People in various social settings may desire to alter the atmospherics of the public space they are in with a personal choice of music or other entertainment. For example, at a bar, restaurant, dance hall, billiard parlor or other public or private social venue the people in the venue may want to have music playing. It is common in such settings for there to be available a jukebox or other media playing device that can provide an opportunity for people to make personal selections, for a fee, of desired music to be played in the venue. The music selected is placed in a queue by the device and subsequently played in sequence for all people in the venue to hear.
Hence, the particular people who pay the fee choose the music that will be played in the venue. Other people in the venue also may want to hear one or more selections of the same music played. However, they may not know that the same selection is already sequenced in the queue to be played by the device. They may pay the fee and add the same selection to the queue a second time. Popular songs that many people in the venue enjoy may be heard more often than less popular songs.
The order in which the music selections are arranged in the queue may be the order in the selections were made. Thus, while more popular songs may be heard more often than less popular songs, a less popular song may be heard in the venue before a more popular song because it was sequenced in the queue before the more popular song.
Digital media may be used to store the various types of information including entertainment sources such as music or videos. The digital media may be available at the venue. Selections for playing of the digital media may be made through a wired device such as a jukebox, a wireless device such as a personal digital assistant or some other media vending device.
The systems and techniques disclosed enable activation of digital media.
Details of one or more implementations are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features and advantages may be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
These and other aspects will now be described in detail with reference to the following drawings.
Like reference symbols in the various drawings indicate like elements.
The systems and techniques described enable the remote activation of digital media from a personal device over a wired or wireless network.
The remote activation system operates as a wireless jukebox. Wireless devices including laptop computers, mobile phones, and personal digital assistants may view the jukebox content over a wireless local area network (WLAN) from any location within a local area environment. Users can browse the local collection of music in the jukebox and select music tracks for playback. The system enables simultaneous interactions allowing multiple users to browse jukebox content and outbid each other for the next track to play in the environment. The track that earns the most digital tokens, or currency, plays next creating a collaborative music space where the music taste of the local users determines which musical selections are played and in what order.
The system provides for activation of the media in sequence from a media gaming queue. The users of the system can add entries to the queue and alter the order of the entries in the queue. In an implementation, the queue contains selections (or references to selections) of digital media containing music that may be played for users to hear. Some or all users in the space may use wired or wireless devices to choose one or more musical selections to be placed in the queue. The order of entries in the queue can be visible to other users with the selections closest to the head of the queue played before selections closer to the end of the queue. That is, users can know the sequence in which the music will be played by the system. The users of the system may alter the sequence of the entries in the queue by voting to move a selection closer to the head of the queue. One method of voting includes adding a currency value to that associated with a selection in the queue. In an implementation, the selection in the queue associated with more value plays before a selection associated with less value. Other interactive methods of sequencing the selections in the queue may be used.
The local media repository device and application server 26 may be connected to a network server 30 that can provide access to a network including the Internet 42. The server 30 can provide to the local repository and application server 26 digital media files 32, digital content updates 34, user account information 36, digital media file retailing 38 and user system usage statistics 40. The digital media files 32 and content 34 may be received from network-connected repositories 44 and 46, respectively. The digital media files may include audio and/or video information including songs, music videos, movies and other files capable of digital formatting. The content 34 can include information related to the media files including text and/or graphics associated or related to a particular digital media file. The content also may include advertisements, promotional or historical information and related digital media files. The user's wireless device 18 or public device may be connected to the user's media activation account 48 through the network. The user may add value to the account through any known mechanism including, for example, credit card charging, bank transfer or cash payment.
The user may browse and select a digital media file from the local repository to be added to the digital media queue for playback in the space. The user also may add value from their activation account 48 to a previously selected digital media file in the queue. Upon receiving a user request for media selection or addition of value, the local repository device and server 26 may query the user's account information 36 for authorization to honor the request. Upon approval, the user account value may be updated by the server 30 over the network connection 42 to the user's media activation account 48. The server 30 also may store statistics on the user's usage of the system. A user's usage of the system may be used, for example, to add or decrease the value of the user's media activation account 48 or provide the user with targeted promotional advertisements.
The album cards 326-334 may have a front side and a back side that may be alternately displayed by selection of a flip button 316, for example, on the card. In the implementation illustrated, the front sides of album cards 326 and 328 are shown. The front side of the album card may display album cover art 336, the album title 338, the artist name 340 and one or more album tracks 342. Each track can have an associated free text box 344. A user may select a desired track by entering in the box 344 a currency value. The currency value can reflect a monetary value, a point value or other valuation scheme. A play-me button 348 may be selected to add selected songs to a public queue of tracks for playback. Similarly, other users of the system may add their own selections to the public queue. The display may provide a buy-me button 346 that triggers a purchase process of any selected song or the full album.
The flip button 316 may be selected to reveal the back side of an album card, which may include additional album information. In the implementation illustrated, the back sides of album cards 330-334 are shown. The back side can contain links 352 such as deep tracks, album statistics, and biographies. An implementation of selecting the deep tracks link is illustrated on album card 334 and presents the remaining tracks that are not shown on the front side but that are available on the album. Each deep track 354 can have a free text box associated it. A user may select a particular track for addition to the public queue by entering a value as described above. A deep track also can have a play me button, and a buy me button as was previously described.
Album card 330 illustrates an implementation of a display resulting from selection of the album stats link. The “album stats” link can present a set of statistics on the usage of the particular album on the jukebox. The usage statistics may indicate the number of times the selection has been played, the most requested track on the album, the ranking of the album from all albums in the jukebox, or other statistics. The “album stats” link also may provide for users to rate the album and may display a cumulative ranking.
Album card 332 illustrates an implementation of a display resulting from selection of the “bios” link. The “bios” link may display a biography of the band or artist and related information.
In an implementation, the music queue page also may contain billboards 408. The billboards 408 can display the albums played most often, tracks played most often and new tracks on this specific jukebox played most often. The tracks displayed on the billboard also can have a free text box used to add currency value to the respective track, play-me button to add the track to the public queue and a buy-me button to trigger a purchase process for the selected track or album.
In an implementation, first-time users may receive an initial stored-value representing digital tokens or currency. Registered users maintain stored-value accounts on a central server. Additional funds may be added automatically to the account every time it drops below a predetermined value through a subscription service, a verified bank account or from a personal credit card. Users may also purchase anonymous account cards from venue owners. Registered users can access their accounts and their stored-value in any system-enabled environment.
In an implementation, a minimum value of currency may be required to promote an album track to a jukebox music queue. Users may browse the local content repository and select album tracks to add to the queue. The selection may be communicated to the system over a wireless network using, for example, http protocol. The jukebox contains all album tracks in media files such as MP3 files stored in a media repository. Once a selected album track has been promoted to the music queue, other system users can advance the selected track in the media queue by adding currency value in any amount. The queue updates itself and may be viewed by other users of the public queue. The album track with the highest value associated value of currency when the currently playing album track ends plays next.
Users may be encouraged to acquire “OnAir time” by getting selections that they submitted played in public. In an implementation, the length of the album track played measures “OnAir Time.” “OnAir Time” milestones may earn additional, free stored-value and a place in a local, regional and national rankings.
Various features of the system can be embodied in the form of computer-implemented processes and apparatuses for practicing those processes. Some or all of the features of the system can also be embodied in the form of computer program code containing instructions embodied in tangible media, such as floppy diskettes, CD-ROMs, hard drives, or any other computer-readable storage medium, wherein, when the computer program code is loaded into and executed by a computer, the computer becomes an apparatus for practicing the invention. The various features can also be embodied in the form of computer program code, for example, whether stored in a storage medium, loaded into and/or executed by a computer, or transmitted over some transmission medium, such as over electrical wiring or cabling, through fiber optics, or via electromagnetic radiation, wherein, when the computer program code is loaded into and executed by a computer, the computer becomes an apparatus for practicing the invention. When implemented on a general-purpose microprocessor, the computer program code segments configure the microprocessor to create specific logic circuits.
Other implementations are within the scope of the following claims
This application claims the benefit of priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application entitled “Techniques for Remote Activation Of Digital Media,” filed Mar. 18, 2003, Ser. No. 60/455,711, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60455711 | Mar 2003 | US |