This application claims the benefit, under 35 U.S.C. § 365 of International Application PCT/EP2012/060839, filed Jun. 7, 2012, which was published in accordance with PCT Article 21(2) on Dec. 13, 2012 and which claims the benefit of French patent application No. 1155061 filed Jun. 09, 2011
The invention relates to the field of audiovisual programme receiver decoders and more specifically to the power consumption in standby mode and on exiting standby mode.
Audiovisual programme receivers/decoders offer the user an increasing number of functions. There are different types of decoder, differentiable by the input interface. Some connect to an antenna socket enabling reception of a DTT (Digital Terrestrial Television) signal, others are connected to a cable network installed by an operator and still others have a network input interface for connection to a home local network or to a modem router itself connected to the Internet. In this latter case, the decoder is intended for IPTV (Internet Protocol Television) reception. The are also hybrid decoders, which have several input interfaces such as, for example, a DTT tuner and an Ethernet network interface (IEEE802.3). In this case the decoder can receive and reproduce a programme received by one or other of the interfaces.
The increasing development of digital products for home use, such as, for example, television, computers, organisers, mobile telephones, data storage devices and printers, is such that it is advantageous to interconnect them via the intermediary of a home network. This type of local network, commonly called LAN (Local Area Network), can be wired (for example with a connection of Ethernet type) or wireless (with for example a WiFi connection) or can combine the two types of interconnection between the devices which are connected thereto.
There currently exist configurations linking several audiovisual programme decoders in a same household. Functions are thus available to the user, such as the sharing of audiovisual programmes or the option of watching several different programmes on several television sets connected respectively to several decoders, for example in different rooms of the house.
There thus exist configurations where a decoder connected to the source of the signal is of “master” type and the data corresponding to an audiovisual programme can be transmitted from the “master” decoder to other decoders called “slave” decoders, connected to the “master” decoder via the intermediary of a local network, with a view to the reproduction of the programme.
Although configurations including a large number of interconnected devices enable the user to benefit from convenient functions, they nevertheless give rise to high power consumption due to the proliferation of devices. Also, it is becoming increasingly important to control power consumption of home-use devices and power consumption of the whole of an installation and more generally of the whole of a household.
There currently exist power consumption directives. These directives must be considered carefully during the design stages for consumer devices.
In the case of an installation where decoders are interconnected and where a “master” decoder is used as an audiovisual programme server for a “slave” decoder, it is not conceivable to have to keep the “master” decoder in a high consumption state when it is not in use. A “slave” decoder wanting to receive an audiovisual programme from a “master” decoder must be able to wake it up if this latter is in standby mode, thus enabling it to be in standby mode as often as possible. This operation for waking up the “master” decoder can be carried out via the intermediary of the local network. A slave decoder sends for example a message to the “master” decoder in order to ask it to exit standby mode and to provide the requested service or services.
The constraint of significant reduction in power consumption, coupled with the necessity to be able to wake up the devices creates a problem. It is necessary to have standby modes corresponding to the lowest possible power consumptions and necessary to be able to wake up a device considering that the interfaces or modules used for the wake-up operation consume power.
When an exit from standby mode of a device is controlled via the intermediary of its network interface (for example Ethernet or WiFi), the network interface consumes several watts. This consumption has a negative impact on power saving in standby mode.
The invention enables at least one of the disadvantages of the prior art to be resolved by optimising the consumption in standby mode of a device while making it possible to control the exit from the standby mode via the intermediary of an interface.
More specifically the invention relates to a method for controlling a device, the device operating in several operating modes corresponding to different levels of power consumption and comprising a first and a second communication interface, the method being characterised in that it comprises, in the device the steps of activating the second communication interface upon receiving a first wake-up message via the first interface when the device is in a first operating mode corresponding to a first level of power consumption, the activation resulting in a second level of power consumption higher than the first level of power consumption, and of receiving a second wake-up message via the second communication interface, the second wake-up message resulting in the transition of the device to an operating mode corresponding to a third level of power consumption, the third level of power consumption being higher than the second level of power consumption.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the operating modes of the device correspond to the activation of subsets of functional modules comprised in the device, each of the subsets of functional modules corresponding to a level of power consumption of the device.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the first operating mode corresponds to a configuration of the device wherein only the first interface is activated.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the second operating mode corresponds to a configuration of the device wherein only the first and second interfaces are activated.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the first interface is a wireless communication interface.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the second interface is a network interface of Ethernet type.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the second interface is a wireless network interface, compatible with transmission standards 802.11.
The invention also relates to a device operating in several operating modes corresponding to different levels of power consumption and comprising a first and a second communication interface, the device being characterised in that it further comprises means for activating the second interface upon receiving via the first interface a first wake-up message when the device is in a first operating mode corresponding to a first level of power consumption, the activation resulting in a second level of power consumption higher than the first level of power consumption and means for controlling the device upon receiving via the second interface a second wake-up message, the second wake-up message resulting in the transition of the device to an operating mode corresponding to a third level of power consumption, the third level of power consumption being higher than the second level of power consumption.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the operating modes of the device correspond to the activation of subsets of functional modules comprised in the device, each of the subsets of functional modules corresponding to a level of power consumption of the device.
Advantageously, the first wake-up message sent to the first interface and the second wake-up message sent to the second interface can be transmitted by different devices, which offers great flexibility in the implementation of functions requiring interactions between several devices.
One of the advantages of the invention is the ease of implementation of the invention in the design of a product having two communication interfaces, considering the standard architecture of an audiovisual programme receiver. The standard architecture of a consumer product of this type, and the implementation of different operating modes (for example deep standby mode, standby mode with network, decoder mode, all-functions mode), is such that it is very simple, during a new design phase, to adapt an existing architecture in order to incorporate the invention and then enable, during use of the product, the wake-up of an item of equipment from another item of equipment without having to supply power to the network interface in standby mode.
The invention will be better understood, and other specific features and advantages will emerge upon reading the following description, the description making reference to the annexed drawings wherein:
In
In a general but non-restrictive way, the invention relates to a method for controlling operating modes of an audiovisual programme decoder and notably the transition of the decoder from a low-consumption standby mode to a functional mode wherein a connection to a local network is active.
In the case where a user uses a “slave” decoder to view an audiovisual programme stored by a “master” decoder and where the “master” decoder is placed in a standby mode, it is necessary to wake up the “master” decoder. In this type of configuration where several items of equipment are interconnected via a LAN network, it is common for an item of equipment to use the network to send a command to exit standby mode (or “wake-up” command) to another item of equipment. The sending of a “magic packet” is a method designed for this type of remote activation dubbed “Wake-on LAN” or “WoL” and described in the White Paper “Wake on LAN Technology” by Lieberman Software, revision 2 dated 1 Jun. 2006). By this method, the wake-up of an item of equipment is activated when the network interface receives a data frame containing a predefined sequence. However, this type of remote wake-up requires the network interface to be active, which requires it to be supplied with power. The consumption of a network interface can be several watts, which is not ideal with regards to the recommendations and directives aiming to reduce overall power consumption and more specifically power consumption of home equipment.
According to an embodiment of the invention and in order to avoid consumption caused by the LAN network interfaces such as a WiFi module or an Ethernet interface, decoder 4 uses a communication interface with a very low level of electrical consumption to send a message to decoder 3. This interface can be wired or wireless, such as for example a Bluetooth wireless interface (such as described in the IEEE802.15.1 standard) or a Zigbee wireless interface (based on the WPAN 802.15.4 standard; Wireless Personal Area Networks). The level of electrical consumption of the low-consumption interface is sufficiently low compared to the level of consumption of an Ethernet interface or an 802.11 interface that it is possible to keep it constantly supplied with power, including when the decoder is operating in standby mode.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the message transmitted by decoder 4 and received via the low-consumption interface of decoder 3 results in the activation of the LAN network interface of decoder 3. The message is for example a message of proprietary type, carried by one or more data frames defined according to the Bluetooth standard. The message can also be a proprietary message carried by one or more data frames defined according to the Zigbee standard, or any other transmission standard defining the exchange of data corresponding to a type of communication interface. The message comprises an identifier which, interpreted by a wake-up module comprised in the Bluetooth interface of decoder 3, results in the activation of a control signal (such as described later; see notably
According to another embodiment of the invention, the message transmitted by decoder 4 can be a standardised message, defined in a standard corresponding to a type of communication interface, which is intended to control the exit from a standby mode of the device comprising this type of interface.
Decoder 4 is structurally identical to decoder 3. It comprises a control unit 41, a LAN network interface 42, a low-consumption interface 43 and a hard disc 44. Also, it can be used as a “slave” decoder in combination with decoder 3 then used as a “master” decoder or conversely as a “master” decoder delivering an audiovisual programme to decoder 3 in “slave” mode.
When decoder 4 in “slave” mode is preparing to receive an audiovisual programme from decoder 3 operating in standby mode, it remotely controls the exit from standby mode of decoder 3 according to the method and in the following way: control unit 41 of decoder 4 controls the sending of a wake-up message intended for decoder 3 via the intermediary of Bluetooth wireless communication interface 43. The message is transmitted by radio according to the bluetooth (short-distance) transmission protocol in the nearby environment of decoder 4. Decoder 3, in the range of the transmission field of interface 43, receives the wake-up message via Bluetooth communication interface 33. Bluetooth interface 33 of decoder 3 is still active; the other functional elements of decoder 3 are inactive. The receipt and recognition of the wake-up message via Bluetooth interface 33 of decoder 3 results in the change of state of an activate signal of LAN network interface 32 of decoder 3. According to an embodiment of the invention, the activation signal results in the switching of a circuit for supplying power to LAN interface 32. According to another embodiment, interface 32 comprises one or more integrated circuits having an activation and deactivation control input making it respectively operative or inoperative and corresponding to a standby and wake-up command for interface 32. The assertion of the activation signal between low-consumption interface 33 and LAN local network interface 32 makes network interface 32 receptive and responsive to the detection of wake-up message of Wake-on LAN type which would be sent thereto via the LAN network. After a period greater than the activation time for LAN interface 32, decoder 4 sends, under control of control unit 41 and via the intermediary of its local network interface 42, a wake-up message of “magic packet” type, via the intermediary of the LAN local network. The receipt of this “magic packet”, specifying decoder 3 as recipient of the packet, results in the exit from standby mode of decoder 3 and activation of the functions necessary for the service requested, such as the transmission of a programme stored on hard disc 34 to decoder 4, via its network interface 42, with a view to its decoding and its reproduction.
Advantageously, the activation of the functions following receipt of a “magic packet” is limited to a predetermined number of functional modules of the device exiting standby. The activation can, for example, only relate to the LAN local network and the associated control logic enabling external devices to communicate via the LAN local network interface. The activation can also, according to another example, relate to a module for displaying and managing the keypad, a reception module for the remote control, one or more USB interfaces, a hard disc, a memory module, or any other module or set of modules incorporated in the device. The activation of a subset only of functional modules of a device and the availability which ensues for a subset of functions and services available to the user, in fact creates a plurality of different functional modes, which are characterised, amongst other things, by the options offered to the user and by the power consumption specific to each of these modes.
According to an embodiment of the invention, Bluetooth communication interface 33 of decoder 3 placed in standby mode can receive a wake-up message. The incoming messages are interpreted by wake-up module 330 of Bluetooth interface 33. In the case where a message received is interpreted as a wake-up message intended for decoder 3, for example by the recognition of a specific identifier in a data frame, wake-up module 330 sets activation signal 37 of the LAN local network interface to control activation circuit 39 in order to supply power to LAN local network interface 32. Then, and upon receiving a “magic packet” intended for decoder 3, the WoL module of the LAN local network interface sets standby exit control signal 38 to control power supply interface 36 and to close the power supply lines with a view to supplying the control unit 31 and hard disc 34 functional blocks and to exiting standby mode. Decoder 3 then exits standby mode and the functions which require the operation of control unit 31 and hard disc 34 are then available. This is the case, for example, for the transmission of an audiovisual programme to another decoder, via the intermediary of LAN local network interface 32, with a view to its decoding and its reproduction.
This wake-up method in two successive steps enables a decoder to be activated by exiting standby mode while avoiding the power consumption inherent in keeping the LAN network interface active.
The power consumption of the decoder is thereby significantly reduced, which makes it possible to better meet the requirements of the directives aiming to reduce overall consumption of home equipment.
The invention, described in the context of a transmission of a programme from a decoder to another decoder via a home network, nevertheless relates to any other device having at least two communication interfaces and several operating modes corresponding to several levels of power consumption.
The invention can be applied for example to a computer comprising two communication interfaces such as a WiFi interface and a Bluetooth interface. Another application example is an item of storage server equipment intended to be used on a local network, typically called NAS (Network Attached Storage), which equipment can be woken up by a computer placed in a nearby environment and using for example a Bluetooth interface to send a first wake-up message and a WiFi or wired Ethernet interface to send a “magic packet”.
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11 55061 | Jun 2011 | KR | national |
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PCT/EP2012/060839 | 6/7/2012 | WO | 00 | 3/7/2014 |
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WO2012/168391 | 12/13/2012 | WO | A |
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