The present invention relates generally to improvements in electronic safes. More particularly, the present invention relates to improvements in electronic safes that provide for enhanced security, increased functionality and ease of use.
Many retail businesses commonly have at least one drop safe on site. Particularly in high cash flow transaction businesses, cashiers are required to limit the amount of cash stored in the cash drawers to a predetermined amount. Any excess cash is placed in a secure drop safe to secure the cash from potential theft. These safes are secure and require considerable effort to break into. Many of these safes are rated as secure devices by independent agencies, such as Underwriter's Laboratories, which require rigorous testing to ensure they are not easily broken into. Unfortunately, the use of these drop safes adds to the paperwork required by both the cashiers and the store managers to track information associated with a deposit, such as the amount of money, cashier, shift and day, for example. Furthermore, when the money is to be removed from the drop safe and taken to the bank or other secured location, the manager must collect, count and sort the money. Additionally, the manager must generate the appropriate reports necessary for the effective running of the business. All of these tasks can consume a significant portion of the manager's time and expose the business to potentially large losses resulting from a robbery occurring while the money is being removed from the safe and counted.
A number of electronic drop safe products are also prevalent in high cash flow transaction businesses. These electronic drop safes may have one or more bill acceptors that can determine the denomination of bills as they are inserted into the bill acceptors and store those bills in a cassette inside the drop safe. Such electronic safes may contain a deposit slot to allow envelopes or wrapped checks, bills and stamps to be inserted and stored for later retrieval. The use of electronics and bill acceptors to recognize bills also allows the reporting and tracking of money by cashier, shift and day easier to do automatically. These electronic drop safes reduce the time the manager must spend to do the counting manually, and also reduce the amount of time the money had to be exposed during those times that the money was removed from the safe to be transferred to a bank or other secured location.
The use of these electronic drop safes added a different set of requirements for the cashiers and managers. Generally, each drop required the cashier to enter his or her identification number through a keypad. The identification numbers or hot keys if incorrectly punched cause errors in identifying the source of the deposited funds. If intentionally wrongly entered, the misidentification might be tied to employee theft. Additionally, a considerable amount of data entry was required on the part of the manager to set up the allowed cashier identification numbers and to create end of shift reports, business day reports, and the like. An identification number typically determines the authority given the manager, which if seen by other employees while the manager is entering this identification number will breech security. Collection reports that summarize the totals collected as well as the subtotals by business day, shift, and the like were generated upon collection of the contents.
These prior art safes force the collections from the safes either at a fixed periodic time determined on a daily basis or by an armored car service schedule. Some safes provide a second bill acceptor which is enabled when the first is full, which adds considerable cost to the safe.
In many instances, although the electronic safes are programmed to identify and authorize certain cashiers and managers to use the electronic safe, separate apparatus is used to track the time that cashiers, managers, and other employees are working on site.
It is not unusual to have multiple electronic safes in a single location or facility. In some instances, these safes are operated stand-alone with the manager individually programming each and accessing each safe for reports. In many cases these safes are wired to a back room computer to automatically monitor the activity of each of the safes and generate consolidated reports. In these cases, considerable expense has limited the use of the safes due to the expense of setting up the system, including wiring and configuration, the need for a computer in each facility and customized software to allow the use of the electronic safes.
The trend toward increasing security of bill acceptors, and currency itself has moved the suppliers of bill acceptors to allow for ease of updating through the use of reprogrammable memory, such as flash memory, within their products. With the recent update of US $20 bills and more recently US $5 and $10 bills, some bill acceptor manufacturers have provided update modules to allow their bill acceptor products to be updated by downloading the revised firmware directly from their update modules to their bill acceptors. Unfortunately, in the case of electronic safes, access to the bill acceptors requires a collection be made by physically opening the safe, forcing either the store manager or the armored car service to be present. Handling of the collected money forces a change to the normal business activities to allow for the technician to upgrade the bill acceptor at his convenience rather than at the normal collection time.
It is an object of the present invention to provide an improved electronic drop safe for receiving cash and non-cash drops.
It is also an object of the present invention to allow most non-cash deposits to be entered through the bill acceptor, and stored along with the cash deposits.
It is another object of the present invention to provide techniques for entering non-bills or non-accepted bills into the bill acceptor along with a tag identifying its credited value.
A further object of the present invention is to provide an approach for entering non-bills or non-accepted bills into the bill acceptor within an envelope or folder designed to deposit the media or act as a tag.
It is another object of the present invention to allow identification of specific cash or non cash deposits physically within the cash acceptor for later accountability even when using third party counting and pickup services.
It is a further object of the present invention to eliminate the need to have cashiers enter their identification information using a keypad, saving time and eliminating errors, and reducing the opportunity for fraud.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide a more secure approach to the setup of the electronic safe parameters as well as to generate reports.
It is still another object of the present invention to provide for the automatic generation of shift reports, business day reports, cashier reports and the like on a programmable time schedule.
It is yet another object of the present invention to provide advanced notice of when the cassette is likely to be full and a pickup or collection needs to be scheduled.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide business analysis inputs allowing the manager to further optimize the business.
It is another object of the present invention to provide methods and apparatus for tracking the times all employees of an establishment are working on site and generating the appropriate reports thereby replacing the an employee time clock or the like.
Another object of the present invention is to provide for a wireless local area network, which requires little setup and no network installation wiring or costs.
Yet another object of the present invention is to provide a single site node to allow wireless communication to an off site host system.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a mechanism to allow the updating of the bill acceptor to allow new currencies, currency updates, or other firmware updates without requiring a collection.
A more complete understanding of the present invention, as well as other features, objects and advantages of the invention, will be apparent from the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings.
The present invention now will be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which several presently preferred embodiments of the invention are shown. This invention may, however, be embodied in various forms and should not be construed as limited to the embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete, and will fully convey the scope of the invention to those skilled in the art.
In one aspect, as shown in
Other non-cash media can be inserted into the bill acceptor and retained by the electronic safe. This feature dramatically reduces the number of manually handled deposits in most retail establishments. Additionally, a printed or preprinted bill sized information tag can be advantageously used to identify the specific deposited material contained in the envelope. This information tag may be placed in the envelope or inserted into the bill acceptor separately to accompany the envelope. For example, the value of a check or other item contained in an envelope can be printed on the accompanying information tag, allowing the value entered for the bookmarked item to be compared with the accompanying tag to make entry errors easy to find. Alternatively, the value of the check or other item may be printed on the envelope.
Also, pre-printed identification slips can be inserted into the bill acceptor. Such slips allow a record of the physical identification of cashiers, third party collection agents, manager changeovers, and the like to be stored in the cassette. These preprinted identification slips can be used in combination with envelopes to identify the source of the deposits physically as well as electronically as discussed further below in connection with
In a preferred embodiment, the bill or other valuable media is entered into the electronic safe using the envelope 200 by placing a bill, such as bill 201, in the envelope to result in a filled envelope 202, as shown in
One weakness of current electronic safe products is the requirement that the cashier enter an identification number (ID) through the use of a keypad. In many cases, a single hot key is utilized to enable the bill acceptor in the safe. The identification information is crucial to tracking the amount of cash put into the safe by a given cashier. In the general case in which multiple cashiers are sharing one safe, an error in entering the hot key, or forgetting to enter the ID and depositing bills into the safe before the previous cashier ID has timed out causes errors in the reporting. Insofar as the integrity of the reporting capabilities of such safes is an important timesaving benefit provided by the safes, these easily committed errors are problematic. To ensure the integrity of the collection data, at least some armored car services are providing the collectors with memory keys, which serve to identify them and act as the key to the electronic lock provided on the safe requiring the carrier to position the key within a receptacle to achieve the necessary communication with the electronic safe controller. This option is less practical than a keypad entry for a cashier. The cashier needs to enter his or her ID quickly, which may be accomplished with single key hot keys. The present invention solves the competing requirements of quick ID entry with the need for a reliable secure ID determination through the use of a wireless identification mechanism to provide identification of a person interacting with an electronic safe.
An electronic safe in accordance with the present invention provides a wireless link with a relatively small field of view around the bill acceptor entry slot. Each cashier will have a wireless ID tag, which may be worn like a wristwatch, a name tag or the like. The ID tag will have the cashier's unique identification and will automatically communicate the ID as each bill is inserted. The electronic safe wireless link constantly polls for a cashier or other user and the cashier or other user's wireless link will respond to the poll. This polling arrangement will keep the power requirement within the wireless tag very low, allowing a small replaceable or rechargeable battery to power the tag. However, in a presently preferred embodiment, the transmitter mounted in the safe is used to wirelessly transmit power to the small lightweight radio frequency (RF) ID tag device worn by the cashier, allowing the ID device to operate without a battery.
Persons other than cashiers can be provided with wireless ID tags. For example, the store manager or other authorized personnel can use a wireless ID tag to trigger reports, act as an electronic key similarly to the memory modules described above, or otherwise interact with the electronic safe. Third party collectors can similarly have a wireless ID tag to replace the need for a special key, memory module, or keying in an ID on a keypad at the time a collection is made. The use of keypads to enter the ID of managers, and third party collectors represents a significant security risk as the watchful eyes of unauthorized people could allow improper access to the secure information or the “combination” to the safe. All the technology available to memory keys including changing the ID day to day, restricting use by time of day, making obsolete the ID of personnel who have left the company, and the use of various encryption algorithms to prevent the electronic decoding of codes can be used on wireless ID keys in accordance with the present invention.
This approach eliminates both the errors associated with entering ID's through the keypad and the security risks associated with entering ID's through the keypad while increasing the speed of the drops. Timeouts to end a drop may be instantly overwritten when a different cashier enters a bill into the bill acceptor.
In another aspect, an electronic safe in accordance with the present invention includes an optical communication link. A handheld terminal, such as a personal digital assistant (PDA) 140 of
In another aspect, as shown in
An electronic safe system in accordance with the present invention will not only allow any number of electronic safes to be networked within a location, but will also allow the network of safes to be monitored remotely. It is known in the prior art to physically wire safes to a backroom computer and through this computer tie to a remote host through a modem. It is also known in the art to have a master electronic safe equipped with a modem and communicate to a remote host directly. As in the local network case, the cost of installing the equipment and running phone lines is high. Further, if phone lines are shared with other equipment, such as point of sale terminals, credit card acceptors, and the like, then access can be limited to all the equipment sharing the line. The present invention solves these problems by accessing a wireless data modem 152 to transfer information between the electronic safes on a site and a host location. A number of commercial services can be used that are very cost effective and do not compete with other resources at the location. Further, by avoiding normal voice channels, higher throughputs can be achieved by the present invention, further minimizing time and costs. Appropriate wireless data modems include CDPD, GSM, and SMS wireless modems.
An electronic safe system in accordance with the present invention may utilize several of these techniques to ensure the widest coverage possible on a national basis. These techniques can further be used to allow the safes access to an Internet IP address. A secure web site would then be used to accumulate the data from electronic safes across the country in the case of large chain stores, allowing for “local” wireless calling at each location, while providing national or international coverage. As seen in
A system in accordance with the present invention accommodates a number of techniques to optimize its use as appropriate for each customer's requirements. Each of these techniques seeks to minimize the cashier's or manager's time, significantly improve the security and integrity of the system, allow for cost effective real time access to the information required from each safe and allow real time setup, programming or reprogramming of the electronic safe or its bill acceptor as required. These improved capabilities can be provided to those making day to day use and operation of the system.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, by providing the appropriate interface from the bill acceptor to the controller with access through either a serial port, IRDA port, or other wireless port, an authorized manager can update the bill acceptor with new firmware to allow new or improved currency to be accepted, new or improved anti-counterfeiting techniques to be incorporated, or any changes required within the safe controller to be updated without the need to open the safe or have access to the currency. Techniques for uploading program memory through wired connections are well known in the art. Further details of presently preferred optical update techniques are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/448,067, assigned to the assignee of the present invention and entitled “Methods and Apparatus for Optical Communication Update of Program Memory in Embedded Systems”, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. The use of wireless updates, including Blue Tooth™ based techniques, for example, may be particularly suitable when used in conjunction with a local area network as addressed further herein.
Current electronic safes have the ability to generate a large number of reports including collection reports, shift reports, daily reports, “z” reports based on business day rather than calendar day, cashier reports and the like. With the exception of collection reports, all the other reports are generated at the initiation of the authorized person. The collection reports are typically automatically generated when the safe door is opened or when the cassette is removed from the safe. The generation of the various reports are selected by the authorized person and generated at his or her request at the time of the request, causing problems when the responsible person is not on site when the reports are expected to be run, or if the responsible person forgets to run the report or is otherwise detained and cannot run the report on time.
An electronic safe system in accordance with the present invention eliminates the problems of prior art systems, by allowing an auto-report mode of operation. In this mode, the reporting time and date range, frequency of reports, and authority to generate the report is programmed into the electronic safe system. The reports will be generated and saved at the appropriate times. Only the actual printing of the reports will require the input of the authorized person and this printing may be performed at any time. The report will reflect the correct time, date and data content associated with the range of time and date reported. In this mode, the reporting serves the business, rather than drives the business.
As an example, as described below, an electronic safe in accordance with the present invention may track the time cashiers begin and quit working during a shift. When a cashier arrives at work, the cashier will sign in to the electronic safe or in some other fashion communicate to the electronic safe that the cashier has begun working. When a cashier departs work, the electronic safe will record the departure time. At set reporting times, the electronic safe may automatically generate a time card report 412 detailing the hours worked by the cashiers or other employees. Alternatively, an employee, such as a manager, may cause the electronic safe to manually generate a time card report 412 detailing the work schedule of one or more cashiers.
As discussed above, prior art safes depend on a routine collection program and are designed to allow sufficient bills to be stored to accommodate the typical pickup schedules. In fact, as the current electronic safes are not qualified as security devices, they are typically referred to as temporary storage devices not intended to be left unattended or for long periods of time before being collected. This is normally not a problem, since bank deposits or armored pickups are done on a daily basis. However, there are significant dollar amounts associated with the routine of daily deposits whether or not an armored service is used. In an attended site, the knowledge of when a pickup or bank deposit must be made can save considerable expense. An electronic safe system in accordance with the present invention provides the capability to predict the time and day the cassette will be full and require replacement. There are a number of methods that can be used to make these predictions. One such technique would track and keep a running histogram of bills per hour or shift for each day of the week and predict based on the deviation of the norm from its saved data. The method can be used by each electronic safe based on its own use pattern, thereby providing an optimum prediction every time. As would be understood by one skilled in the art, advanced methods using neural networks can also be used in accordance with the teachings of the present invention.
Insofar as the data for each cashier, bill or check accepted is stored in the electronic safe for a period of time, a feature of the present invention is to provide analysis of the data which will allow the manager to optimize the operation of the business. The information resulting from the analysis includes but is not limited to the following. An electronic safe system in accordance with the present invention may suitably report on the amount of money by hour, by shift, day of the week, or the like to allow optimizing of cashier hiring. The electronic safe can report on the average drops per cashier over similar periods of time to determine if the work level is being maintained or if business is being lost and should be investigated by the manager. The electronic safe can report the average cash per drop per shift, per day, and the like to help determine the nature of the safe's usage over these same time periods. The average cash per drop for different cashiers on the same shift might point to incorrect use of the safe. Many retailers require all $50 and $100 bills be dropped directly and immediately into the electronic safe, bypassing the POS terminal. Such reporting can alert the manager that these rules are not being followed.
Currently, an alternate apparatus for tracking the employee's time has to be used even when an electronic safe is also used. An electronic safe system in accordance with the present invention has the ability to have each employee enter through the keypad, optically or utilizing an ID tag, such as bracelet 130 of
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made in the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of he present invention. Thus, it is intended that the present invention covers the modifications and variations of this invention provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
The present application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 11/474,206 filed Jun. 23, 2006 which is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/960,595 filed Sept. 21, 2001 which in turn claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/234,133 entitled “Methods and Apparatus for an Electronic Drop Safe” filed Sept. 21, 2000.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60234133 | Sep 2000 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11474206 | Jun 2006 | US |
Child | 12899219 | US | |
Parent | 09960595 | Sep 2001 | US |
Child | 11474206 | US |