The present disclosure relates to a protective cover for a wireless terminal, and more particularly to a protective cover for a wireless terminal that includes an electronic ink display element.
As wireless terminals and smartphones in particular become increasingly popular, users have come to rely on these devices to perform a wide variety of tasks. In many instances, smartphones have replaced wristwatches as a way to determine time and date. Some users frequently lookup information such as time and date without using any other smartphone features. That is, a user may activate the screen of their smartphone for no other reason than to check the time and/or date. Similarly, a user looking for additional information (e.g., weather, news headlines, a shopping list, etc.) may repeatedly activate their screen and unlock their phone for the sole purpose of accessing that information. Such frequent screen activations can be cumbersome for users, and can be demanding on the battery of the wireless terminal.
According to one aspect of the present disclosure, a method is implemented by a protective cover for a wireless terminal. The protective cover includes a transceiver circuit, a processor circuit, an electronic ink display element, and an inductive power supply circuit. The inductive power supply circuit inductively charges from a wireless terminal contained in the protective cover, and supplies power to the transceiver circuit, the processor circuit, and the electronic ink display element. The inductive charging and supplying of power are implemented by the inductive power supply circuit. The transceiver circuit wirelessly receives data from the wireless terminal. The processor circuit updates the electronic ink display element based on the received data. The receiving and the updating are performed using the power from the inductive power supply circuit.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, a protective cover for a wireless terminal is disclosed. An inductive power supply circuit is disposed on the protective cover and is configured to inductively charge from a wireless terminal contained in the protective cover. An electronic ink display element is disposed on the protective cover. A transceiver circuit is disposed on the protective cover and is configured to wirelessly receive data from the wireless terminal using power from the inductive power supply circuit. A processor circuit is disposed on the protective cover, and is configured to use power from the inductive power supply circuit to control the transceiver circuit and the electronic ink display element, and to update the electronic ink display element based on the received data.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, an electronic ink display assembly includes an adhesive layer that is disposed on a first side of a support member, with the support member being sized for mounting to a wireless terminal or to a protective cover for a wireless terminal. An inductive power supply circuit is secured to the support member, and is configured to inductively charge from the wireless terminal when the wireless terminal is contained in the protective cover. An electronic ink display element is disposed on an opposite second side of the support member. A transceiver circuit is secured to the support member and is configured to wirelessly receive data from the wireless terminal using power from the inductive power supply circuit. A processor circuit is secured to the support member, and is configured to use power from the inductive power supply circuit to control the transceiver circuit and the electronic ink display element, and to update the electronic ink display element based on the received data.
In one or more embodiments, the data received from the wireless terminal includes a current time, a current date, or both. In one or more embodiments, the inductive power supply circuit and the transceiver circuit are part of a Near Field Communication (NFC) tag. In one or more embodiments, the inductive power supply circuit and the transceiver circuit are part of a Wireless Charging tag.
Of course, the present disclosure is not limited to the above features and advantages. Indeed, those skilled in the art will recognize additional features and advantages upon reading the following detailed description, and upon viewing the accompanying drawings.
The present disclosure describes a protective cover 10 for a wireless terminal 12, with the protective cover including an electronic ink display element 14 operative to display data wirelessly received from the wireless terminal through, e.g., Near Field Communication (NFC) or Wireless Charging transmission(s) when the wireless terminal is in proximity to the protective cover (e.g., when the wireless terminal 12 is received into and contained in the protective cover 10). This provides a low power way to display information from the wireless terminal 12, such as time and date information, without requiring users to activate a display of the wireless terminal 12, and without requiring a wired connection between the protective cover 10 and the wireless terminal 12.
The inductive power supply circuit 20 is configured to inductively charge from the wireless terminal 12 when the wireless terminal 12 is contained in the protective cover 10. The transceiver circuit 22 is configured to wirelessly receive data from the wireless terminal 12 using power from the inductive power supply circuit 20. The processor circuit 18 is configured to use power from the inductive power supply circuit 20 to control the transceiver circuit 22 and the electronic ink display element 14, and to update the electronic ink display element 14 based on the received data. The transceiver circuit 22 and processor circuit 18 comprise one or more processor circuits, including, for example, one or more microprocessors, microcontrollers, digital signal processors, or the like, and, if necessary, are also each configured with appropriate software and/or firmware to carry out one or more of the techniques discussed above. For convenience, similar reference numerals are used throughout the Figures to indicate similar elements.
The wireless terminal 22 may be a cellular telephone, smartphone, personal digital assistant (PDA), tablet computer, laptop computer, laptop embedded equipment (LEE), laptop mounted equipment (LME), or any other device equipped with NFC and/or Wireless Charging features. Thus, although a smartphone is shown in
Some electronic ink technologies (such as electrophoretic ink, also known as “E Ink”) are so-called “passive” displays that require electricity to alter what is displayed, but can then continue displaying that static content (e.g., text and/or images) indefinitely without requiring additional power. In this regard, passive electronic ink displays serve as a sort of non-volatile memory, because they consume power only when being updated, and subsequently retain data (i.e., the text and/or images being displayed). By using an electronic ink display element 14 that is passive, and by inductively charging from the wireless terminal 10 via the inductive power supply circuit 20, the protective cover 10 can be constructed without requiring a battery that would otherwise require frequent charging or replacement.
An application on the wireless terminal 10 provides users with the ability to verify a communication link to the electronic ink display element 14, and to control what is displayed on the electronic ink display element 14. For example, a user could use the application to control what content they want displayed on the electronic ink display element 14. Optionally, users could also choose how often they want that content updated. For example, a user could choose how often they wanted weather updates to be sent to the electronic ink display element 14. Default update periods could be set based on what content is being displayed (e.g., every minute if time and date are displayed, or once a day if date is displayed without time). If items with differing update periods are chosen, in one or more embodiments both types of content are updated based on the shorter of those periods (e.g., if updates for “time” are scheduled every minute, update other content every minute as well, even if the other content would otherwise have a longer update period).
Other example display items 202 shown in
In one or more embodiments, the “application updates” correspond to updates from other applications on the wireless terminal (e.g., games, social media applications, Short Message Service “SMS” messages, etc.). In one or more embodiments these are application updates that would otherwise be pushed to the display of the wireless terminal 12 and would otherwise cause the wireless terminal 12 display to turn ON from an OFF state. In one or more embodiments, selecting the “application updates” display item redirects these updates from the main display of the wireless terminal 12 to the electronic ink display element 14, such that the main display of the wireless terminal 12 remains in the OFF state.
A “push update” button 208 enables a user of the application 200 to transmit an update to the electronic ink display element 14 on demand instead of waiting for a next scheduled update. For example, if the application of
Thus, in one or more embodiments the processor circuit 18 updates the electronic ink display element 14 periodically based on the transceiver circuit 22 receiving data from the wireless terminal 12 periodically according to a predefined update schedule (e.g., one update per minute), updates the electronic ink display element 14 based on the transceiver circuit 22 receiving data from the wireless terminal 12 when requested by a user of the wireless terminal 12 outside of the update schedule (e.g., through button 208), or both.
As shown in
The memory 44 is operative to store the software application of
As shown in
In one or more embodiments, the components 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 are molded into the protective cover 10, such that a user would not see the NFC transceiver 16, processor circuit 18, and inductive power supply circuit 20, and would not see some or all of the sides of the electronic ink display element (as only the front of the display element 14 would be visible). In this regard, the components 14, 16, 18, 20, 22 being disposed “on” the protective cover 10 encompasses one or more of these components being partially or entirely enclosed within the protective cover 10 (e.g., embedded into the protective cover and hidden from view). Of course, the components 14, 16, 18, and 20 could be presented in other configurations and could be integrated into or mounted on other protective covers than that shown in
In one or more embodiments, the placement of the CC circuit 16 is chosen to place the inductive power supply circuit 20 and transceiver circuit 22 in an optimal proximity to the corresponding transceiver circuit 48 and coil 49 of the wireless terminal 12, and to avoid an unnecessary distance between these components (e.g., placing the coil 49 and inductive power supply circuit 20 at opposite corners of the protective cover 10, or placing the transceiver circuits 22 and 48 at opposite corners of the protective cover 10).
In one or more embodiments, the assembly 50 could be applied as an after-market product to any number of wireless terminal protective cases (for example, instead of being affixed to and/or integrated into a specific protective cover prior to sale of the protective cover). In one or more embodiments the support member 52 has a generally planar structure, but is flexible to accommodate rounded protective covers of various protective cases. In one or more embodiments, the assembly 50 could be applied directly to a wireless terminal 12 that does not use a protective cover 10. In one or more embodiments (e.g., that of
Because many users opt to place their valuable smart phones, tablets, and other such wireless terminals in a protective cover, the embodiments described above have wide applicability for saving power of such wireless terminals that would otherwise be consumed by users activating the displays of their wireless terminals to repetitively determine pieces of information (e.g., time, date, etc.). By using a passive display as described above, the protective cover 10 would use very little power, and could charge from a given wireless terminal 12 when the wireless terminal 12 is in proximity to the inductive power supply circuit 20 (e.g., when the wireless terminal 12 is contained in the protective cover 10), thus avoiding the need for an independent power supply and a wired connection between the protective cover 10 and the wireless terminal 12.
The foregoing description and the accompanying drawings represent non-limiting examples of the methods and apparatus taught herein. As such, the present disclosure is not limited by the foregoing description and accompanying drawings. Instead, the present disclosure is limited only by the following claims and their legal equivalents.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2013/060248 | 11/19/2013 | WO | 00 |