The present invention relates to a postal service infrastructure that initiates communication with one or more meters.
A high volume postal customer may use a meter which incorporates a Postal Security Device (PSD) to secure the proof of payment of postal indicia. In an exemplary application, indicia may be applied to mailing items that identifies the value of the postage applied and other information. A customer may purchase postage and the purchased value may be stored in the PSD. As the postage indicia is applied to items, the value applied may be deducted from the stored value. Once postage indicia is applied, the item may then be dropped into the collection stream of the particular postal system and subsequently processed for delivery.
In various countries, for example the United States, postal meters may communicate with a remote data center to exchange information related to customer usage and funding for billing purposes and to have postage funds replenished. In the United States, a postal customer generally may add postage to the meter in two ways. The first is to physically take the meter to the postal authority, generally referred to herein as “the post,” where postage is purchased and added to the PSD. The second is to remotely add postage over a network, for example, a telephone line with a modem, or the Internet, where the added postage is deducted from an account usually maintained with a meter vendor or a trusted third party administrator, for example, a financial institution. In this case, customer or postal authority access to a meter's accounting system or memory system generally is not possible. Meters with this type of communication capability generally communicate with a data center in a postal service infrastructure where the meter initiates communication.
It would be advantageous for the data center to have the ability to initiate communication with one or meters that are part of the infrastructure.
A system for providing franking services includes one or more networks, one or more postage meters, and a postal infrastructure data center connected to the one or more meters through the one or more networks, wherein the postal infrastructure data center establishes communication with the one or more meters as required.
The foregoing aspects and other features of the disclosed embodiments are explained in the following description, taken in connection with the accompanying drawings, wherein:
System 100 includes one or more funding devices, shown in
It is a feature of the disclosed embodiments for the postal infrastructure data center 130 to initiate communication with one or more of the meters 1151 . . . 115n as required.
Storage device 119 generally stores machine readable program code which is adapted to cause microprocessor 118 to perform the functions of the disclosed embodiments. Storage device 119 may utilize optical, magnetic, semiconductor, electronic, or other types of suitable devices to store the program code.
Microprocessor 118 typically performs the electronic accounting functions in relation to franking items. Data associated with the accounting functions may include an accumulated total value of credit entered into the PSD, an accumulated total value of charges dispensed by the PSD by franking items, a count of the number of items franked, and a count of the number of items franked with a charge in excess of a predetermined value. The accumulated total value of credit may be stored in an ascending credit register 160, the accumulated total value of postage charges dispensed may be stored in a descending register 165, and the count of items may be stored in an items count register 170. The various registers may be located in storage device 119.
The franking functions performed by microprocessor 118 typically include providing an indication, funds, or other authorization to produce indicia, and reporting the number of items, value marked and other parameters to the accounting functions. Such indication, funds, or other authorization are referred to herein as indicia services.
The meter 115 generally provides indicia services locally utilizing a printer 140 and may be capable of franking a label, directly franking a mail piece, or franking any other suitable substrate. Meter 115 is advantageous in that a user may place meter 115 in a specific location on or over a substrate and frank or print an object. Meter 115 may be capable of printing stamps, barcodes, addresses, planet codes, images, text, indicia, logos, graphics, or any other printable item in any desired order. For example, the user may be able to position meter 115 to print a return address, and then position meter 115 to print a mailing address, and then to print postage.
The printer 140 may be capable of printing on any suitable substrate or media, including an adhesive or tacky substrate, and may also be capable of applying a covering over the printed items. For example, the printer 140 may be capable of applying a film or coating over a printed item for protection or to prevent tampering.
The printer 140 may be an inkjet, dye sublimation, thermal wax, laser, electrostatic, xerographic, thermal, RF, or any suitable type of printer. In one embodiment, printer 140 may utilize energy beams, having high or low power, for example, RF beams, to print directly onto a substrate.
The control functions performed by microprocessor 118 may include utilizing communications port 117 to communicate with the postal infrastructure data center 130. Communications port 117 generally includes an antenna 190 and support circuitry 195 or other signaling devices 200 for communicating with the postal infrastructure data center 130 through the one or more networks 1251 . . . 125n.
The signaling devices 200 may provide an air interface, a wired interface, a wireless interface, or an electrical, electromagnetic, radio, infrared, or other suitable facility for communication. The support circuitry 195 may also include location determining circuitry, for example, a GPS facility for determining the location of the meter 115.
The postal infrastructure data center 130 generally has the capability to access one or more of the meters 1151 . . . 115n to exchange information as required. For example, the postal infrastructure data center 130 may access meters 1151 . . . 115n to download additional features, updates, upgrades, programs, diagnostic functions, delivery confirmation or other types of information. The postal infrastructure data center 130 may access meters 1151 . . . 115n to retrieve information including accounting data, status data, etc.
In one embodiment, communication between meters 1151 . . . 115n and the postal infrastructure data center 130 may be wireless. In other embodiments, the communication may occur through a combination of wireless and wired connections, or only wired connections.
Postal infrastructure data center 130 may initiate a data exchange by initially detecting the one or more communications networks 1251 . . . 125n suitable for the data exchange. Postal infrastructure data center 130 may logon or establish a connection to a particular communications network 125 by addressing a message specifically to that communications network. Alternately, Postal infrastructure data center 130 may identify that one or more communications networks 1251 . . . 125n are available for providing communications and may perform a selection process among the available communications networks 1251 . . . 125n. For example, postal infrastructure data center 130 may broadcast polling or paging signals in attempt to receive a response from a communication network. In the event that more than one communication network responds, meter 115 may select a responding network based on any combination of signal strength, quality of service, connection speed, cost, etc.
Communication networks 1251 . . . 125n may include any suitable communications network, for example, the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN), a wireless network, a wired network, a Local Area Network (LAN), a Wide Area Network (WAN), virtual private network (VPN), an air interface, etc. The air interface may include any suitable wireless communication protocols or signaling techniques or standards, for example TDMA, CDMA, IEEE 802.11, Bluetooth, close range RF, optical, any. appropriate satellite communication standards, etc.
In one embodiment, postal infrastructure data center 130 may utilize cell communication technology and identify a cellular communication network from the one or more networks 1251 . . . 125n using roaming techniques.
After postal infrastructure data center 130 has established a connection with an appropriate communication network 125, postal infrastructure data center 130 then attempts to logon or establish a connection to one or more meters 1151 . . . . 115n. Postal infrastructure data center 130 may attempt to connect to an individual meter 115 by addressing a message specifically to that meter 115. Alternately, postal infrastructure data center 130 may identify that one or more meters 1151 . . . 115n are available for communication.
For example, postal infrastructure data center 130 may attempt to identify any meters 1151 . . . 115n connected to networks 1251 . . . 125n, for example by polling network addresses or other identification techniques. Postal infrastructure data center 130 may also attempt to identify meters 1151 . . . 115n by broadcasting a paging signal or other type of signal that requests a response. In an embodiment using cell communication technology, postal infrastructure data center 130 may place a call to one or more meters 1151 . . . 115n.
Postal infrastructure data center 130 may be capable of establishing more that one connection to a particular meter 115 and may be capable of establishing a connection to more than one meter 1151 . . . 115n simultaneously. For example, postal infrastructure data center 130 may establish a first connection to a first meter 1151 for fund replenishment and, during the first connection, may establish a second connection to the first meter 1151 to download data tables. As another example, postal infrastructure data center 130 may establish a first connection to a first meter 1151 for fund replenishment and, during the first connection, may establish a second connection to a second meter 1152 to download data tables.
Referring to
In other embodiments, devices 435 may include suitable circuitry, programs, transmitters and receivers for any appropriate type of wireless communication utilizing radio frequency (RF), infrared (IR), optical, acoustical, any type of electromagnetic based technology, or any other type of wireless communication. The postal infrastructure data center 130 may also include a user interface facility 445 which may provide local users with access to postal infrastructure data center services.
It should be understood that the foregoing description is only illustrative of the disclosed embodiments. Various alternatives and modifications can be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the disclosed embodiments. Accordingly, the disclosed embodiments is intended to embrace all such alternatives, modifications and variances which fall within the scope of the appended claims.