This application is related to co-pending and co-owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/916,951 filed Jun. 13, 2013 by Cody Stephen Bryant, et al. entitled, METHOD AND APPARATUS PERTAINING TO SHARING CONTENT WITH SCHEDULED-EVENT PARTICIPANTS, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety herein.
The present disclosure relates generally to electronic devices and more particularly to the electronic sharing of content items.
Electronic devices, including portable electronic devices, have gained widespread use and may provide a variety of functions including, for example, telephonic, electronic messaging and other personal information manager (PIM) application functions. Portable electronic devices include, for example, several types of mobile stations such as simple cellular telephones, so-called smart telephones, wireless personal digital assistants (PDAs), and laptop and tablet/pad-styled computers with wide-area, wireless 802.11, and/or Bluetooth capabilities.
Many electronic devices permit the user to obtain, access, and/or capture any of a variety of content items. (As used herein, “content items” will be understood to refer to consumable media such as digital photographs and other images, video (including audio-video) material, audio material, and textual material (with or without non-textual embellishment.) And, as many electronic devices have communications capabilities, these devices are also capable of sharing content items with other parties by transporting such content items to such parties.
In fact, many electronic devices will support any of a plurality of different sharing modalities. Examples include (but are not limited to) a variety of email services and messaging services, uploading and downloading services, and social networking-based services. Unfortunately, having access to a rich selection of sharing tools does not always lead to user satisfaction. Instead, at least some users under at least some operating circumstances can become frustrated due to confusion regarding which sharing modality to employ when looking to share a given content item.
In other cases users who may not suffer confusion can nevertheless become annoyed at the tedium and/or time sometimes associated with navigating and correctly executing the series of steps, menu-based selections, and so forth that can be associated with effectively using particular sharing approaches when sharing their content items.
The following describes an apparatus and method pertaining to accessing a memory to obtain information regarding sharing history (as pertains, for example, to a particular user and/or device) and using that sharing history to display at least one recommended sharing action (from amongst a plurality of available candidate sharing actions such as, but not limited to, email-based sharing actions, social network-based sharing actions (such as Facebook™ and LinkedIn™), Twitter™-based sharing actions, Short Message Service (SMS)-based sharing actions, Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS)-based sharing actions, cloud-based sharing services (such as Picassa™, Flickr™ and Pinterest™), file uploading-based sharing services, and so forth) as regards to a particular content item (such as, for example, a particular digital photograph, a video, a Powerpoint™ presentation, and so forth).
By one approach the aforementioned apparatus comprises a portable communications device such as a so-called smartphone.
This sharing history can comprise, for example, previously-selected sharing actions as correlated to content item types. Useful examples of sharing history include, but are not limited to, previously-selected sharing actions regarding one or more of shared-content recipients, corresponding temporal data, shared-content size, corresponding location data, and so forth. By one approach the apparatus itself serves to automatically track user-based content-sharing selections over time, which information is stored as the aforementioned sharing history.
These teachings are highly flexible in practice and will accommodate a variety of modifications. As one illustrative example, while displaying at least a portion of a particular content item (such as a particular digital photograph), these teachings will accommodate providing the user with an opportunity to assert a non-specific share command corresponding to that displayed content item. Asserting this non-specific share command, in turn, can trigger the aforementioned display of the one or more recommended sharing actions to employ with respect to the displayed content item.
So configured, a given device can learn, over time, a user's behaviors with respect to what kinds of content items are typically shared with which recipients via which sharing service. A simple example in these regards is empirically concluding that the user tends to share many of their captured digital photographs via the Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) with three specific cellular telephone numbers in a group message. When the user then uses their device's camera to capture an image or is viewing images, the device can then automatically, or in response to a non-specific share command as desired, recommend the sharing action of sending the captured image to that particular group of recipients via MMS.
These teachings can be economically deployed and are also highly scalable. Accordingly, these teachings can be readily employed with as many, or as few, sharing modalities as may be desired. Similarly, the aforementioned recommendations can be based upon only a few, or a great many, monitored sharing actions to develop the sharing history.
For simplicity and clarity of illustration, reference numerals may be repeated among the figures to indicate corresponding or analogous elements. Numerous details are set forth to provide an understanding of the embodiments described herein. The embodiments may be practiced without these details. In other instances, well-known methods, procedures, and components have not been described in detail to avoid obscuring the embodiments described. The description is not to be considered as limited to the scope of the embodiments described herein.
These teachings can be carried out by any of a variety of enabling platforms. For the sake of an illustrative example but without intending any particular limitations in these regards, the description provided herein presumes the platform of choice to be a portable communications device.
This illustrative portable communication device includes a control circuit 102 that controls the overall operation of the portable electronic device. Such a control circuit 102 or processor can comprise a fixed-purpose hard-wired platform or can comprise a partially or wholly programmable platform. These architectural options are well known and understood in the art and require no further description here. This control circuit 102 is configured (for example, by using corresponding programming as will be well understood by those skilled in the art) to carry out one or more of the steps, actions, and/or functions described herein.
Corresponding communication functions, including data and voice communications, are performed through a communication subsystem 104. The communication subsystem receives messages from and sends messages to a wireless network 150. The wireless network 150 may be any type of wireless network, including, but not limited to, a wireless data networks, a wireless voice network, or a network that supports both voice and data communications.
The control circuit 102 may also operably couple to a short-range communication subsystem 132 (such as an 802.11 or 802.16-compatible transceiver and/or a Bluetooth™-compatible transceiver). To identify a subscriber for network access, the portable communication device may utilize a Subscriber Identity Module or a Removable User Identity Module (SIM/RUIM) card 138 for communication with a network, such as the wireless network 150. Alternatively, user identification information may be programmed into a memory 110.
A power source 142, such as one or more rechargeable batteries or a port to an external power supply, powers the electronic device. The control circuit 102 may interact with an accelerometer 136 that may be utilized to detect direction of gravitational forces or gravity-induced reaction forces. The control circuit 102 also interacts with a variety of other components, such as a Random Access Memory (RAM) 108, a memory 110, an auxiliary input/output (I/O) subsystem 124, a data port 126, a speaker 128, a microphone 130, and other device subsystems 134 of choice.
A display 112 can be disposed in conjunction with a touch-sensitive overlay 114 that operably couples to an electronic controller 116. Together these components can comprise a touch-sensitive display 118 that serves as a graphical-user interface. Information, such as text, characters, symbols, images, icons, and other items may be displayed on the touch-sensitive display 118 via the control circuit 102.
The touch-sensitive display 118 may employ any of a variety of corresponding technologies including but not limited to capacitive, resistive, infrared, surface acoustic wave (SAW), strain gauge, optical imaging, dispersive signal technology, and/or acoustic pulse recognition-based touch-sensing approaches as are known in the art. If the touch-sensitive display 118 should utilize a capacitive approach, for example, the touch-sensitive overlay 114 can comprise a capacitive touch-sensitive overlay 114. In such a case the overlay 114 may be an assembly of multiple stacked layers including, for example, a substrate, a ground shield layer, a barrier layer, one or more capacitive touch sensor layers separated by a substrate or other barrier, and a cover. The capacitive touch sensor layers may comprise any suitable material, such as indium tin oxide (ITO).
One or more touches, also known as touch contacts or touch events, may be detected by the touch-sensitive display 118. The control circuit 102 may determine attributes of the touch, including a location of a touch. Touch location data may include data for an area of contact or data for a single point of contact, such as a point at or near a center of the area of contact. Generally speaking, a swipe is a touch that begins at one location on the touch-sensitive display 118 and ends at another location (as when the user places their fingertip on the touch-sensitive display 118 and then drags their fingertip along the surface of the touch-sensitive display 118 before finally lifting their fingertip from that surface).
The portable communication device includes an operating system 146 and software programs, applications (such as, but not limited to, a calendar application as is known in the art), or components 148 that are executed by the control circuit 102 and are typically stored in a persistent, updatable store such as the memory 110. Additional applications or programs may be loaded onto the portable communication device through the wireless network 150, the auxiliary I/O subsystem 124, the data port 126, the short-range communications subsystem 132, or any other suitable subsystem 134.
The memory 110 may comprise a non-transitory storage media that stores executable instructions which, when executed, causes one or more of the functions, steps, or actions described herein. In particular, this memory 110 can serve, for example, to non-transitorily store the computer instructions that, when executed by the control circuit 102, cause the control circuit 102 to behave as described herein. (As used herein, this reference to “non-transitorily” will be understood to refer to a non-ephemeral state for the stored contents (and hence excludes when the stored contents merely constitute signals or waves) rather than volatility of the storage media itself and hence includes both non-volatile memory (such as read-only memory (ROM) as well as volatile memory (such as an erasable programmable read-only memory (EPROM).)
As a communication device, a received signal such as a text message, an e-mail message, or web page download is processed by the communication subsystem and input to the control circuit 102. The control circuit 102 processes the received signal for output to the display 112 and/or to the auxiliary I/O subsystem 124. A user may generate data items, for example e-mail messages, that may be transmitted over the wireless network 150 through the communication subsystem. For voice communications, the overall operation of the portable communication device is similar. The speaker 128 outputs audible information converted from electrical signals, and the microphone 130 converts audible information into electrical signals for processing.
Other components may be provided, such as a positioning system or device (like a GPS device) for determining location. Also, one or more components may be combined or further separated.
The remainder of this description will presume to use the foregoing portable communication device as an enabling platform. That said, it will again be understood that no particular limitations are intended in those regards.
For example, at 201 and 202 the control circuit 102 can automatically track user-based content-sharing selections and store that information (for example, in the aforementioned memory 110) as a sharing history. By one approach, this can comprise noting and recording which sharing mechanisms (such as specific email services, SMS or MMS services, file-uploading and downloading drop box services, and social network services) the user chooses when sharing particular types of content items. By one approach these “types” can refer, for example, to file types such as .doc (text document), .jpg (picture or photo file), .pdf, .mp3 (audio file), spreadsheet file, video file, and so forth.
This tracking and storing activity can also comprise, in lieu of the foregoing or in combination therewith, one or more of: noting with which recipients (and which address/service for a given recipient) the user shares such content items; noting corresponding temporal data (such as the season or holiday, the month, the day of the week, and/or the time of day) to thereby correlate a tendency of the user to send one type of content item per one sharing behavior during, say, working hours and a tendency to send that same type of content item using a different sharing behavior during non-working hours; shared-content size to thereby correlate a tendency of the user to share a particular type of content item using one sharing behavior when the shared-content size is less than some predetermined amount (such as five megabytes or ten megabytes) and a different sharing behavior when the shared-content size is larger than that predetermined amount; and corresponding location data to thereby correlate, for example, a tendency of the user to share content items using one sharing behavior when the user is located at their office (regardless of the day or hour) and a different sharing behavior when the user is located elsewhere, to note but a few examples in these regards.
So configured, the user's device is itself able to establish, at least over time, a relevant history of a user's sharing behaviors. This history can be dynamically updated as the user's behavior confirms use of the recommendations provided by this process 200 and as the user evinces alternative behaviors.
These teachings will accommodate other approaches in these regards if desired, however. For example, by one approach the control circuit 102 tracks the user's content-sharing selections but then transmits that information to a remote platform where the tracking information serves to inform the remote creation and modification of a relevant sharing history. That remotely-derived sharing history can then be provided in its entirety to the control circuit 102 from time to time or, if desired, the control circuit 102 can query the remote platform at times of need to leverage the content of the remotely-stored sharing history.
As another example of an optional activity that this process 200 can support, at 203 the control circuit 102 can display at least a portion of a particular content item (as selected, for example, by the user). As will be illustrated by way of examples below, the aforementioned sharing history can be leveraged to inform the process of sharing the displayed content item. That said, however, it will be understood that the present teachings can be implemented without necessarily displaying the content item to be shared. For example, these teachings can be applied with respect to a displayed file or folder name or file icon for the content item to be shared.
At 204 this process 200 will also optionally provide for detecting when a user inputs a non-specific share command. This detection can comprise, for example, detecting a user's touch on a non-specific share button on a touch-sensitive display 118 as described above. As used herein, this reference to a “non-specific” share command will be understood to refer to a command to begin a sharing activity without yet specifying any particular sharing transport mechanism. An illustrative example in these regards appears further herein.
In the absence of detecting at 204 the non-specific share command this process 200 can accommodate any of a variety of responses. Examples of responses can include temporal multitasking (pursuant to which the portable communication device conducts other tasks before returning to again monitor for a non-specific share command) as well as continually looping back to essentially continuously monitor for this event. These teachings also accommodate supporting this detection activity via a real-time interrupt capability.
In any event, this process 200 then provides, at 205 and 206, for accessing information regarding a relevant sharing history and using that sharing history to display at least one recommended sharing action from amongst a plurality of available candidate sharing actions as regards a particular content item (such as, by one approach, a currently displayed particular content item as described above).
When the process 200 includes the activity of detecting a non-specific share command as described above, the activity of accessing the sharing history information can comprise an automatic response to detecting that non-specific share command. By another approach, such information can be automatically accessed (and one or more corresponding recommended sharing actions displayed) when the user selects to display or otherwise render a particular content item. The display can be opening the content for viewing and the render may be opening the content for listening. Also, the display can be viewing and/or highlighting a label, icon, reference, file name, or other item representing the specific content (without opening the content).
The particular use made of the sharing history can vary with the application setting and/or the needs of a given user. For example, the number, depth, and kind of correlations assessed and utilized can vary as desired. These teachings will also accommodate weighting different factors and informational items differently from one another if so desired.
As noted above, by one approach the portable communication device can track and develop a useful sharing history over time. Accordingly, the first time a user employs their device to share a content item there will be no sharing history yet developed. By way of an illustrative example, upon asserting the above-mentioned non-specific share command icon 301 a scrollable menu list of available candidate sharing approaches 401 is displayed as shown in
So configured, the user can select a particular candidate sharing approach to share the content item 301. The selections made in these regards are in turn tracked and stored as described above to build the sharing history.
These teachings are highly flexible in these regards and will accommodate essentially any content sharing approach. These figures provide a few non-exhaustive illustrative examples in these regards, such as the well-known BBM™ messaging service, a one-to-many message service (such as Twitter™) represented here by the fictional service TwitTwit, a pinboard-style photo-sharing website (such as Pintererst™) represented here by the fictional service PinPinit, email (via any of a plurality of email service providers including the Yahoo™ email service, the Google™ email service, and so forth), SMS and/or MMS messaging services, a social-networking service (such as Facebook™) represented here by the fictional service Facepaging, a Near Field Communications (NFC) service, a Bluetooth™-based service, a video-clip sharing service such as Vine™, and so forth.
As that sharing history develops the portable communication device is able to access and leverage that sharing history as described above to then develop and display one or more corresponding recommended sharing actions as appropriate.
In this example these recommendations 501 each comprise a simple, intuitive icon that represents as appropriate a particular social network, email service, or message service, or even specific individuals or groups of individuals as appropriate. The relevant size of each recommendation icon can vary, if desired, with respect to any parameter of interest. For example, by one approach the size of the recommendation can vary as a function of the confidence that the control circuit 102 has with respect to the recommendation being a likely, preferred sharing action for this particular content item (taking all other parameters of interest into account). As another example the size of the recommendation icon can vary as a simple function of how frequently the user selects that sharing approach when sharing this type of content item (again possibly taking all other parameters of interest into account).
As shown in
By one approach, if desired, the display always includes at least a portion of the scrollable list of available candidate sharing actions 401 to thereby permit the user to access their sharing options via that approach. As illustrated in
As shown in
These teachings will readily accommodate pre-populating one or more fields and other selection opportunities when opening the selected content-sharing transport modality. This can comprise, for example, automatically inserting recipient addresses and/or names, subject field information (using, for example, the file name of the content item being shared), a name or signature block for the person sharing the content item, and so forth. These teachings will also provide for automatically attaching the content item to a message and/or inserting the content item into the message as appropriate. These teachings will also accommodate, as another example, providing a link that the recipient can select to direct their device to an on-line location where they can access and/or download the content item.
So configured, a user's device can develop one or more recommended sharing actions (including but not limited to recommendations regarding shared-content recipients and/or content-sharing transport modalities) for a given content item based, at least in part, upon a sharing history that is relevant to the user themselves. Using these approaches a user can more easily, quickly, and intuitively share content items than has been the typical user experience of the past.
These teachings will accommodate presenting some or all of the recommended sharing actions at any of a variety of times. By one approach, for example, the user can cause such recommendations to appear by asserting a general share button (or the like) as described above. By another approach, one or more such recommendations can be automatically displayed automatically when the user opens a given shareable content item in a particular previewer or viewer. Such an automated presentation can initially comprise, for example, a small window that the user can expand by, for example, tapping in that window. By another approach, in lieu of the foregoing or in combination therewith, the automated presentation of a recommended sharing action can be only temporarily displayed such that if the user does not assert a control feature within the recommendations the corresponding display of recommended sharing actions can be automatically removed.
Many electronic devices include one or more calendars (such as Outlook™) that serve, at least in part, to track scheduled events such as meetings, appointments, and so forth. In many cases a scheduled meeting (which may comprise an in-person meeting and/or a distance meeting such as a conference call or an on-line web meeting) has associated therewith the names and/or contact information for the corresponding meeting participants.
Accordingly, as one illustrative example in these regards, if a user is viewing a particular content item (such as a particular image, Powerpoint presentation, pdf document, spreadsheet, and so forth) at the same time as when an event is scheduled on their calendar, these teachings will provide for presenting that user with an opportunity to share that particular content item with the participants of that event. By one approach the presentation of such an opportunity can be limited to the scheduled start and stop times of the event. By another approach the opportunity window can be extended to include a period of time (such as five or ten minutes) prior to the scheduled beginning of the event and/or following the scheduled conclusion of the event.
By one approach, the process 1000 provides for displaying only this one sharing opportunity under these circumstances. By another approach, however, the process 100 provides for displaying the opportunity to share this particular content item with the participants of the scheduled calendar event in common with at least one other recommended sharing action as regards this content item. Accordingly, the process of
In
Selecting that icon/button 1101 then opens, in this example, an email-creation window as shown in
As noted above, these teachings will also provide a scrollable list of available candidate sharing approaches 401. As shown in
These teachings provide a variety of ways by which a user can more easily, accurately, and appropriately share a variety of content item types. In many cases the ability of these teachings to best serve the needs of a given user improve over time as well.
The present disclosure may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from its essential characteristics. The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects only as illustrative and not restrictive. The scope of the disclosure is, therefore, indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description. All changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.
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