This invention relates generally to accessories for portable media devices, and relates more particularly to audio mixing systems for use with portable media devices.
Music is often played and/or recorded using a device commonly referred to as an audio mixer. An audio mixer is capable of receiving audio signals (input signals) from two or more devices that produce audio signals and outputting audio signals (output signals) to one or more audio devices, such as speakers. An audio mixer may include mechanisms to adjust the characteristics of the received audio signals, including mechanisms to adjust gain, to equalize the high, mid and low ranges of the signals, to pan a stereo signal between the left and right signals, and to adjust the volume (or level) of the signals. The individual audio signals, having been manipulated by the mechanisms as described above, are then summed into a summed audio signal. The summed audio signal can be further adjusted by a mechanism, such as a compressor mechanism and/or a volume control mechanism to create an audio signal output. The mechanisms described above are linked to controls accessible by a user of the mixer, who can manipulate the controls to achieve the desired audio signal output. The audio signal output can be outputted to one or more devices for listening and/or recording.
Audio mixers are widely available, and examples include the BOSS® BR1600CD Digital Recorder and Mixer, the Roland® M-10E 10-channel 5-stereo Mixer, the TASCAM® 414mkII Portastudio™ mixer and recorder, and the TASCAM® DP-01FX/CD mixer and digital recorder, the features and specifications of which are widely available and known to those with ordinary skill in the art, and incorporated herein by this reference.
Similarly, video signals can be mixed by a video mixer, with the altered signal then output for viewing and/or recording. For example, the Roland® V-1 is a 4-channel video mixer.
Recently, portable media devices, capable of handling digital audio files in one or more file formats, have become very popular for their compact size and large storage capacity. Several formats for digital audio files exist, each offering its own combination of sound quality, compression rate, streaming capability, and other features. Some of the existing file formats are: AAC (“advanced audio coding”), ATRAC (“adaptive transform acoustic coding), MP3 (mpeg-1 audio layer 3), AIFF (audio interchange file format), WMA Windows® media audio), OGG (Ogg Vorbis), and WAV (waveform audio format), but this list is not an exhaustive one. Also, many portable media devices can playback video files in different formats, such as AVI (advanced video interleave) and MPEG-1 (moving picture experts group initial video and audio compression standard). For example, portable media devices sold under the trademark iPod by Apple Computer, Inc. of Cupertino, Calif., are widely sold with this capability. Portable media devices capable of playing digital audio files, and of storing them in large numbers, are often referred to as MP3 players because of the popularity of that particular file format.
Traditionally, portable media devices have been able to playback only those audio files uploaded from a computer and stored in the storage system of the portable media device in one of aforementioned file formats. Additionally, until recently, portable media devices have not included mechanisms to allow recording of music or sounds onto the portable media device, nor have they provided support for external audio receiving devices. However, newer models of portable media devices, such as an Apple® iPod® device, and other portable media devices, provide increased support for external devices, including devices to record sounds onto the portable media device.
Devices have been created that take advantage of some of the recording features of portable media devices, including, for example, the audio mixing system for an MP3 player described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/472,098, incorporated herein in its entirety by this reference.
However, the capacities of these devices are limited. A user of a portable media device may have an extensive media system. For example, a user may have available to him or her a media system that may include one or more instruments capable of generating sounds that can be converted into electrical (or audio) signals, such as one or more electric guitars, bass guitars, acoustic guitars, keyboards, microphones, synthesizers, and the like, and/or video signals, such as a video recorder. A user's media system may also include audio and/or video signals recorded on compact discs, digital video discs, records, cassettes, one or more computers and the like. A user may also have available to him or her, as part of his or her media system, programs, such as programs capable of being run on a computer, that permit manipulation of audio and/or media signals. The number and types of signals that can be input into the devices is limited, and the ability of the devices to permit full integration of the functionalities of a portable media device into a user's media system is limited. Thus, a need exists for an apparatus or system that is capable of permitting a user to integrate the functionalities of one or more portable media devices with one or more components of his or her media system. Other needs or potential benefits of such an apparatus or system may be apparent from this disclosure.
Portable media devices typically include a screen that displays information to the user regarding various features and/or functionalities of the device. Such portable media devices will frequently include a feature that causes the screen to light, commonly called a “backlight,” that permits better visibility of information displayed on the screen. To conserve energy, particularly battery life, the backlight typically remains lit for a relatively short period of time, often adjustable by a user. However, in some applications, when the portable media device is electrically coupled to an apparatus, it would be useful for the backlight to remain lit for a longer period of time, without the need to turn it back on when it goes off and/or reprogram the period of time for which it is to remain lit. Therefore, a need or potential for benefit exists for a feature associated with the apparatus to which the portable media device is coupled to cause the backlight to remain on while the portable media device remains coupled to the apparatus.
A typical portable media device, such as an Apple® iPod® device, includes controls on the face of the device (such as controls located on a touch screen and/or a control wheel) that are manipulated, while not exclusively, most conveniently by the user's thumb. Controls designed to be operated by a user's thumb are easier to use if the user's other fingers can be conveniently placed behind the user's thumb such that, if the portable media device were not disposed between the thumb and fingers, the pad of the thumb would touch some part of the palm-side portion of the user's fingers. Such configuration of thumb and fingers is sometimes referred to herein as the “preferred operating hand position.” Of course, when a user is manipulating the controls of a portable media device with his or her thumb, and when the portable media device is not resting on a surface, disposed within a docking station or otherwise supported, the preferred operating hand position is also preferred because it allows the user to grip the portable media device. Nevertheless, even if a portable media device is fully supported, for example, by a docking station, it continues to be preferable to operate the controls of the portable media device using the preferred operating hand position. Therefore, a need exists for a docking station for a portable media device that permits the user to operate the controls of the portable media device using the preferred operating hand position.
The invention will be better understood from a reading of the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying Figures in the drawings in which:
For simplicity and clarity of illustration, the drawing figures illustrate the general manner of construction, and descriptions and details of well-known features and techniques may be omitted to avoid unnecessarily obscuring the invention. Additionally, elements in the drawing figures are not necessarily drawn to scale. For example, the dimensions of some of the elements in the figures may be exaggerated relative to other elements to help improve understanding of embodiments of the present invention. The same reference numerals in different figures denote the same elements.
The terms “first,” “second,” “third,” “fourth,” and the like in the description and in the claims, if any, are used for distinguishing between similar elements and not necessarily for describing a particular sequential or chronological order. It is to be understood that the terms so used are interchangeable under appropriate circumstances such that the embodiments of the invention described herein are, for example, capable of operation in sequences other than those illustrated or otherwise described herein. Furthermore, the terms “include,” “have,” and any variations thereof, are intended to cover a non-exclusive inclusion, such that a process, method, article, or apparatus that comprises a list of elements is not necessarily limited to those elements, but may include other elements not expressly listed or inherent to such process, method, article, or apparatus.
The terms “left,” “right,” “front,” “back,” “top,” “bottom,” “over,” “under,” and the like in the description and in the claims, if any, are used for descriptive purposes and not necessarily for describing permanent relative positions. It is to be understood that the terms so used are interchangeable under appropriate circumstances such that the embodiments of the invention described herein are, for example, capable of operation in other orientations than those illustrated or otherwise described herein. The term “coupled,” as used herein, is defined as directly or indirectly connected in an electrical, mechanical, or other manner. For example, a first mechanism electrically coupled to a second mechanism may be directly connected or may be indirectly connected via a conductor coupled to the first and second mechanisms that operates to transmit signals from the first mechanism to the second mechanism. The term “secured,” as used herein, is defined as firmly attaching, joining, fixing, fastening, or connecting one item to another item (in a removable or non-removable) manner, either directly or via one or more intermediate items secured to the items described as “secured” to one another in a manner appropriate for the specific items.
A mixer is particularly (although not exclusively) suited to allow integration of the functionalities of one or more portable media device with one or more components of a user's media system. Therefore, a preferred embodiment of an apparatus or system of the present invention is a mixer for use with a portable media device and one or more components of a user's media system. Such a mixer allows a user to more fully integrate the functionalities of one or more portable media device with one or more components of his or her media system. Certain embodiments of such a mixer (or other apparatus or system for use with a portable media device) include controls and/or features that simplify use of a portable media device as a component of a media system. For example, a preferred embodiment includes one or more of (a) a recording menu access control, (b) an authenticated recording feature, and/or (c) a backlight toggle control.
In an example of an embodiment of the invention, an audio mixer for a portable media device includes: (a) an audio receiving mechanism capable of receiving audio signals from a plurality of components of a user's media system, modifying the characteristics of the received audio signals, summing the modified audio signals into a master audio signal, and outputting the master audio signal to the portable media device to be saved to the portable media device as a recording; (b) a docking station to receive the portable media device; and (c) a portable media device operating system.
In another embodiment of the invention, an apparatus for use with a portable media device includes: (a) an interface configured to be plugged into and electrically coupled to the portable media device that provides a way of communicating between the apparatus and the portable media device; (b) a processor, in communication with the apparatus and the portable media device, capable of causing the backlight of the portable media device to remain on while the portable media device remains coupled with the apparatus; and (c) a backlight toggle control, in communication with the processor.
In yet another embodiment of the invention, an apparatus for use with a portable media device includes a docking station, wherein the docking station includes: (a) a receiving port configured to accept a portable media player, and (b) a cavity below the receiving port, an opening of which is aligned with the front face of the portable media device disposed within the receiving port, and which permits a user of the apparatus to operate the controls of the portable media device using the preferred operating hand position while the portable media device remains within the receiving port.
Certain embodiments of an apparatus or system of the present invention include mixers for use with a portable media device. A mixer allows a user to integrate the functionalities of one or more portable media devices with one or more components of his or her media system in a new and useful manner. Such a mixer permits a user to, for example, manipulate and sum signals, such as audio signals, produced by one or more components of his or her media system, such as musical instruments, save the signals produced by the mixer to a portable media device as a recording (preferably, an authenticated recording) and, simultaneously, sense the signals produced by the mixer, for example, by listening to audio signals through speakers.
The usefulness of an apparatus or system, such as a mixer, of an embodiment of the present invention is increased if it includes an authenticated recording feature, as described below.
The portable media device operating system 112 facilitates communication and transfer of power and signals between the portable media device 114 and the mixer 100. In the embodiment illustrated in
In a preferred embodiment of the mixer 100, the portable media device operating system 112 further comprises a processor 252, which controls communications between the portable media device 114 and the mixer 100, via the interface 250. Such communications are sent to the processor 252 from the interface 250 over the conductor 254. The conductor 254 can include one or more individual conductors. In one embodiment, the processor 252 is a microcontroller. For example, the processor 252 can be an eight bit microcontroller sold under the trademark PSOC by Cypress of San Jose, Calif., or an eight bit microcontroller sold under the trade name C8051F331 or C8051F333 by Silicon Laboratories of Austin, Tex. The portable media device operating system 112 can also include separate hand shaking (or authentication) circuitry 253, if required by the portable media device 114.
In some embodiments, certain functions of the portable media device 100 are controlled by the user through the portable media device 114. As an example, a menu system on a screen 115 of the portable media device 114 can be used by the user to begin recording, delete previous recordings, stop recording, enable or disable the automatic gain control, select the recording mode (mono or stereo), set recording quality, begin playing, stop playback, etc. To the extent necessary or desirable for the function of the mixer 100, information regarding the instructions from the portable media device 114 is passed through the interface 250 to the processor 252. In some embodiments, one or more functions of the mixer 100 can be controlled by the user through the portable media device 114 such as, for example, selections to enable or disable the automatic gain control and/or select the recording mode. The processor 252 then implements the instructions from the user.
In one embodiment, after the mixer 100 has begun recording signals onto the portable media device 114, the portable media device 114 displays menu 304 on screen 115, as shown in
Preferably, the portable media device operating system 112 is designed to interact with the portable media device 114 such that any such recording saved in the memory of the portable media device 114 is saved in a manner that causes the recording to be recognized by the portable media device 114 as a file capable of being played by the portable media device 114, without further manipulation of such file (an “authenticated recording”). Thus, preferably, a user, having saved a recording to a portable media device 114 can, optionally, proceed immediately to access a list of files available on the portable media device 114 using, for example, controls of the portable media device 114 accessible by the flywheel 302 on the portable media device 114, which list will include the authenticated recording, and select such authenticated recording to be played by the portable media device 114. This functionality of the mixer 100 with the authenticated recording feature can be achieved, for example, by authentication circuitry 253 included in the portable media device operating system 112.
There are numerous benefits to a mixer 100 that includes this feature (the “authenticated recording feature”). For example, a user can use the mixer 100 with the authenticated recording feature to create a first audio signal, save an authenticated recording of the first audio signal to a portable media device 114, input the saved authenticated recording of the first audio signal into the mixer, sum the first audio signal of the saved authenticated recording with a second audio signal created by the mixer to create a third audio signal, and save the third audio signal to a computer, via the USB interface 110 or to another personal media device (not shown) coupled to the mixer.
In another embodiment, the user can control one or more of the functions listed above through controls located on the housing 101 and electrically coupled to the processor 252. For example, in the mixer 100 illustrated in
Preferably, the portable media device operating system 112 of the mixer 100 includes a backlight toggle control 258 located on the housing 101 of the mixer 100. A backlight toggle control 258 allows a user of the mixer 100 to override the backlight settings of the portable media device 114. Preferably, the backlight toggle control 258 allows a user to cause the backlight of the portable media device 114 to remain on while the portable media device 114 remains coupled to the mixer 100 or until the user engages the backlight toggle control 258 to turn off the backlight of the portable media device 114, whichever occurs first. In the example of the mixer 100 illustrated in
As discussed above, it is typically desirable for a user to select a backlight setting for a portable media device that causes the backlight to remain on for a relatively short period of time, because such a setting will preserve battery life. However, in an apparatus or system for use with a portable media device, such as a mixer, the portable media device receives power from the apparatus or system, thereby reducing or eliminating the drain on the battery of the portable media device while the apparatus or system is powered and the portable media device remains coupled to the apparatus or system. Therefore, it will be understood by those with ordinary skill in the art that the backlight toggle control is useful for many apparatuses and systems for use with a portable media device, including but not limited to a mixer. Thus, embodiments of the present invention include other apparatuses and systems (not shown) for use with a portable media device that comprise a backlight toggle control.
It will be understood that the portable media device 114 is not, and need not be, a component of the mixer 100, but is merely shown to facilitate understanding of such a mixer 100 and the way in which it may function. It will be further understood that a mixer can be configured to be coupled with and to communicate with more than one portable media device 114 at the same time or at different times.
It will be understood by one with ordinary skill in the art that mixers can comprise a variety of functions known in the art, and that circuitry necessary or desirable to achieve such functions are known in the art and need not be explained in detail. Nevertheless, returning to
In the illustrated embodiment, (a) a first channel 102 includes one or more inputs 116, 118, which inputs may be input jacks, such as an XLR jack 116 and/or a ¼ inch jack 118, to receive audio signals from a source, for example, a microphone, capacitors 120, 122, a gain (or trim) mechanism 124, equalization circuits 126, a volume (or level) adjustment mechanism 128, and a pan mechanism 130; (b) a second channel 104 includes one or more inputs 132, 134, which inputs may be input jacks, such as an XLR jack 132 and/or a ¼ inch jack 134, to receive audio signals from a source, for example, a microphone, capacitors 136, 138 a gain (or trim) mechanism 140, equalization circuits 142, a volume adjustment mechanism 144, and a pan mechanism 146; (c) a third channel 106 includes one or more inputs 148, 150, which inputs may be input jacks, such as two ¼ inch jacks 148, 150, to receive audio signals from a source, for example, an electric keyboard, a mechanism 156 coupled with the circuit or circuits of one line of the channel input, for example, the left line, to split a mono signal into a stereo signal, differential amplifiers 152, 154, equalization circuits 160, a volume adjustment mechanism 162, and a balance mechanism 164; and (d) a fourth channel 108 includes one or more inputs 170, 172, which inputs may be input jacks, such as two RCA jacks 170, 172, to receive audio signals from a source, for example, a compact disc player, equalization circuits 174, a volume adjustment mechanism 176, and a balance mechanism 178. It will be understood by one with ordinary skill in the art that the inputs, jacks, mechanisms, controls, and/or circuits of each channel are coupled in one or more manners known in the art, for example, via conductors, and that one or more nodes, switches, capacitors and the like may be included appropriately in the circuitry of a mixer (some of which may be illustrated on
In the embodiment of the present invention illustrated in
It will be understood by one with ordinary skill in the art that a mixer need not include all of the features described above and/or could include addition features currently in use (or used in the future) in audio mixers not included in the illustrated embodiment. Furthermore, it will be understood inputs used to input signals into a mixer can include a variety of input jacks configured to accept a variety of plugs associated with sources of audio signals. In addition, it will be understood that audio signals could be input into a mixer by inputs other than input jack and plug, for example, by a wireless connection. Mixers can include any number of channels, any of which channels can be designed to accept mono signals, stereo signals, or both. In addition, mixers can receive and process video signals, either in addition to or exclusive of audio signals.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, illustrated on
As illustrated by the embodiment of the present invention shown in
In the embodiment of the mixer 100 illustrated in
A preferred embodiment of a mixer, such as the embodiment illustrated in
In a preferred embodiment of the mixer 100, whether the USB interface 110 acts to send or accept signals is controlled by the computer to which the mixer 100 is coupled, in accordance with commands selected by the user, or otherwise; however, a processor, and controls for such processor, could be included in a mixer to allow initiation of such commands by the mixer. It will be understood by those with ordinary skill in the art that connectors other than USB connectors are available and may be suitable to couple an interface to a computer or other digital source or receiver, and that such connectors could be used in a mixer. For example, connections such as IEEE-1394 (also known as Firewire or ilink) connections could be employed, or the connection could be eliminated entirely.
In an embodiment of the mixer 100 that includes a USB interface 110, as described above, said USB interface 110 is preferably coupled to a USB input level mechanism 218 to create the USB input audio signal. Preferably, the USB level input mechanism 218 is coupled with a control that allows a user to adjust the USB input audio signal. For example, a rotary analog potentiometer 450 is coupled with the USB input level mechanism 218 and permits a user to adjust the USB input audio signal in a range of silent to +15 dB.
In the example of the mixer 100 shown on
As described above, the USB interface 110 can operate to send audio signals to a computer or receive digital signals from a computer. The mixer 100 can also be used in a manner that permits the continuing audio signal to be output to a computer, via the USB interface 110, to be processed by the computer (for example, by using an audio workstation processor), and then returned to the mixer 100, via the USB interface 110. The USB input audio signal is then summed with the continuing audio signal at a mix ratio mechanism 220. However, by operating the potentiometer 452 coupled with the mix ratio mechanism 220, a user can cause the second summed audio signal to be only the USB input audio signal (which, again, is the continuing audio signal, further processed by the computer, and returned to the mixer).
A user of the mixer 100, who has used the USB interface 110 in the manner described above, could operate the potentiometer 452 coupled with the mix ratio mechanism 220 to cause the second summed audio signal to be a mix of the continuing audio signal and the USB input audio signal. With such a use, the USB audio input signal typically will be “delayed” in comparison to the continuing audio signal. While the delay between the continuing audio signal and the USB input audio signal may be undesirable in certain contexts, a user may find the effects of this delay to be pleasing and/or otherwise desirable in other contexts.
In the embodiment of the mixer 100 illustrated on
As described above, the mixer 100, permits more complete integration of the functionalities of one or more portable media devices with one or more components of a user's media system—by permitting communication between the mixer 100 and the portable media device 114 via the portable media device operating system 112. Thus, in one embodiment, the master audio signal is processed and transmitted to the portable media device 114 by the interface 250 to be saved by the portable media device 114 as an authenticated recording. Preferably, the portable media device stores the authenticated recording in one of the aforementioned file formats. For example, the portable media device can save the authenticated recording as uncompressed WAV files. In one embodiment, the authenticated recording, for example, can be saved at high or low quality. The high quality audio signal can be a 16-bit stereo, 44.1 KHz signal, with a bit rate of 1211 kb/sec [kilobytes per second] while the low quality audio signal can be a 16-bit monaural, 22.05 KHz signal, with a bit rate of 352 kb/sec, as an example. In another embodiment, the user can set the quality of the recording to other values.
A preferred embodiment of the mixer 100 also includes a mechanism 223 to communicate to the user whether the master audio signal is being saved to the portable media device, and a mechanism 224, 225 to communicate the status of the master audio signal to a user. For example, mechanism 223, 224, 225 can be a light source. In one embodiment, mechanisms 224, 225 can include an LED that lights a first light if the master audio signal is greater than 6 dBV (decibels in reference to 1 volt rms [root means squared]), a second light if the master audio signal is greater than 0 dBV, a third light if the master audio signal is greater than −6 dBV, a fourth light if the master audio signal is greater than −12 dBV, a fifth light if the master audio signal is greater than −18 dBV, and a sixth light if the master audio signal is greater than −24 dBV. In one embodiment, mechanism 223 includes an LED that lights white if a portable media device is disposed within the docking station and lights red if information is communicated from the portable media device 114 to the processor 252, via the interface 250, that a signal is being recorded to the portable media device.
To more fully enjoy the capacities of the mixer 100, including but not limited to the ability of the mixer 100 to permit new and useful integrations of the functionalities of one or more personal media device 114 with one or more components of a user's media system, audio signals saved to the personal media device 114 preferably will be suited to the requirements of the personal media device 114. Therefore, the mixer 100 preferably includes a signal conditioning mechanism 260 that adjusts the master audio signal to create a conditioned audio signal that is suited to the requirements of the portable media device 114. For example, in a preferred embodiment, the signal conditioning mechanism 260 attenuates the master audio signal to the nominal input signal level of the portable media device, to create the conditioned audio signal. The 600 m Vrms figure is somewhat unique to the iPod, and this number is taken from our ipod documentation that is under NDA with apple. Thus, in a preferred embodiment of the mixer 100, that includes a signal conditioning mechanism 260, the conditioned audio signal (rather than the master audio signal, as described above) is processed by the processor 252 and transmitted to the portable media device 114 by the interface 250 to be saved by the portable media device 114 as an authenticated recording.
Uniquely, the mixer 100 will permit a user to listen to the master audio signal while the master audio signal (or the conditioned audio signal, as the case may be) is saved to a personal media device 114 as a recording. (Similarly, a video signal produced by a mixer can be viewed as it is being recorded to a mixer.) The benefits of this feature will be easily understood by those with ordinary skill in the art. To facilitate this feature of a mixer 100, the mixer preferably needs one or more outputs, such as output jacks, configured to be coupled to one or more signal output devices, for example, an audio device, such as powered speakers, headphones, a computer, and/or an audio effects processor. For example, in the embodiment illustrated in
The embodiment of the mixer 100 illustrated in
The new and unique integration of the functionalities of one or more portable media device 114 and one or more other components of a user's media system achieved with the mixer 100 is further enhanced when a user elects to input audio signals into the mixer 100 from the portable media device 114 coupled to the mixer 100. In the manner described above, a user can access the “play” control of the portable media device 114 to select an audio signal to be output to the mixer 100 as a portable media device signal, via the interface 250.
Preferably, the mixer 100 includes a personal media device input level mechanism 274 to create the modified portable media device signal. Preferably, the personal media device level input mechanism 274 is coupled with a control that allows a user to adjust the modified portable media device signal. For example, a rotary analog potentiometer 530 is coupled with the portable media device level mechanism 274 and permits a user to adjust the modified portable media device signal in a range of silent to +15 dB.
As shown on
An apparatus or system, such as a mixer, can be powered in any appropriate manner known in the art. In the embodiment of the mixer 100 illustrated in
An embodiment of the present invention further comprises a docking station for use with a portable media device. For example, such a docking station can be an integral part of an apparatus for use with a portable media device, such as a mixer. In general, the docking station permits a user to access controls of the portable media device using the preferred operating hand position even if the preferred operating hand position is not also necessary or desirable for gripping the portable media device. A docking station is included in the embodiment of the mixer 100 illustrated in FIG.
The docking station 499 comprises (a) a receiving port 501 configured to accept the portable media device 114, which receiving port 501 includes a connector 500 configured to electrically couple with a portable media device, via its bottom port, and provide communication between the portable media device and an apparatus (such as a mixer 100) associated with the docking station 499, and (b) a cavity 510 below the receiving port, an opening of which is generally aligned with the front face 580 of a portable media device disposed within the receiving port 501, and which permits a user of the apparatus to operate the controls (e.g., a flywheel 302) of the portable media device 114 using the preferred operating hand position.
The receiving port 501 of the docking station 499 further comprises one or more support surfaces for a portable media device disposed within the docking station 499. For example, in the embodiment of a docking station illustrated in
The cavity 510 is defined by a wall 512, which is directly or indirectly secured to the receiving port 501 of the docking station 499. For example, in the embodiment illustrated on
Optionally, the docking station 499 includes a pad 514, preferably made of a soft material with a relatively low coefficient of friction, such as felt, and/or one or more removable adaptors 516, to permit accommodation into the docking station of differently-sized portable media devices.
Prior art mixers typically have a front face, on which most of the controls for operation of the mixer are placed, the plane of which lies substantially parallel to the plane of a substantially horizontal surface on which the mixer is positioned (the “surface plane”), and a rear face, on which most input and output jacks of the mixer are located, the plane of which lies perpendicular to the top face. While the controls are relatively easy to access with this configuration, the input and output jacks positioned on the rear face are difficult to access. Alternatively, both controls and input and output jacks are located on the top face of the mixer. While the input and output jacks are more easily accessed with this configuration, cables and other attachments to the mixer via the input and output jacks can interfere with a user's access and comfortable use of the controls.
An embodiment of a mixer provides a substantial improvement over these prior art mixers. Turning to the embodiment of the mixer 100 illustrated on
In a preferred embodiment, the angle between the surface plane and the planes of each of the rear face 554 and the front face 552 of the mixer is between approximately 10 and approximately 15 degrees; more preferably, the angle between the surface plane and the planes 553, 555 of each of the rear face 554 and the front face 552 of the mixer is approximately 12 degrees. Similarly, preferably, the angle of intersection 556 of planes A 555 and B 553 (representing the planes of the front and rear faces of the mixer, respectively) is between approximately 160 and approximately 150 degrees; more preferably, said angle of intersection 556 is approximately 156 degrees.
Housing 101 is preferably made of a material that is tough, hard, and rigid, has good chemical resistance and dimensional stability, exhibits good creep resistance, is relatively strong, and inexpensive. As shown on
Although the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the invention. Various examples of such changes have been given in the foregoing description. Accordingly, the disclosure of embodiments of the invention is intended to be illustrative of the scope of the invention and is not intended to be limiting. It is intended that the scope of the invention shall be limited only to the extent required by the appended claims. For example, to one of ordinary skill in the art, it will be readily apparent that the system discussed herein may be implemented in a variety of embodiments, and that the foregoing discussion of certain of these embodiments does not necessarily represent a complete description of all possible embodiments. Rather, the detailed description of the drawings, and the drawings themselves, disclose at least one preferred embodiment of the invention, and may disclose alternative embodiments of the invention.
All elements claimed in any particular claim are essential to the invention claimed in that particular claim. Consequently, replacement of one or more claimed elements constitutes reconstruction and not repair. Additionally, benefits, other advantages, and solutions to problems have been described with regard to specific embodiments. The benefits, advantages, solutions to problems, and any element or elements that may cause any benefit, advantage, or solution to occur or become more pronounced, however, are not to be construed as critical, required, or essential features or elements of any or all of the claims.
Moreover, embodiments and limitations disclosed herein are not dedicated to the public under the doctrine of dedication if the embodiments and/or limitations: (1) are not expressly claimed in the claims; and (2) are or are potentially equivalents of express elements and/or limitations in the claims under the doctrine of equivalents.