizable or non-vaporizable materials. For example, a user may depress a button, causing the vaporizer 108 to start vaporizing or heating the one or more vaporizable or non-vaporizable materials. A user may then draw on an outlet 114 to inhale the vapor. In various embodiments, the processor 102 may control vapor production and flow to the outlet 114 based on data detected by a flow sensor 116. For example, as a user draws on the outlet 114, the flow sensor 116 may detect the resultant pressure and provide a signal to the processor 102. In response, the processor 102 may cause the vaporizer 108 to begin vaporizing the one or more vaporizable or non-vaporizable materials, terminate vaporizing the one or more vaporizable or non-vaporizable materials, and/or otherwise adjust a rate of vaporization of the one or more vaporizable or non-vaporizable materials. In another embodiment, the vapor may exit the electronic vaporizing device 100 through an outlet 124. The outlet 124 differs from the outlet 114 in that the outlet 124 may be configured to distribute the vapor into the local atmosphere, rather than being inhaled by a user. In an embodiment, vapor exiting the outlet 124 may be at least one of aromatic, medicinal, recreational, and/or wellness related.
In another embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may comprise a piezoelectric dispersing element 140. In some embodiments, the piezoelectric dispersing element 140 may be charged by a battery, and may be driven by a processor on a circuit board. The circuit board may be produced using a polyimide such as Kapton®, or other suitable material. The piezoelectric dispersing element 140 may comprise a thin metal disc which causes dispersion of the fluid fed into the dispersing element via the wick or other soaked piece of organic material through vibration. Once in contact with the piezoelectric dispersing element 140, the vaporizable material (e.g., fluid) may be vaporized (e.g., turned into vapor or mist) and the vapor may be dispersed via a system pump and/or a sucking action of the user. In some embodiments, the piezoelectric dispersing element 140 may cause dispersion of the vaporizable material by producing ultrasonic vibrations. An electric field applied to a piezoelectric material within the piezoelectric dispersing element 140 may cause ultrasonic expansion and contraction of the piezoelectric material, resulting in ultrasonic vibrations to the disc. The ultrasonic vibrations may cause the vaporizable material to disperse, thus forming a vapor or mist from the vaporizable material.
In some embodiments, the connection between the power supply 120 and the piezoelectric dispersing element 140 may be facilitated using one or more conductive coils. The conductive coils may provide an ultrasonic power input to the piezoelectric dispersing element 140. For example, the signal carried by the coil may have a frequency of approximately 107.8 kHz. In some embodiments, the piezoelectric dispersing element 140 may comprise a piezoelectric dispersing element that may receive the ultrasonic signal transmitted from the power supply through the coils, and may cause vaporization of the vaporizable liquid by producing ultrasonic vibrations. An ultrasonic electric field applied to a piezoelectric material within the piezoelectric dispersing element 140 causes ultrasonic expansion and contraction of the piezoelectric material, resulting in ultrasonic vibrations according to the frequency of the signal. The vaporizable liquid may be vibrated by the ultrasonic energy produced by the piezoelectric dispersing element 140, thus causing dispersal and/or atomization of the liquid. In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may be configured to permit a user to select between using a heating element of the vaporizer 108 or the piezoelectric dispersing element 140. In another embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may be configured to permit a user to utilize both a heating element of the vaporizer 108 and the piezoelectric dispersing element 140.
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may comprise a heating casing 126. The heating casing 126 may enclose one or more of the container 110, the vaporizer 108, and/or the outlet 114. In a further embodiment, the heating casing 126 may enclose one or more components that make up the container 110, the vaporizer 108, and/or the outlet 114. The heating casing 126 may be made of ceramic, metal, and/or porcelain. The heating casing 126 may have varying thickness. In an embodiment, the heating casing 126 may be coupled to the power supply 120 to receive power to heat the heating casing 126. In another embodiment, the heating casing 126 may be coupled to the vaporizer 108 to heat the heating casing 126. In another embodiment, the heating casing 126 may serve as an insulator.
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may comprise a filtration element 128. The filtration element 128 may be configured to remove (e.g., filter, purify, etc.) contaminants from air entering the electronic vaporizing device 100. The filtration element 128 may optionally comprise a fan 130 to assist in delivering air to the filtration element 128. The electronic vaporizing device 100 may be configured to intake air into the filtration element 128, filter the air, and pass the filtered air to the vaporizer 108 for use in vaporizing the one or more vaporizable or non-vaporizable materials. In another embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may be configured to intake air into the filtration element 128, filter the air, and bypass the vaporizer 108 by passing the filtered air directly to the outlet 114 for inhalation by a user.
In an embodiment, the filtration element 128 may comprise cotton, polymer, wool, satin, meta materials, and the like. The filtration element 128 may comprise a filter material that at least one airborne particle and/or undesired gas by a mechanical mechanism, an electrical mechanism, and/or a chemical mechanism. The filter material may comprise one or more pieces of a filter fabric that may filter out one or more airborne particles and/or gasses. The filter fabric may be a woven and/or non-woven material. The filter fabric may be made from natural fibers (e.g., cotton, wool, etc.) and/or from synthetic fibers (e.g., polyester, nylon, polypropylene, etc.). The thickness of the filter fabric may be varied depending on the desired filter efficiencies and/or the region of the apparel where the filter fabric is to be used. The filter fabric may be designed to filter airborne particles and/or gasses by mechanical mechanisms (e.g., weave density), by electrical mechanisms (e.g., charged fibers, charged metals, etc.), and/or by chemical mechanisms (e.g., absorptive charcoal particles, adsorptive materials, etc.). In as embodiment, the filter material may comprise electrically charged fibers such as, but not limited to, Filtrete® by 3M. In another embodiment, the filter material may comprise a high-density material similar to material used for medical masks which are used by medical personnel in doctors' offices, hospitals, and the like. In an embodiment, the filter material may be treated with an anti-bacterial solution and/or otherwise made from anti-bacterial materials. In another embodiment, the filtration element 128 may comprise electrostatic plates, ultraviolet light, a HEPA filter, combinations thereof, and the like.
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may comprise a cooling element 132. The cooling element 132 may be configured to cool vapor exiting the vaporizer 108 prior to passing through the outlet 114. The cooling element 132 may cool vapor by utilizing air or space within the electronic vaporizing device 100. The air used by the cooling element 132 may be either static (existing in the electronic vaporizing device 100) or drawn into an intake and through the cooling element 132 and the electronic vaporizing device 100. The intake may comprise various pumping, pressure, fan, or other intake systems for drawing air into the cooling element 132. In an embodiment, the cooling element 132 may reside separately or may be integrated the vaporizer 108. The cooling element 132 may be a single cooled electronic element within a tube or space and/or the cooling element 132 may be configured as a series of coils or as a grid like structure. The materials for the cooling element 132 may be metal, liquid, polymer, natural substance, synthetic substance, air, or any combination thereof. The cooling element 132 may be powered by the power supply 120, by a separate battery (not shown), or other power source (not shown) including the use of excess heat energy created by the vaporizer 108 being converted to energy used for cooling by a small turbine or pressure system to convert the energy. Heat differentials between the vaporizer 108 and the cooling element 132 may also be converted to energy utilizing commonly known geothermal energy principles.
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may comprise a magnetic element 134. For example, the magnetic element 134 may comprise an electromagnet, a ceramic magnet, a ferrite magnet, rare earth magnet, and/or the like. The magnetic element 134 may be configured to apply a magnetic field to air as it is brought into the electronic vaporizing device 100, in the vaporizer 108, and/or as vapor exits the outlet 114.
The input/output device 112 may be used to select whether vapor exiting the outlet 114 should be cooled or not cooled, heated or not heated, and/or magnetized or not magnetized. For example, a user may use the input/output device 112 to selectively cool vapor at times and not cool vapor at other times. The user may use the input/output device 112 to selectively heat vapor at times and not heat vapor at other times. The user may use the input/output device 112 to selectively magnetize vapor at times and not magnetize vapor at other times. The user may further use the input/output device 112 to select a desired smoothness, temperature, and/or range of temperatures. The user may adjust the temperature of the vapor by selecting or clicking on a clickable setting on a part of the electronic vaporizing device 100. The user may use, for example, a graphical user interface (GUI) or a mechanical input enabled by clicking a rotational mechanism at either end of the electronic vaporizing device 100.
In an embodiment, cooling control may be set within the electronic vaporizing device 100 settings via the processor 102 and system software (e.g., dynamic linked libraries). The memory 104 may store settings. Suggestions and remote settings may be communicated to and/or from the electronic vaporizing device 100 via the input/output device 112 and/or the network access device 106. Cooling of the vapor may be set and calibrated between heating and cooling mechanisms to what is deemed an ideal temperature by the manufacturer of the electronic vaporizing device 100 for the vaporizable material. For example, a temperature may be set such that resultant vapor delivers the coolest feeling to the average user but does not present any health risk to the user by the vapor being too cold, including the potential for rapid expansion of cooled vapor within the lungs and the damaging of tissue by vapor which has been cooled to a temperature which may cause frostbite like symptoms.
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may be configured to receive air, smoke, vapor or other material and analyze the contents of the air, smoke, vapor or other material using one or more sensors 136 to at least one of analyze, classify, compare, validate, refute, and/or catalogue the same. A result of the analysis may be, for example, an identification of at least one of medical, recreational, homeopathic, olfactory elements, spices, other cooking ingredients, ingredients analysis from food products, fuel analysis, pharmaceutical analysis, genetic modification testing analysis, dating, fossil and/or relic analysis and the like. The electronic vaporizing device 100 may utilize, for example, mass spectrometry, PH testing, genetic testing, particle and/or cellular testing, sensor based testing and other diagnostic and wellness testing, either via locally available components or by transmitting data to a remote system for analysis.
In an embodiment, a user may create a custom scent by using the electronic vaporizing device 100 to intake air elements, wherein the electronic vaporizing device 100 (or third-party networked device) analyzes the olfactory elements and/or biological elements within the sample. The electronic vaporizing device 100 and then formulates a replica scent within the electronic vaporizing device 100 (or third-party networked device) that may be accessed by the user instantly or at a later date, with the ability to purchase this custom scent from a networked ecommerce portal.
In another embodiment, the one or more sensors 136 may be configured to sense negative environmental conditions (e.g., adverse weather, smoke, fire, chemicals (e.g., such as CO2 or formaldehyde), adverse pollution, and/or disease outbreaks, and the like). The one or more sensors 136 may comprise one or more of, a biochemical/chemical sensor, a thermal sensor, a radiation sensor, a mechanical sensor, an optical sensor, a mechanical sensor, a magnetic sensor, an electrical sensor, combinations thereof and the like. The biochemical/chemical sensor may be configured to detect one or more biochemical/chemicals causing a negative environmental condition such as, but not limited to, smoke, a vapor, a gas, a liquid, a solid, an odor, combinations thereof, and the like. The biochemical/chemical sensor may comprise one or more of a mass spectrometer, a conducting/nonconducting regions sensor, a SAW sensor, a quartz microbalance sensor, a conductive composite sensor, a chemiresistor, a metal oxide gas sensor, an organic gas sensor, a MOSFET, a piezoelectric device, an infrared sensor, a sintered metal oxide sensor, a Pd-gate MOSFET, a metal FET structure, an electrochemical cell, a conducting polymer sensor, a catalytic gas sensor, an organic semiconducting gas sensor, a solid electrolyte gas sensors, a piezoelectric quartz crystal sensor, and/or combinations thereof.
The thermal sensor may be configured to detect temperature, heat, heat flow, entropy, heat capacity, combinations thereof, and the like. Exemplary thermal sensors include, but are not limited to, thermocouples, such as semiconducting thermocouples, noise thermometry, thermoswitches, thermistors, metal thermoresistors, semiconducting thermoresistors, thermodiodes, thermotransistors, calorimeters, thermometers, indicators, and fiber optics.
The radiation sensor may be configured to detect gamma rays, X-rays, ultra-violet rays, visible, infrared, microwaves and radio waves. Exemplary radiation sensors are suitable for use in the present invention that include, but are not limited to, nuclear radiation microsensors, such as scintillation counters and solid state detectors; ultra-violet, visible and near infrared radiation microsensors, such as photoconductive cells; photodiodes; phototransistors; infrared radiation microsensors, such as photoconductive IR sensors; and pyroelectric sensors.
The optical sensor may be configured to detect visible, near infrared, and infrared waves. The mechanical sensor may be configured to detect displacement, velocity, acceleration, force, torque, pressure, mass, flow, acoustic wavelength, and amplitude. Exemplary mechanical sensors are suitable for use in the present invention and include, but are not limited to, displacement microsensors, capacitive and inductive displacement sensors, optical displacement sensors, ultrasonic displacement sensors, pyroelectric, velocity and flow microsensors, transistor flow microsensors, acceleration microsensors, piezoresistive microaccelerometers, force, pressure and strain microsensors, and piezoelectric crystal sensors. The magnetic sensor may be configured to detect magnetic field, flux, magnetic moment, magnetization, and magnetic permeability. The electrical sensor may be configured to detect charge, current, voltage, resistance, conductance, capacitance, inductance, dielectric permittivity, polarization and frequency.
Upon sensing a negative environmental condition, the one or more sensors 136 may provide data to the processor 102 to determine the nature of the negative environmental condition and to generate/transmit one or more alerts based on the negative environmental condition. The one or more alerts may be deployed to the electronic vaporizing device 100 user's wireless device and/or synced accounts. For example, the network device access device 106 may be used to transmit the one or more alerts directly (e.g., via Bluetooth®) to a user's smartphone to provide information to the user. In another embodiment, the network access device 106 may be used to transmit sensed information and/or the one or more alerts to a remote server for use in syncing one or more other devices used by the user (e.g., other vapor devices, other electronic devices (smartphones, tablets, laptops, etc.). In another embodiment, the one or more alerts may be provided to the user of the electronic vaporizing device 100 via vibrations, audio, colors, and the like deployed from the mask, for example through the input/output device 112. For example, the input/output device 112 may comprise a small vibrating motor to alert the user to one or more sensed conditions via tactile sensation. In another example, the input/output device 112 may comprise one or more LED's of various colors to provide visual information to the user. In another example, the input/output device 112 may comprise one or more speakers that may provide audio information to the user. For example, various patterns of beeps, sounds, and/or voice recordings may be utilized to provide the audio information to the user. In another example, the input/output device 112 may comprise an LCD screen/touchscreen that provides a summary and/or detailed information regarding the negative environmental condition and/or the one or more alerts.
In another embodiment, upon sensing a negative environmental condition, the one or more sensors 136 may provide data to the processor 102 to determine the nature of the negative environmental condition and to provide a recommendation for mitigating and/or to actively mitigate the negative environmental condition. Mitigating the negative environmental conditions may comprise, for example, applying a filtration system, a fan, a fire suppression system, engaging a HVAC system, and/or one or more vaporizable and/or non-vaporizable materials. The processor 102 may access a database stored in the memory device 104 to make such a determination or the network device 106 may be used to request information from a server to verify the sensor findings. In an embodiment, the server may provide an analysis service to the electronic vaporizing device 100. For example, the server may analyze data sent by the electronic vaporizing device 100 based on a reading from the one or more sensors 136. The server may determine and transmit one or more recommendations to the electronic vaporizing device 100 to mitigate the sensed negative environmental condition. The electronic vaporizing device 100 may use the one or more recommendations to activate a filtration system, a fan, a fire suppression system engaging a HVAC system, and/or to vaporize one or more vaporizable or non-vaporizable materials to assist in countering effects from the negative environmental condition.
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may comprise a global positioning system (GPS) unit 118. The GPS unit 118 may detect a current location of the device 100. In some embodiments, a user may request access to one or more services that rely on a current location of the user. For example, the processor 102 may receive location data from the GPS 118, convert it to usable data, and transmit the usable data to the one or more services via the network access device 106. The GPS unit 118 may receive position information from a constellation of satellites operated by the U.S. Department of Defense. Alternately, the GPS unit 118 may be a GLONASS receiver operated by the Russian Federation Ministry of Defense, or any other positioning device capable of providing accurate location information (for example, LORAN, inertial navigation, and the like). The GPS unit 118 may contain additional logic, either software, hardware or both to receive the Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) signals, operated by the Federal Aviation Administration, to correct dithering errors and provide the most accurate location possible. Overall accuracy of the positioning equipment subsystem containing WAAS is generally in the two-meter range.
In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may comprise a card reader 138. The card reader 138 may include the functionality to process magnetic strip cards (contactless cards) and/or smart chip cards. Smart chip cards may be processed according to the Europay, MasterCard®, Visa® (EMV) protocol. In an embodiment, the card reader 138 may process cards using Near Field Communication (NFC) hardware and the NFC protocol. The electronic vaporizing device 100 may utilize the card reader 138 to process one or more payment transactions. For example, a card may be swiped (or inserted in the case of a smart chip card) at the card reader 138. The card reader 138 in conjunction with the processor 102, the network access device 106, the input/output device 112, and/or combinations thereof, sends card data of the card to a remote computing device via the processor 102 and the network access device 106. The remote computing device may receive card data from the card reader 138 and process the transaction according to one or more card processing systems. For example, a payment request may be sent electronically from the electronic vaporizing device 100 to a credit card processor. The payment request may comprise, for example, an identifier associated with the electronic vaporizing device 100, a merchant identifier, a vendor name, a unique transaction code, a transaction cost, combinations thereof, and the like. The credit card processor routes the payment request to a card network, e.g., Visa® or MasterCard®, which in turn routes the payment request to the card issuer, e.g., a bank. Assuming the card issuer approves the transaction, the approval is then routed back to the electronic vaporizing device 100. In an embodiment, some or all portions of the transaction process nay be encrypted using known encryption techniques.
The card reader 138 may have a frame 166 that is configured to receive card insertions or card swipes. The frame 166 may include a top surface 168, side surfaces 170, and a bottom surface 172. The side surfaces 170 may include one or more openings that receive cards through, respectively, one or more card interfaces. The one or more card interfaces may include circuitry, e.g., chip card reader circuitry 174 or magnetic strip reader circuitry 176 configured to read data stored on the card.
The one or more card interfaces of the card reader 138 may include both a chip card reader interface 156 and a magnetic strip reader interface 164. In some embodiments, the interfaces are on opposite sides of the card reader 138, as shown in
In another embodiment, the interfaces are on the same side of the card reader 138 and share an opening for receiving smart chip cards and magnetic strip cards.
The payment transaction may be guided and/or informed by one or more user interfaces presented on a display of the electronic vaporizing device 100 via the input/output device 112. Personal identification information (such as a PIN, password, security code, etc.) and payment transaction data (amount, credit limits, device identification, merchant identifier, unique transaction code, etc.) may be provided by a user associated with the payment object or card and/or by the electronic vaporizing device processor and transmitted to the remote computing system for processing thereof.
In another embodiment, the payment transaction may be guided and/or informed by one or more user interfaces presented on a display of a supplemental device in communication with the electronic vaporizing device 100, such as a smart phone or other mobile or personal computing device. In an embodiment, the electronic vaporizing device 100 may couple with the supplemental device to make use of one or more features available on the supplemental device to aid in processing the payment transaction (e.g., communications, processing, storage, and the like).
The vaporizer 200 may comprise or be coupled to one or more containers 202 containing a vaporizable material, for example a fluid. For example, coupling between the vaporizer 200 and the one or more containers 202 may be via a wick 204, a valve, or by some other coupling/engagement structure. Coupling may operate independently of gravity, such as by capillary action or pressure drop through a valve. The vaporizer 200 may be configured to vaporize the vaporizable material from the one or more containers 202 at controlled rates in response to mechanical input from a component of the electronic vaporizing device 100, and/or in response to control signals from the processor 102 or another component. Vaporizable material (e.g., fluid) may be supplied by one or more replaceable cartridges 206. In an embodiment, the vaporizable material may comprise aromatics and/or aromatic elements. In an embodiment, the aromatic elements may be medicinal, recreational, therapeutic, and/or wellness related. The aromatic element may include, but is not limited to, at least one of lavender or other floral aromatic eLiquids, mint, menthol, herbal, extracts, soil or geologic, plant based, name brand perfumes, custom mixed perfume formulated inside the electronic vaporizing device 100 and aromas constructed to replicate the smell of different geographic places, conditions, and/or occurrences. For example, the smell of places may include specific or general sports venues, well known travel destinations, the mix of one's own personal space or home. The smell of conditions may include, for example, the smell of a pet, a baby, a season, a general environment (e.g., a forest), a new car, a sexual nature (e.g., musk, pheromones, etc.). The one or more replaceable cartridges 206 may contain the vaporizable material. If the vaporizable material is liquid, the cartridge may comprise the wick 204 to aid in transporting the liquid to a mixing chamber 208. In the alternative, some other transport mode may be used. Each of the one or more replaceable cartridges 206 may be configured to fit inside and engage removably with a receptacle (such as the container 202 and/or a secondary container) of the electronic vaporizing device 100. In an alternative, or in addition, one or more fluid containers 210 may be fixed in the electronic vaporizing device 100 and configured to be refillable. In an embodiment, one or more materials may be vaporized at a single time by the vaporizer 200. For example, some material may be vaporized and drawn through an exhaust port 212 and/or some material may be vaporized and exhausted via a smoke simulator outlet (not shown).
In operation, a heating element 214 may vaporize or nebulize the vaporizable material in the mixing chamber 208, producing an inhalable vapor/mist that may be expelled via the exhaust port 212. In an embodiment, the heating element 214 may comprise a heater coupled to the wick (or a heated wick) 204 operatively coupled to (for example, in fluid communication with) the mixing chamber 210. The heating element 214 may comprise a nickel-chromium wire or the like, with a temperature sensor (not shown) such as a thermistor or thermocouple. Within definable limits, by controlling power to the wick 204, a rate of vaporization may be independently controlled. Multiplexers 208 and 216 may receive power from a vaporizer power supply 218 and/or from a power supply 120 built into the electronic vaporizing device 100. At a minimum, control may be provided between no power (off state) and one or more powered states. Other control mechanisms may also be suitable.
In another embodiment, the vaporizer 200 may comprise a piezoelectric dispersing element 240. In some embodiments, the piezoelectric dispersing element 240 may be charged by a battery, and may be driven by a processor on a circuit board. The circuit board may be produced using a polyimide such as Kapton®, or other suitable material. The piezoelectric dispersing element 240 may comprise a thin metal disc which causes dispersion of the fluid fed into the dispersing element via the wick or other soaked piece of organic material through vibration. Once in contact with the piezoelectric dispersing element 240, the vaporizable material (e.g., fluid) may be vaporized (e.g., turned into vapor or mist) and the vapor may be dispersed via a system pump and/or a sucking action of the user. In some embodiments, the piezoelectric dispersing element 240 may cause dispersion of the vaporizable material by producing ultrasonic vibrations. An electric field applied to a piezoelectric material within the piezoelectric dispersing element 240 may cause ultrasonic expansion and contraction of the piezoelectric material, resulting in ultrasonic vibrations to the disc. The ultrasonic vibrations may cause the vaporizable material to disperse, thus forming a vapor or mist from the vaporizable material.
In an embodiment, the vaporizer 200 may be configured to permit a user to select between using the heating element 214 or the piezoelectric dispersing element 240. In another embodiment, the vaporizer 200 may be configured to permit a user to utilize both the heating element 214 and the piezoelectric dispersing element 240.
In some embodiments, the connection between a power supply and the piezoelectric dispersing element 240 may be facilitated using one or more conductive coils. The conductive coils may provide an ultrasonic power input to the piezoelectric dispersing element 240. For example, the signal carried by the coil may have a frequency of approximately 107.8 kHz. In some embodiments, the piezoelectric dispersing element 240 may comprise a piezoelectric dispersing element that may receive the ultrasonic signal transmitted from the power supply through the coils, and may cause vaporization of the vaporizable liquid by producing ultrasonic vibrations. An ultrasonic electric field applied to a piezoelectric material within the piezoelectric dispersing element 240 causes ultrasonic expansion and contraction of the piezoelectric material, resulting in ultrasonic vibrations according to the frequency of the signal. The vaporizable liquid may be vibrated by the ultrasonic energy produced by the piezoelectric dispersing element, thus causing dispersal and/or atomization of the liquid.
In an embodiment, the vaporizer 200 may comprise a card reader 218. The card reader 218 may include the functionality to process magnetic strip cards and/or smart chip cards. Smart chip cards may be processed according to the Europay, MasterCard®, Visa® (EMV) protocol. In an embodiment, the card reader 218 may process cards using Near Field Communication (NFC) hardware and the NFC protocol. The vaporizer 200 may utilize the card reader 218 to process one or more payment transactions. For example, a card may be swiped (or inserted in the case of a smart chip card) at the card reader 218. The card reader 218 may send card data of the card to a remote computing device. The remote computing device may receive card data from the card reader 218 and process the transaction according to one or more card processing systems. For example, a payment request may be sent electronically from the vaporizer 200 to a credit card processor. The payment request may comprise, for example, an identifier associated with the vaporizer 200, a merchant identifier, a vendor name, a unique transaction code, a transaction cost, combinations thereof, and the like. The credit card processor routes the payment request to a card network, e.g., Visa® or MasterCard®, which in turn routes the payment request to the card issuer, e.g., a bank. Assuming the card issuer approves the transaction, the approval is then routed back to the vaporizer 200. The card reader 218 may comprise the functionality and components as illustrated and described with respect to
In an embodiment, the cooling element 602 may be a coil of any suitable length and may reside proximate to the inhalation point of the vapor (e.g., the exhaust port 212). The temperature of the air is reduced as it travels through the cooling element 602. In an embodiment, the cooling element 602 may comprise any structure that accomplishes a cooling effect. For example, the cooling element 602 may be replaced with a screen with a mesh or grid-like structure, a conical structure, and/or a series of cooling airlocks, either stationary or opening, in a periscopic/telescopic manner. The cooling element 602 may be any shape and/or may take multiple forms capable of cooling heated air, which passes through its space.
In an embodiment, the cooling element 602 may be any suitable cooling system for use in a vapor device. For example, a fan, a heat sink, a liquid cooling system, a chemical cooling system, combinations thereof, and the like. In an embodiment, the cooling element 602 may comprise a liquid cooling system whereby a fluid (e.g., water, coolant) passes through pipes in the vaporizer 600. As this fluid passes around the cooling element 602, the fluid absorbs heat, cooling the air in the cooling element 602. After the fluid absorbs the heat, the fluid may pass through a heat exchanger which transfers the heat from the fluid to air blowing through the heat exchanger. By way of further example, the cooling element 602 may comprise a chemical cooling system that utilizes an endothermic reaction. An example of an endothermic reaction is dissolving ammonium nitrate in water. Such endothermic process is used in instant cold packs. These cold packs have a strong outer plastic layer that holds a bag of water and a chemical, or mixture of chemicals, that result in an endothermic reaction when dissolved in water. When the cold pack is squeezed, the inner bag of water breaks and the water mixes with the chemicals. The cold pack starts to cool as soon as the inner bag is broken, and stays cold for over an hour. Many instant cold packs contain ammonium nitrate. When ammonium nitrate is dissolved in water, it splits into positive ammonium ions and negative nitrate ions. In the process of dissolving, the water molecules contribute energy, and as a result, the water cools down. Thus, the vaporizer 600 may comprise a chamber for receiving the cooling element 602 in the form of a “cold pack.” The cold pack may be activated prior to insertion into the vaporizer 600 or may be activated after insertion through use of a button/switch and the like to mechanically activate the cold pack inside the vaporizer 600.
In an embodiment, the cooling element 602 may be selectively moved within the vaporizer 600 to control the temperature of the air mixing with vapor. For example, the cooling element 602 may be moved closer to the exhaust port 212 or further from the exhaust port 212 to regulate temperature. In another embodiment, insulation may be incorporated as needed to maintain the integrity of heating and cooling, as well as absorbing any unwanted condensation due to internal or external conditions, or a combination thereof. The insulation may also be selectively moved within the vaporizer 600 to control the temperature of the air mixing with vapor. For example, the insulation may be moved to cover a portion, none, or all of the cooling element 602 to regulate temperature.
In an embodiment, the filtration element 802 and/or the filtration element 810 may comprise cotton, polymer, wool, satin, meta materials and the like. The filtration element 802 and/or the filtration element 810 may comprise a filter material that at least one airborne particle and/or undesired gas by a mechanical mechanism, an electrical mechanism, and/or a chemical mechanism. The filter material may comprise one or more pieces of, a filter fabric that may filter out one or more airborne particles and/or gasses. The filter fabric may be a woven and/or non-woven material. The filter fabric may be made from natural fibers (e.g., cotton, wool, etc.) and/or from synthetic fibers (e.g., polyester, nylon, polypropylene, etc.). The thickness of the filter fabric may be varied depending on the desired filter efficiencies and/or the region of the apparel where the filter fabric is to be used. The filter fabric may be designed to filter airborne particles and/or gasses by mechanical mechanisms (e.g., weave density), by electrical mechanisms (e.g., charged fibers, charged metals, etc.), and/or by chemical mechanisms (e.g., absorptive charcoal particles, adsorptive materials, etc.). In as embodiment, the filter material may comprise electrically charged fibers such as, but not limited to, Filtrete® by 3M. In another embodiment, the filter material may comprise a high-density material similar to material used for medical masks which are used by medical personnel in doctors' offices, hospitals, and the like. In an embodiment, the filter material may be treated with an anti-bacterial solution and/or otherwise made from anti-bacterial materials. In another embodiment, the filtration element 802 and/or the filtration element 810 may comprise electrostatic plates, ultraviolet light, a HEPA filter, combinations thereof, and the like.
In an embodiment, illustrated in
The detachable vaporizer 1102 may comprise a vaporize button 1105 that may be configured to initiate a process of vaporizing a vaporizable material contained within the detachable vaporizer 1102, resulting in vapor exiting an exhaust port 1106 for inhalation by a user. The exhaust port 1106 may be hingedly attached to the detachable vaporizer 1102 to enable the exhaust port 1106 to be stored within a housing of the detachable vaporizer 1102. The exhaust port may also be entirely detachable or telescoping. The detachable vaporizer 1102 may comprise an exhaust port release button 1107 to disengage the exhaust port 1106 when stored and locked within the housing of the detachable vaporizer 1102.
In operation, a heating element 1112 may vaporize or nebulize the vaporizable material in the mixing chamber 1109, producing an inhalable vapor/mist that may be expelled via the exhaust port 1106. In an embodiment, the heating element 1112 may be coupled to the wick (or a heated wick) 1111 and operatively coupled to (for example, in fluid communication with) the mixing chamber 1109. The heating element 1112 may comprise a nickel-chromium wire or the like, with a temperature sensor (not shown) such as a thermistor or thermocouple. Within definable limits, by controlling power to the wick 1111, a rate of vaporization may be independently controlled. The heating element 1112 may receive power through the input/output port 1103 and the input/output port 1104. For example, the heating element 1112 may receive power from a power supply built into the smartphone 1101 and/or a power supply 1113. The power supply 1113 may comprise a lithium-ion battery (including thin film lithium ion batteries), a lithium ion polymer battery, a nickel-cadmium battery, a nickel metal hydride battery, a lead-acid battery, combinations thereof, and the like.
The power supply 1113 may be configured for one or more of, wireless charging (e.g., inductive and/or conductive), supplying a constant DC or pulsed DC power source to a battery being charged, a motion-powered charger, a pulse charger, a solar charger, a wind charger, a Universal Serial Bus (USB) charger, and combinations thereof. The power supply 1113 may be coupled to the power output port 1104a to provide power to a device coupled to the power output port 1104a.
The heating element 1112 may vaporize or nebulize the vaporizable material in the mixing chamber 1109. The detachable vaporizer 1102 may exchange data signals and/or power with the smartphone 1101 through the input/output port 1103 and the input/output port 1104 for control of the detachable vaporizer 1102.
In an embodiment, the detachable vaporizer 1102 may comprise a card reader 1114. The card reader 1114 may include the functionality to process magnetic strip cards and/or smart chip cards. Smart chip cards may be processed according to the Europay, MasterCard®, Visa® (EMV) protocol. In an embodiment, the card reader 1114 may process cards using Near Field Communication (NFC) hardware and the NFC protocol. The detachable vaporizer 1102 may utilize the card reader 1114 to process one or more payment transactions. For example, a card may be swiped (or inserted in the case of a smart chip card) at the card reader 1114. The card reader 1114 may send card data of the card to the smartphone 1101, which can then send the card data to a remote computing device. The remote computing device may receive card data and process the transaction according to one or more card processing systems. For example, a payment request may be sent electronically to a credit card processor. The payment request may comprise, for example, an identifier associated with the hybrid electronic communication vapor device 1100, a merchant identifier, a vendor name, a unique transaction code, a transaction cost, combinations thereof, and the like. The credit card processor routes the payment request to a card network, e.g., Visa® or MasterCard®, which in turn routes the payment request to the card issuer, e.g., a bank. Assuming the card issuer approves the transaction, the approval is then routed back to the hybrid electronic communication vapor device 1100.
In one embodiment of the disclosure, a system may be configured to provide services such as network-related services and/or financial transaction services to a user device.
The network and system may comprise a user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c in communication with a computing device 1204 such as a server, for example. The computing device 1204 may be disposed locally or remotely relative to the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c. As an example, the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c and the computing device 1204 may be in communication via a private and/or public network 1220 such as the Internet or a local area network. Other forms of communications may be used such as wired and wireless telecommunication channels, for example. In another embodiment, the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c may communicate directly without the use of the network 1220 (for example, via Bluetooth®, infrared, and the like).
In an embodiment, the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c may be an electronic device such as an electronic vapor device (e.g., vape-bot, micro-vapor device, vapor pipe, e-cigarette, hybrid handset and vapor device), a smartphone, a smart watch, a computer, a smartphone, a laptop, a tablet, a set top box, a display device, or other device capable of communicating with the computing device 1204. As an example, the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c may comprise a communication element 1206 for providing an interface to a user to interact with the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c and/or the computing device 1204. The communication element 1206 may be any interface for presenting and/or receiving information to/from the user, such as user feedback. An example interface may be communication interface such as a web browser (e.g., Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Safari, or the like). Other software, hardware, and/or interfaces may be used to provide communication between the user and one or more of the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c and the computing device 1204. In an embodiment, the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c may have at least one similar interface quality such as a symbol, a voice activation protocol, a graphical coherence, a startup sequence continuity element of sound, light, vibration or symbol. In an embodiment, the interface may comprise at least one of lighted signal lights, gauges, boxes, forms, words, video, audio scrolling, user selection systems, vibrations, check marks, avatars, matrix', visual images, graphic designs, lists, active calibrations or calculations, 2D interactive fractal designs, 3D fractal designs, 2D and/or 3D representations of vapor devices and other interface system functions.
As an example, the communication element 1206 may request or query various files from a local source and/or a remote source. As a further example, the communication element 1206 may transmit data to a local or remote device such as the computing device 1204.
In an embodiment, the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c may be associated with a user identifier or device identifier 1208a, 1208b, and/or 1208c. As an example, the device identifier 1208a, 1208b, and/or 1208c may be any identifier, token, character, string, or the like, for differentiating one user or user device (e.g., user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c) from another user or user device. In a further embodiment, the device identifier 1208a, 1208b, and/or 1208c may identify a user or user device as belonging to a particular class of users or user devices. As a further example, the device identifier 1208a, 1208b, and/or 1208c may comprise information relating to the user device such as a manufacturer, a model or type of device, a service provider associated with the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c, a state of the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c, a locator, and/or a label or classifier. Other information may be represented by the device identifier 1208a, 1208b, and/or 1208c.
In an embodiment, the device identifier 1208a, 1208b, and/or 1208c may comprise an address element 1210 and a service element 1212. In an embodiment, the address element 1210 may comprise or provide an internet protocol address, a network address, a media access control (MAC) address, an Internet address, or the like. As an example, the address element 1210 may be relied upon to establish a communication session between the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c and the computing device 1204 or other devices and/or networks. As a further example, the address element 1210 may be used as an identifier or locator of the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c. In an embodiment, the address element 1210 may be persistent for a particular network.
In an embodiment, the service element 1212 may comprise an identification of a service provider associated with the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c and/or with the class of user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c. The class of the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c may be related to a type of device, capability of device, type of service being provided, and/or a level of service. As an example, the service element 1212 may comprise information relating to or provided by a communication service provider (e.g., Internet service provider) that is providing or enabling data flow such as communication services to and/or between the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c. As a further example, the service element 1212 may comprise information relating to a preferred service provider for one or more particular services relating to the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c. In an embodiment, the address element 1210 may be used to identify or retrieve data from the service element 1212, or vice versa. As a further example, one or more of the address element 1210 and the service element 1212 may be stored remotely from the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c and retrieved by one or more devices such as the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c and the computing device 1204. Other information may be represented by the service element 1212.
In an embodiment, the computing device 1204 may be a server for communicating with the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c. As an example, the computing device 1204 may communicate with the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c for providing data and/or services. As an example, the computing device 1204 may provide services such as data sharing, data syncing, network (e.g., Internet) connectivity, network printing, media management (e.g., media server), content services, streaming services, broadband services, or other network-related services. In an embodiment, the computing device 1204 may allow the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c to interact with remote resources such as data, devices, and files. As an example, the computing device may be configured as (or disposed at) a central location, which may receive content (e.g., data) from multiple sources, for example, user devices 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c. The computing device 1204 may combine the content from the multiple sources and may distribute the content to user (e.g., subscriber) locations via a distribution system
In an embodiment, one or more network devices 1216 may be in communication with a network such as network 1220. As an example, one or more of the network devices 1216 may facilitate the connection of a device, such as user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c, to the network 1220. As a further example, one or more of the network devices 1216 may be configured as a wireless access point (WAP). In an embodiment, one or more network devices 1216 may be configured to allow one or more wireless devices to connect to a wired and/or wireless network using Wi-Fi, Bluetooth or any desired method or standard.
In an embodiment, the network devices 1216 may be configured as a local area network (LAN). As an example, one or more network devices 1216 may comprise a dual band wireless access point. As an example, the network devices 1216 may be configured with a first service set identifier (SSID) (e.g., associated with a user network or private network) to function as a local network for a particular user or users. As a further example, the network devices 1216 may be configured with a second service set identifier (SSID) (e.g., associated with a public/community network or a hidden network) to function as a secondary network or redundant network for connected communication devices.
In an embodiment, one or more network devices 1216 may comprise an identifier 1218. As an example, one or more identifiers may be or relate to an Internet Protocol (IP) Address IPV4/IPV6 or a media access control address (MAC address) or the like. As a further example, one or more identifiers 1218 may be a unique identifier for facilitating communications on the physical network segment. In an embodiment, each of the network devices 1216 may comprise a distinct identifier 1218. As an example, the identifier 1218 may be associated with a physical location of the network devices 1216.
In an embodiment, the computing device 1204 may manage the communication between the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c and a database 1214 for sending and receiving data therebetween. As an example, the database 1214 may store a plurality of files (e.g., web pages), user identifiers or records, or other information. In one embodiment, the database 1214 may store user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c usage information (including chronological usage), type of vaporizable and/or non-vaporizable material used, frequency of usage, location of usage, recommendations, communications (e.g., text messages, advertisements, photo messages), simultaneous use of multiple devices, and the like). The database 1214 may collect and store data to support cohesive use, wherein cohesive use is indicative of the use of a first electronic vapor devices and then a second electronic vapor device is synced chronologically and logically to provide the proper specific properties and amount of vapor based upon a designed usage cycle. As a further example, the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c may request and/or retrieve a file from the database 1214. The user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c may thus sync locally stored data with more current data available from the database 1214. Such syncing may be set to occur automatically on a set time schedule, on demand, and/or in real-time. The computing device 1204 may be configured to control syncing functionality. For example, a user may select one or more of the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c to never by synced, to be the master data source for syncing, and the like. Such functionality may be configured to be controlled by a master user and any other user authorized by the master user or agreement.
In an embodiment, the database 1214 may store information relating to the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c such as the address element 1210, and/or the service element 1212. As an example, the computing device 1204 may obtain the device identifier 1208a, 1208b, and/or 1208c from the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c and retrieve information from the database 1214 such as the address element 1210 and/or the service elements 1212. As a further example, the computing device 1204 may obtain the address element 1210 from the user device 1202a, 1202b, and/or 1202c and may retrieve the service element 1212 from the database 1214, or vice versa. Any information may be stored in and retrieved from the database 1214. The database 1214 may be disposed remotely from the computing device 1204 and accessed via direct or indirect connection. The database 1214 may be integrated with the computing device 1204 or some other device or system.
In an embodiment, the computing device 1204 may be configured to communicate with one or more credit card processing systems. In an embodiment, the computing device 1204 may be a credit card processing system. The computing device 1204 can receive payment requests from one or more of the user device 1202a, the user device 1202b, and/or the user device 1202c. The computing device 1204 may process or cause the processing of the payment request and return a result of the payment request to one or more of the user device 1202a, the user device 1202b, and/or the user device 1202c.
In an embodiment data generated, gathered, created, etc., by one or more of the vapor device 1302, the vapor device 1304, the vapor device 1306, the vapor device 1314, and/or the electronic communication device 1308 may be uploaded to and/or downloaded from a central server 1310 via a network 1312, such as the Internet. Such uploading and/or downloading may be performed via any form of communication including wired and/or wireless. In an embodiment, the vapor device 1302, the vapor device 1304, the vapor device 1306, the vapor device 1314, and/or the electronic communication device 1308 may be configured to communicate via cellular communication, Wi-Fi communication, Bluetooth® communication, satellite communication, and the like. The central server 1310 may store uploaded data and associate the uploaded data with a user and/or device that uploaded the data. The central server 1310 may access unified account and tracking information to determine devices that are associated with each other, for example devices that are owned/used by the same user. The central server 1310 may utilize the unified account and tracking information to determine which of the vapor device 1302, the vapor device 1304, the vapor device 1306, the vapor device 1314, and/or the electronic communication device 1308, if any, should receive data uploaded to the central server 1310.
For example, the vapor device 1302 may be configured to upload usage information related to vaporizable material consumed and the electronic communication device 1308 may be configured to upload location information related to location of the vapor device 1302. The central server 1310 may receive both the usage information and the location information, access the unified account and tracking information to determine that both the vapor device 1302 and the electronic communication device 1308 are associated with the same user. The central server 1310 may thus correlate the user's location along with the type, amount, and/or timing of usage of the vaporizable material. The central server 1310 may further determine which of the other devices are permitted to receive such information and transmit the information based on the determined permissions. In an embodiment, the central server 1310 may transmit the correlated information to the electronic communication device 1308 which may then subsequently use the correlated information to recommend a specific type of vaporizable material to the user when the user is located in the same geographic position indicated by the location information.
In another embodiment, the central server 1310 may provide one or more social networking services for users of the vapor device 1302, the vapor device 1304, the vapor device 1306, and/or the electronic communication device 1308. Such social networking services include, but are not limited to, messaging (e.g., text, image, and/or video), mixture sharing, product recommendations, location sharing, product ordering, and the like.
In an embodiment, illustrated in
A system, method, and device deployment of an electronic hybrid electronic vaporizing/transaction processing device disclosed herein and as illustrated in
In an embodiment, illustrated in
The method may comprise the steps 1510 of receiving a command to activate a transaction processing mode, and step 1520 of activating the payment object reader component in response to the received command to activate the transaction processing mode.
The method may comprise the step 1530 of processing a payment object by the payment object reader component and reading payment object information from the payment object by the payment object reader component.
The method may also comprise the step 1540 of transmitting at least a portion of the payment object information via at least one network to a remote computing system for further processing thereof. In one embodiment, at least one of a plurality of personal identification data of a user associated with a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, a plurality of payment transaction data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object to be received by the payment object reader component, and combinations thereof may be received from an associated user via at least one input/output interface, and transmitting at least a portion of the personal identification data, payment transaction data, and combinations thereof via at least one network to the remote computing system for further processing thereof.
The method may also comprise the step 1550 of receiving from the remote computing system, via at least one network, at least one of authorization data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object, status data associated with a payment transaction to be processed using a payment object, and combinations thereof. The method may further comprise the step 1560 of processing a payment transaction using the payment object in accordance with the authorization data.
The electronic vaporizing device may be suitably selected from the group of electronic vaporizing devices consisting of an electronic cigarette, an electronic cigar, an electronic vapor device, an electronic vapor device integrated with an electronic communication device, a robotic vapor device, and/or a micro-size electronic vapor device.
In view of the exemplary systems described herein, methodologies that may be implemented in accordance with the disclosed subject matter have been described with reference to several flow diagrams. While for purposes of simplicity of explanation, the methodologies are shown and described as a series of blocks, it is to be understood and appreciated that the claimed subject matter is not limited by the order of the blocks, as some blocks may occur in different orders and/or concurrently with other blocks from what is depicted and described herein. Moreover, not all illustrated blocks may be required to implement the methodologies described herein. Additionally, it should be further appreciated that the methodologies disclosed herein are capable of being stored on an article of manufacture to facilitate transporting and transferring such methodologies to computers.
Those of ordinary skill in the relevant art would further appreciate that the various illustrative logical blocks, modules, circuits, and algorithm steps described in connection with the embodiments disclosed herein may be implemented as electronic hardware, computer software, or combinations of both. To clearly illustrate this interchangeability of hardware and software, various illustrative components, blocks, modules, circuits, and steps have been described above generally in terms of their functionality. Whether such functionality is implemented as hardware or software depends upon the particular application and design constraints imposed on the overall system. Skilled artisans may implement the described functionality in varying ways for each particular application, but such implementation decisions should not be interpreted as causing a departure from the scope of the present disclosure.
As used in this application, the terms “component,” “module,” “system,” and the like are intended to refer to a computer-related entity, either hardware, a combination of hardware and software, software, or software in execution. For example, a component may be, but is not limited to being, a process running on a processor, a processor, an object, an executable, a thread of execution, a program, and/or a computer. By way of illustration, both an application running on a server and the server may be a component. One or more components may reside within a process and/or thread of execution and a component may be localized on one computer and/or distributed between two or more computers.
As used herein, a “vapor” includes mixtures of a carrier gas or gaseous mixture (for example, air) with any one or more of a dissolved gas, suspended solid particles, or suspended liquid droplets, wherein a substantial fraction of the particles or droplets if present are characterized by an average diameter of not greater than three microns. As used herein, an “aerosol” has the same meaning as “vapor,” except for requiring the presence of at least one of particles or droplets. A substantial fraction means 10% or greater; however, it should be appreciated that higher fractions of small (<3 micron) particles or droplets may be desirable, up to and including 100%. It should further be appreciated that, to simulate smoke, average particle or droplet size may be less than three microns, for example, may be less than one micron with particles or droplets distributed in the range of 0.01 to 1 micron. A vaporizer may include any device or assembly that produces a vapor or aerosol from a carrier gas or gaseous mixture and at least one vaporizable material. An aerosolizer is a species of vaporizer, and as such is included in the meaning of vaporizer as used herein, except where specifically disclaimed.
Various embodiments presented in terms of systems may comprise a number of components, modules, and the like. It is to be understood and appreciated that the various systems may include additional components, modules, etc. and/or may not include all of the components, modules, etc. discussed in connection with the figures. A combination of these approaches may also be used.
In addition, the various illustrative logical blocks, modules, and circuits described in connection with certain embodiments disclosed herein may be implemented or performed with a general purpose processor, a digital signal processor (DSP), an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), a field programmable gate array (FPGA) or other programmable logic device, discrete gate or transistor logic, discrete hardware components, or any combination thereof designed to perform the functions described herein. A general-purpose processor may be a microprocessor, but in the alternative, the processor may be any conventional processor, controller, microcontroller, system-on-a-chip, or state machine. A processor may also be implemented as a combination of computing devices, e.g., a combination of a DSP and a microprocessor, a plurality of microprocessors, one or more microprocessors in conjunction with a DSP core, or any other such configuration.
Operational embodiments disclosed herein may be embodied directly in hardware, in a software module executed by a processor, or in a combination of the two. A software module may reside in RAM memory, flash memory, ROM memory, EPROM memory, EEPROM memory, registers, hard disk, a removable disk, a CD-ROM, a DVD disk, or any other form of storage medium known in the art. An exemplary storage medium is coupled to the processor such the processor may read information from, and write information to, the storage medium. In the alternative, the storage medium may be integral to the processor. The processor and the storage medium may reside in an ASIC or may reside as discrete components in another device.
Furthermore, the one or more versions may be implemented as a method, apparatus, or article of manufacture using standard programming and/or engineering techniques to produce software, firmware, hardware, or any combination thereof to control a computer to implement the disclosed embodiments. Non-transitory computer readable media may include but are not limited to magnetic storage devices (e.g., hard disk, floppy disk, magnetic strips), optical disks (e.g., compact disk (CD), digital versatile disk (DVD)), smart cards, and flash memory devices (e.g., card, stick). Those skilled in the art will recognize many modifications may be made to this configuration without departing from the scope of the disclosed embodiments.
The previous description of the disclosed embodiments is provided to enable any person skilled in the art to make or use the present disclosure. Various modifications to these embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the generic principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments without departing from the spirit or scope of the disclosure. Thus, the present disclosure is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown herein but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features disclosed herein.
Unless otherwise expressly stated, it is in no way intended that any method set forth herein be construed as requiring that its steps be performed in a specific order. Accordingly, where a method claim does not actually recite an order to be followed by its steps or it is not otherwise specifically stated in the claims or descriptions that the steps are to be limited to a specific order, it is in no way intended that an order be inferred, in any respect. This holds for any possible non-express basis for interpretation, including: matters of logic with respect to arrangement of steps or operational flow; plain meaning derived from grammatical organization or punctuation; the number or type of embodiments described in the specification.
It will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art that various modifications and variations may be made without departing from the scope or spirit. Other embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit being indicated by the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/327,116 filed on Apr. 25, 2016, entitled “Electronic Vapor Device Utilizing a Multifunctional Transaction Processing Unit”, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference as though set forth in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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62327116 | Apr 2016 | US |