The present disclosure relates generally to computer networks, and more specifically to the composition, editing, and display of text, images, audio, and video on electronic display devices over a computer network.
With the popularity of the internet, comic strips, like other mediums, have moved online, yet even with the availability of computer-assisted comic strip generation, and the ubiquity of computerized image editors, tradition still rules the day and text bubbles are displayed as image objects, as a part of a larger image. Subsequently, removing text bubbles from a comic image, and displaying a comic online, thus edited, without a text bubble body, but with a text bubble tail, has not occurred to anyone. Including a text bubble tail in a comic display absent a text bubble body, as a ‘disembodied tail’, has not occurred despite the disadvantages of including an entire text bubble image object in an image in a display. The present invention pays homage to traditional comic strip text bubbles, adjusted for the properties of online digital displays. The present method and system concerns excluding one or more whole text bubbles from a comic strip display and emulating text bubble bodies by placing disembodied text bubble tails in the display, and placing associated, tagged text next to a separately tagged image in the display, so that a comic strip is best presented on a variety of electronic display screens and formats, including in web pages, emails, and text messages.
Traditionally, when displaying a comic strip (i.e. comic) on a network-connected computer or mobile device, speech or thought attributable to a character is depicted with lettering inside of a text bubble (i.e. bubble). The bubble is displayed in an image with other image objects, such as a comic character (i.e. character), and the edges of an image are indicated by a border line, or by the edges of a display screen. A display screen can contain one or more such images. Typically, a text bubble consists of a rounded or rectangular shape (i.e. body) connected to a bubble tail (i.e. tail). A speech bubble tail is an elongated curved or straight, open-ended triangular shape, the closed point of which is located in close proximity to a speaking comic character. A thought bubble tail is typically a trail of small ovals graduating in size towards a speech bubble, with the smallest oval in close proximity to a character. Tails can take other forms, such as a straight line.
Where tails are small, bubbles are large, and often cover a large area of an image. Conversely, relative to an entire page of multiple comic strip images, a text bubble can appear small and hard to read, especially when displayed on a small screen such as on a mobile device.
Speech attributable to a character is sometimes displayed as a caption, with quotation marks, said caption displayed as an image; or as text. Either way, if lettering displayed in such a manner is not pointed to by a tail it can be difficult for users to distinguish it from narrative lettering or ‘voice-over’, or to identify which character is ‘speaking’. Plus, the look of a conventional comic is lost without a tail. In any comic strip display, or in any meme displayed in the manner of a conventional comic strip, the display is not perceived as a comic strip if one or more tails are not part of the display. Likewise, a clear relationship between characters and text is not established without a tail. A conventional look is not lost, however, if the lines of a bubble body are excluded from the display, and drawn lettering in a bubble body is likewise excluded, as long as a text bubble body is emulated in the display by means of careful placement and positioning of a disembodied tail in proximity to a character object in an image, with the other end of said tail in proximity to an element of tagged text, and the background color of said tagged text that the tail points to is matched with the color of the tail. In another embodiment, said text is visually bracketed using edges of the display screen, if possible, or by placing background colors in the display, outside of the comic image and it's associated text field, that contrast with the background color of the text field. In yet another embodiment, text bracketing is aided by using bubble body-part image files.
In the present invention, emulating a bubble body in a display instead of drawing it, placing the emulation outside of (i.e. separate from) images, and establishing a visual relationship between text and images using bubble tails, absent bubble bodies, encompasses a number of advantages.
An object and advantage of the present invention as it concerns searching and indexing a comic display, is as follows: displaying an image and text in the manner of a comic strip, in such a way that the display can be economically and accurately parsed and indexed, by tagging text related to a character object in the source code for the display, as well as in the display itself, but not displaying the text as part of an image, wherein text is composed using a broadly recognized mark-up language, such as html or html5, and not converted into an image. In prior art, once a bubble attributable to a comic character is converted into a image file for display on a network, editing words in the bubble involves drawing or generating a new image, even if text is interactively entered (i.e. input) in a display as text. When text inside of or on top of a bubble is displayed as an image, said text cannot be accurately and economically indexed and parsed by a search engine because it is an image. Typically, indexing and parsing a comic display is generally done using file names of images in the display, and image file names do not accurately or fully convey the subject matter of a comic strip or meme or graphic novel. Marking up text in display source code, as well as in a display itself, is essential for accurate indexing and searching of a comic strip or meme, especially when it contains an abundance of words, which comics and memes sometimes do, such as when they are used for news, informational, or educational purposes. If text interactively entered in a comic display is stored on a network server or, locally, in a cache, secondary to display page source code, before ultimately being converted into an image and displayed as an image, said text is not crawled and indexed by large scale search engines that crawl and index the internet. Text displayed according to the present invention can be crawled and indexed for search, and foreign language translation of said text utilizing an online language translator is also enabled, something that is not possible if text is displayed as an image. The present invention accommodates the size and universality of the internet, and search engines and foreign language users that access a webpage display. Furthermore, computer-generated audio recordings of comic strips, graphic novels, and text is enabled when text in a display is not converted into an image, and is marked up in source code for the display.
Yet another object and advantage of the present invention as it concerns visibility of comic displays, is as follows: maintaining the look and manner of a conventional comic strip in a display in which one or more text bubble bodies has been excluded while maintaining an unobstructed and efficient view of the display, accomplished by including one or more deliberately placed disembodied text bubble tails in the display, with a separately tagged media element, such as text, wherein associated images are not blocked by a bubble body. More and more, the internet is being accessed via a small touch screen, such as a smart phone or smart watch screen, wherein a conventional comic or meme is viewed on a small display screen, and wherein lettering in a bubble is too small for a user to read without enlarging, pinching and swiping the display numerous times, sometimes temporarily forcing large areas of an image off the display screen, which is frustrating for the user. In a conventional comic display, a bubble is often granted a small footprint relative to the entirety of images in a display, such that lettering in the bubble is too small to read. If, in order to counter this effect, an edited enlargement of a text bubble is generated and layered over a displayed image a user's view of the underlying image is subsequently compromised, if only temporarily, and a newly generated image with a size-reduced bubble, or no bubble, must nonetheless be drawn and displayed, and the user must engage in extra inputs such as scrolling, swiping, and pinching. When marked up text is displayed separately as a text element next to an image element, the user's view of an image is not significantly blocked, and the text's font size can be triggered according to the type and size of the display device, said automation dictated by scripts in the mark-up code for the display. Furthermore, the present invention allows for more economical use of display screen real estate by enabling a one word or one-phrase tagged advertisement link embedded in a text field (i.e. in a bubble emulation), in lieu of a non-imbedded display ad. Hyperlinked ads imbedded in text are not possible if said text is an image. In the present invention, imbedding a link to a network resource, such as to an advertisement, in text, does not require editing of an image in a comic display, and segments of network feeds that are part of a display or part of text in an emulated bubble, can be dynamically generated and changed on the fly, e.g. in real time. Another advantage of the present invention is that an artist drawing an image to be part of a comic strip display doesn't need to worry about leaving a region of a drawing object-free in anticipation of placing a bubble body in said region later on. The same artist doesn't need to worry about allowing a region of an image to be clear of image objects in anticipation of placing a tail object in the image, because tails are tiny, relative to real estate in an image, and relative to real estate in a display. In a related embodiment of the present invention, tagged text is displayed with a disembodied tail on top of an imago containing a character object, said image tagged as a background image in the display, wherein said text is nevertheless not converted, itself, into an image.
Yet another object and advantage of the present invention is as follows, and it concerns a user, or multiple users, interacting with a comic display, including displays comprised of a variety of media. As more and more comics have been posted to the internet, and online image editing software has become cheaper, easier to use, and more accessible to users, text bubbles attributable to a character have been added to photographic images, and to video displays. Adding text bubbles to photographs and other media is an ‘internet-born’ re-interpretation of conventional comic strips, known as memes. The present invention encompasses such memes, as well as conventional comic strips and graphic novels, and it encompasses displays of sequential media segments displayed with a horizontal, as well as a vertical, orientation, wherein horizontal, as well as vertical, swiping and scrolling are utilized as inputs, and wherein alternative methods of inputs are used, including voice and gesture recognition. According to the present invention, by including a disembodied tail and tagging text in a display, any drawing or photograph can quickly and economically be displayed in the manner of a comic strip, in a web page, email, or text message, by a single user, or by any number of unskilled, designated users. Text in a display, as well as images accompanying a text bubble emulation in a display, can be singularly edited when said text or images are tagged and displayed independently of one another in the display, and multi-media displays of text, imagery, video, and hyperlinked advertisements displayed in the manner of a traditional comic strip are therein efficiently created or edited, simultaneously and in real time, by a multitude of designated users, when one or more text fields, and one or more images containing a character object related to a text field, are tagged and displayed independently of one another. By the same manner, in the present invention an image or video thumb displayed amongst comic strip segments can be edited or replaced or removed independently of other segments in the display, and segmented displays of text, imagery, and advertisements displayed in the manner of a traditional comic strip can be edited independently of other segments in a display. A greater degree of labor and specialized skill is required in the drawing and editing of a comic strip image or meme image, generally speaking, than is required in the writing and editing of a snippet of text. Utilizing a disembodied tail, the present invention accommodates this imbalance as it pertains to composing a comic strip or meme display, including in an interactive format involving participation by a crowd of unskilled users, by enabling text to be input and edited without necessitating editing of an image associated with that text, and enabling singular editing of other media elements in the display. In a related embodiment, a comic strip or meme displayed over a social network is crowd sourced, wherein trending media elements or portions of text in a display reflect a consensus choice, or opinion, of a group of participating users. In yet another embodiment, advertisements are inserted or fed in a display which reflect the subject matter of said display, or reflect specific interests, or stored data, related to a user accessing the display. Processing said subject matter data and stored interest data is enabled by the parsing and indexing properties of the present invention described above. Only one or more text bubble bodies in a display need be excluded and replaced by tagged text accompanied by a disembodied tail, in order for a display to embody the editing, indexing, visibility, and interactive advantages of the present invention. If textual display ads not imbedded in text bubble emulations are desired, tagging and segmentation of a comic strip display or meme display as it is described above enables non-imbedded display ads to be efficiently added to a display, including in place of text in an emulated bubble, wherein all manner of hyper-linked media elements can be singularly input and displayed in-between tagged segments of a display without necessitating editing of other segments of the display. The present invention is embodied in a single-image, single text bubble emulation display, as well as in a multi-media display of multiple segments of text, drawings, photos, video, and advertisements displayed in the manner of a traditional comic strip.
A method and system is presented for displaying comic strips and memes over a digital network on an electronic display screen wherein text is displayed outside (i.e. separate from) one or more image elements containing a character, such that said image is viewed without interruption, and such that tagged text is part of the source code for the display, as well as part of the visual display itself, and the display is accurately and economically edited, indexed, and searched, and the look of a conventional comic strip is maintained utilizing the inclusion in the display of one or more disembodied text bubble tails, instead of whole text bubbles, wherein one or more text bubble bodies is emulated, not drawn, through deliberate positioning of said tails relative to text and relative to a character in the display, and through the matching of the color of a tail with the background color of tagged text that the tail ‘points’ to, wherein a lettering image object attributable to a comic character is not generated, and wherein not all text in a display is converted into an image, and wherein text is differentiated from being a caption by the inclusion of a disembodied tail directing a users gaze from a character object to a region of text displayed above, below, or to the side of an image. In displays where, for example, some lettering in a display is an image, enclosed in drawn bubbles, and some bubbles are emulated, without bubble bodies, using disembodied tails (i.e. wherein some text is included in source code for the display, as well as in the display itself), and wherein some bubbles are interactively generated as text but converted for display into an image, and wherein html, xhtm1, html5, css, css3, php, java or another screen mark up language is tagged for at least one text element in a display, the present invention is likewise embodied, whether the display is a comic, meme, or graphic novel and whether the display reports, educates, informs, advertises, or just entertains.
In summary, wherein a text bubble tail is a ‘signature’ of a conventional comic strip, a disembodied text bubble tail is a signature of the present invention.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20170235738 A1 | Aug 2017 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62176254 | Feb 2015 | US |