Electronic devices such as electronic book readers (“eBook reader devices”), cellular telephones, portable media players, laptops, tablet computers, netbooks, personal digital assistants and the like, provide a variety of functions to users. Due to differences in construction, patterns of use, and so forth, each device may have different resources available such as network connectivity, battery power, computational capacity, memory capacity, and so forth.
The detailed description is set forth with reference to the accompanying figures. In the figures, the left-most digit(s) of a reference number identifies the figure in which the reference number first appears. The use of the same reference numbers in different figures indicates similar or identical items.
Overview
Electronic devices such as electronic book reader devices (“eBook reader devices”), cellular telephones, portable media players, laptops, tablet computers, netbooks, personal digital assistants and the like, provide a variety of functions to users. Due to differences in construction, patterns of use, and so forth, each device may have different available resources such as network connectivity, battery power, computational capacity, memory capacity, and so forth.
This disclosure describes, in part, devices and techniques for forming a composite device from a plurality of constituent devices. Resources may be shared amongst the constituent devices of the composite device to extend operational time or capabilities, as well as to provide enhanced capabilities. Resources include electrical power, network interfaces, memory, processing capability, display devices and other outputs, and so forth.
Once the composite device is established, content stored on one constituent device may be presented at one or more of the constituent devices. For example, pages from an eBook may be presented across several eBook reader devices. In some implementations, a single constituent device provides the content and pre-renders the content prior to transmission to the other constituent devices for presentation.
Presentation of the content across the constituent devices that form the composite device may also take into account a relative spatial arrangement of the constituent devices. For example, a row of constituent devices laid upon a table may display content of an eBook relative to the sequence. Thus, a constituent device at the leftmost of the row shows a first page, the second constituent device from the left shows the second page, and so forth. While the techniques described herein are described with reference to eBook reader devices, these techniques similarly apply to other electronic devices, including portable handheld electronic devices, such as laptop computers, mobile phones, netbooks, personal media players (“PMPs”), etc.
Illustrative EBook Reader Device
A composite connection 106 may be established between the devices, thus facilitating the sharing of resources between constituent devices 104(1)-104(R). The composite connection may be established via a Bluetooth or other wireless connection, a wired connection, and so forth. This composite connection 106 may be provided by a composite connection interface discussed in more detail below with regards to
Once connected via the composite connection 106, constituent devices 104(1)-104(R) form a composite device 108(1). The composite management modules 102 within the constituent devices manage resource allocation amongst the devices in the composite device 108(1).
The eBook reader device 104 may have a display 110 to present content in a human-readable format to a user. The display 110 may be an electrophoretic display, cholesteric display, liquid crystal display, light emitting diode display, and so forth. In some implementations, one or more displays 110 may be present. These displays may be of the same or different types. For example, one display may be an electrophoretic display while another may be a liquid crystal display.
The content presented on the display 110 may take the form of electronic books or “eBooks.” For example, the display 110 may depict the text of the eBooks and also any illustrations, tables, or graphic elements that might be contained in the eBooks. The terms “book” and/or “eBook”, as used herein, include electronic or digital representations of printed works, as well as digital content that may include text, multimedia, hypertext, and/or hypermedia. Examples of printed and/or digital works include, but are not limited to, books, magazines, newspapers, periodicals, journals, reference materials, telephone books, textbooks, anthologies, instruction manuals, proceedings of meetings, forms, directories, maps, web pages, and so forth. Accordingly, the terms “book” and/or “eBook” may include any readable or viewable content that is in electronic or digital form.
The display 110 may further include touch screen capabilities that allow user input through contact or gesturing relative to the display. For convenience only, the display 110 is shown in a generally rectangular configuration. However, it is understood that the display 110 may be implemented in any shape, and may have any ratio of height to width. Also, for stylistic or design purposes, the display 110 may be curved or otherwise non-linearly shaped. Furthermore display 110 may be flexible and configured to fold or roll.
The eBook reader device 104 may also incorporate one or more actuatable controls 112, and a keypad 114 for user input. The one or more actuatable controls 112 may have dedicated or assigned operations. For instance, the actuatable controls 112 may include page turning buttons, a joystick, navigational keys, a power on/off button, selection keys, joystick, touchpad, and so on.
While a composite device 108(1) comprising a plurality of eBook reader devices 104(1)-(R) is shown, it is understood that other electronic devices may form composite devices. For example, cellular telephone 116(1) and other devices 116(X) such as portable media players, desktop computers, laptops, tablet computers, netbooks, personal digital assistants, servers, medical devices, and the like may be coupled via a composite connection 106 to form composite device 108(C).
Peripherals 204 may be coupled to the processor 202. An image processing unit 206 is shown coupled to one or more displays 208. For example, this display 208 may be display 110 on eBook reader device 104 described above. In some implementations, multiple displays may be present and coupled to the image processing unit 206. In some implementations, one or more image processing units 206 may couple to the multiple displays.
Electronic device 100 may have a keypad which may be the same, for example, as the keypad 114 on eBook reader device 104 described above. A hard drive that may use magnetic or optical memory or solid state storage may be present to store information, such as eBooks.
A composite connection interface 214 may also be coupled to USB host controller 210 via the universal serial bus. Composite connection interface 214 may include wired connectivity, wireless connectivity, or both. Composite connection interface 214 may implement a personal area network between the electronic device 100 and other electronic devices 100 that are proximate to one another. In some implementations, an electronic device 100 is determined to be proximate to another electronic device 100 when a connection via the personal area network is available. The personal area network may utilize a Bluetooth™ wireless network, wired USB connection, Firewire, Infrared Data Association (“IrDA”) connection, and so forth.
Optical transceivers 216 may also be connected to the USB host controller 210 via the universal serial bus. These optical transceivers 216 may be configured to transmit and receive optical signals, such as infrared or visible light. These optical transceivers 216 may be used to determine the relative spatial arrangement of the constituent devices in a composite device 108. This determination is discussed in more detail below with respect to
One or more motion sensors 218 may also be connected to the USB host controller 210 via the universal serial bus. These motion sensors may include linear accelerometers, rotational accelerometers, gyroscopes, laser gyroscopes, quartz rate sensors, pendular accelerometers, and so forth. These motion sensing devices provide information about their relative movement in space. When coupled to the electronic device 100, motion of the electronic device 100 in space may be determined. These motions may be linear, angular, or a combination of the two. In some implementations, data from the motion sensors 218 may be used to determine a relative spatial arrangement by tracking movement of the devices from a common origin point. This determination of relative spatial arrangement by tracking movement is described below in more depth with regards to
An external memory interface (“EMI”) 220 is also shown coupled to external memory 222. The EMI 220 manages access to data stored in external memory 222. The external memory 222 may comprise Static Random Access Memory (“SRAM”), Pseudostatic Random Access Memory (“PSRAM”), Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory (“SDRAM”), Double Data Rate SDRAM (“DDR”), Phase-Change RAM (“PCRAM”), or other computer readable storage media.
External memory 222 may be used to store any number of functional components that are executable on processor 202, as well as data including content items such as eBooks. Thus, memory 222 may store an operating system 224 comprising a kernel 226 operatively coupled to one or more device drivers 228. Device drivers 228 are also operatively coupled to peripherals 204. Kernel 226 may also be coupled to composite management module 102, as introduced with respect to
External memory 222 may also store data 230, which may comprise content objects for consumption on electronic device 100, executable programs, databases, user settings, configuration files, device status, and so forth. Furthermore, electronic device 100 may include one or more other, non-illustrated peripherals, such as a firewire bus, camera, global positioning system, PC Card component, and so forth.
A battery 232 may present to provide electrical power to components of the electronic device 100 when disconnected from an external power supply. Battery 232 may be interrogated by a power management module to measure or determine battery parameters including power remaining, charge cycle count, estimated operational life remaining, and so forth. These parameters may include capacity such as milliamp-hours (“mAH”), percentage of total, and so forth.
Electronic device 100 may couple to a battery charger/power supply 234. This charger/power supply 234 may be internal or external to the electronic device 100. This charger/power supply 234 is configured to provide operational power for electronic device 100, configured to charge battery 232, or both.
Charger/power supply 234 may be coupled to electronic device 100 via several mechanisms. For illustration, and not by way of limitation, the following mechanisms are discussed. In some implementations, direct coupling using an electrically conductive material provides transfer of power between charger/power supply 234 and device 100. In another implementation, optical coupling may also provide for transfer of power. Optical coupling includes a light source on charger/power supply 234 emitting photons and a photovoltaic cell on the electronic device 100 converting at least a portion of those emitted photons into electrical energy. In another implementation, inductive coupling may be used. Inductive coupling utilizes an electromagnetic field to transfer power. Other implementations may use capacitive coupling, resonant power transfer, non-radiative energy transfer, and so forth.
In some implementations, constituent devices within composite device 108 may be coupled to one another using the above mechanisms to transfer power between the constituent devices. Furthermore, various coupling modes may be combined. For example, one constituent electronic device 100 may be directly coupled to a charger/power supply 234 and also provide power inductively to another electronic device 100.
Couplings, such as that between kernel 228 and device driver 230, are shown for emphasis. There are couplings between many of the components illustrated in
A battery state indicator 304 indicates a status or power level of the battery. Here, the battery is about 85% fully charged. As described above, the battery state indicator may derive its information from battery 232, the power management module, charger/power supply 234, or a combination thereof.
Processor load of the device may also be indicated, such as shown by a status icon 306. Processor load may indicate a quantity of computational capacity in use on electronic device 100. For example, should electronic device 100 be involved in a processor intensive task such as building an index for an eBook, computational capacity in use may be close to 100%, as shown. In contrast, when the processor 202 is largely idle, the processor load is correspondingly close to or at zero.
A memory status icon 308 indicates an amount of memory available on or to the device. Available memory may be either volatile or non-volatile memory available for data storage and, further, the memory may be local (e.g., integral with the device) or remote (e.g., on a server accessible by the device over a network). For example, available memory status icon 308 may indicate the amount of memory available in a non-volatile flash memory device attached to EMI 222.
In contrast, eBook reader device 104(R) shows a different device status 404(R). On this eBook reader device 104(R) the WWAN state 406(R) indicates the WWAN network connection is off Battery state 408(R) indicates a battery capacity of 142 mAH, indicating the device is more deeply discharged. Processor load 410(R) is low at only 9% utilization of the computational capacity of the processor. Finally, available memory 412(R) is 0.75 GB.
As described above, composite connection 106 may be a physical connection 508, such as the direct coupling described above, or a wireless connection 510. In either instance, the physical or wireless connection 510 may allow for a transmission of data, power, or both. Furthermore, a combination of wired connection 508 and wireless connection 510 may be used. For example, electrical power may be delivered via a physical connection 508 while data is transferred via a wireless connection 510.
In
The available computational computing capacity of eBook reader device 104(R) has been exploited by sending tasks from eBook reader device 104(1) to eBook reader device 104(R) for execution. Upon completion, the eBook reader device 104(R) may return the results of those distributed processing tasks to eBook reader device 104(1) as shown at 520.
In some implementations where the processing loads are minimal, resource allocation may result in one or more of the processors in the composite device entering low power or reduced capability modes. For example, as described below with regards to
Given the redundancy of having two operable WWAN connections, and given the poorer quality of the WWAN connection on the eBook reader device 104(R) compared to the eBook reader device 104(1), the WWAN network interface on eBook reader device 104(R) has been disabled. The eBook reader device 104(1) provides WWAN connectivity to the eBook reader device 104(R) via the composite connection 106.
Individual constituent devices may experience reductions in power consumption as a result of participating in the composite device. For example, by shutting down the redundant WWAN network interface, power consumption on the eBook reader device 104(R) is reduced as shown by graph 524. As shown by graph 526, power usage of the eBook reader device 104(1) has also dropped slightly due to the reduced processor usage resulting from the distribution of some processing tasks to the eBook reader device 104(R).
Operation 604 shows the exchange of device status between the constituent devices. Once device status has been exchanged, resource allocation takes place. In some implementations a single constituent device may act as a master and receive the device status information. The master may then allocate resources at least in part as a result of the received device status information. In other implementations, these functions may be distributed across the constituent devices, such as in a peer-to-peer arrangement. In some implementations, resources may be manually allocated or deallocated. For example, processor sharing on a particular constituent device may be disallowed by a user of that device. In other implementations, resources may be automatically allocated or deallocated based on the resources of the constituent devices or the like.
Operation 606 shows the transfer of resources between constituent devices according to the resource allocation. In this example, power, processing tasks, and WWAN capability is shared between the constituent devices. Thus, the composite device results in capabilities which may be difficult or impossible for individual constituent devices to provide. For example, a constituent device with a low battery, active WWAN networking interface, and so forth may not be able to complete a task such as indexing a large eBook before power on the device is exhausted. Furthermore, even if the power were available, a single constituent device may require an unacceptably long time to complete the indexing. However, by forming a composite device where resources such as power, processing capability, and networking interfaces are shared, the indexing task become possible by sharing power and computational resources.
Illustrative Process for Buffering Information in Internal Memory
At 702, the composite management module 102 recognizes possible constituent devices suitable for forming a composite device. Devices may be considered suitable due to one or more factors. These factors include proximity, connectivity, security considerations, previously pre-defined user preferences, and so forth. Recognition of possible constituent devices may be initiated automatically, by a user, or both. Automatic initiation may occur based on a variety of factors such as location, time, when the individual resources of a possible constituent device are insufficient for a task, and so forth.
At 704, a composite connection 106 between suitable constituent devices is established. This composite connection may be wired, wireless, or both. For example, a cable, backplane, Bluetooth, 802.11n, or an IrDA connection may be used to establish the composite connection.
In some implementations, one of the constituent devices may be designated to accept device status information and allocate resources. At 706, one of the constituent devices is designated as a composite master device. Several factors may be used to designate the composite master. These factors may include model number, firmware version, operating system version, random selection, user selection, and so forth. For instance, a device that first requests to form the composite device may be assigned the master role. Or, the device having the greatest capabilities of one or more resources (e.g., the highest charged battery) may be assigned the master role. However, in some implementations a peer-to-peer arrangement may be used, thus there would be no defined composite master device. Instead, the functions are distributed across several constituent devices.
At 708, device status information is transferred to a composite master device or the other constituent devices when no composite master is used. As described above with regards to
At 710, resources are allocated amongst the constituent devices based on the device status information. For example, a resource allocation may designate power and WWAN connectivity is to be provided by a first constituent device for use by a second constituent device.
At 712, resource sharing begins per the resource allocation. Thus, continuing the example, the first constituent device may turn off its onboard WWAN interface, and use the second constituent device's WWAN interface via the composite connection to retain connectivity.
Because the composite communication 106 provides communication between the constituent eBook reader devices, changes on one device may affect one or more of the other devices. For example, a user may change to a second page of the document on the first eBook reader devices 104(1), and the notes associated with that second page may be presented on the second eBook reader device 104(R). Similarly, changing which of multiple pages of notes are displayed may alter the display on the other device to show the associated text.
Because a composite device comprises a plurality of constituent devices, it may be advantageous to determine a spatial arrangement of the constituent devices. For example, when displaying text across several displays, users may prefer to have the pages displayed in order, such as arranged left to right.
Backplane 902 provides a mechanism for determining a spatial arrangement of multiple constituent devices of a composite device. Given that backplane 902 provides a relatively fixed reference structure, placement of the constituent device on a particular backplane connector 904 may thus indicate the spatial arrangement of the constituent devices to one another. Thus, a constituent device coupled to slot 906(1) is recognized as being directly above a constituent device coupled to slot 906(4), and directly to the left of a constituent device coupled to slot 906(2).
In some implementations the backplane 902 may provide resources. For example, backplane 902 may include a power supply, battery, network connectivity, memory, and so forth.
Constituent devices that have not been attached to the backplane 902, as shown in
As shown in
In some implementations, the optical transceivers 216 may be used to provide the composite connection as well. Also, in other implementations, other electromagnetic signals may be used.
The spatial arrangement of constituent devices in a composite device may be determined in one, two, or three dimensions. For example, constituent devices may be distributed along a line, a plane, or across a volume such as in a room.
Information from motion sensors 218 may be used to determine a relative spatial arrangement of the constituent devices. As shown in
Continuing to
In some implementations multiple users may participate in the manual determination of spatial arrangement. For example, in a classroom setting where each student has a constituent device, each student may select who and where their neighbors are. This information may then be combined to provide a spatial arrangement of the constituent devices within a composite device.
Content to be presented may be preprocessed before sending, as shown in
At 1302, the preprocessed page is packaged and transferred via the composite connection to the second device. Thus, each constituent device may receive a page designated for that particular constituent device to display. This designation is based, at least in part, on the spatial arrangement of the constituent devices. By sending each constituent device a particular package containing the specific content for that constituent device to display, data transfer between constituent devices may be minimized.
However, in some implementations the content to be presented across the composite device may be preprocessed and placed into a single package. For example, where three pages are to be displayed across a composite device having three constituent devices, a package including all three pages may be sent to each of the devices. Each constituent device then presents a portion of the entire package. Selection of the portion to be presented may be based at least in part on the spatial arrangement of the constituent devices. Thus, the constituent device on the left shows the left-most portion of the package, while the constituent device on the right shows the right-most portion of the package, and so forth. This single package may be provided to the constituent devices through individual data transfers, broadcast, and so forth.
Operation 1408 shows the transfer of a package including the preprocessed page image to the second constituent device via the composite connection. As described above, the second constituent device may then display the package. Thus, the content may be displayed on all or a portion of the constituent devices.
At 1508, the composite management module 102 packages data on a first constituent device for display on other constituent devices. As described earlier, this packaged data may comprise a preprocessed image of a page 1508(1), an extract of page data for display 1508(2), an invariant reference number for synchronizing display 1508(3), and so forth.
At 1510, the composite management module 102 transfers the packaged data from the first device to the other constituent devices via the composite connection 106. The transfer destination of packaged data may be determined at least in part by the spatial arrangement of the constituent devices. Thus, where several constituent devices are arranged in a row, the first page may be packaged for display on the first constituent device, second page may packaged for display on the second constituent device, and so forth.
At 1512, the constituent devices have received the packaged data, and may begin presentation. For example, the constituent devices may display text from an eBook across the composite device. Individual presentation capabilities have been combined to display content in a way not possible to a single device.
When no backplane is present at 1604, information about relative spatial location of the constituent devices may be received at 1608. For example, in one implementation, at 1608(1) the optical transceivers may be used to interrogate proximate constituent devices, as described above with regards to
Once the spatial information has been gathered, the composite management module 102 may then determine a relative spatial arrangement based on the relative spatial location information at 1610. This spatial information may be provided relative to other constituent devices or absolutely in terms of location. The spatial information may also be provided with varying degrees of granularity. For example, spatial information may indicate “device B is to the left of device A”, or that “device B is +30 centimeters along an x-axis from device A,” or that “device B is located at West 48.938508102, North −119.434903201.”
Returning to 1602, when automatic determination is unavailable, the composite management module 102 determines a unique identifier for each constituent device at 1612. This may be pre-determined, user selectable, and so forth. For example, in a classroom situation each user may have a unique identifier comprising their name.
At 1614, the composite management module 102 may then present a user interface showing constituent devices and permitting designation by a user of the relative spatial arrangement. For example, as shown above with respect to
Although the subject matter has been described in language specific to structural features and/or methodological acts, it is to be understood that the subject matter defined in the appended claims is not necessarily limited to the specific features or acts described. Rather, the specific features and acts are disclosed as illustrative forms of implementing the claims. For example, the methodological acts need not be performed in the order or combinations described herein, and may be performed in any combination of one or more acts.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
6043798 | Yamamoto et al. | Mar 2000 | A |
6327152 | Saye | Dec 2001 | B1 |
6340957 | Adler et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6570546 | Welker et al. | May 2003 | B1 |
6593902 | Ogino et al. | Jul 2003 | B1 |
6697251 | Aisenberg | Feb 2004 | B1 |
6989800 | McLaughlin | Jan 2006 | B2 |
7065575 | Machiraju et al. | Jun 2006 | B1 |
7068294 | Kidney et al. | Jun 2006 | B2 |
7171692 | DeMello et al. | Jan 2007 | B1 |
7239898 | Lenchik et al. | Jul 2007 | B2 |
7379975 | Hussmann | May 2008 | B2 |
7409231 | Oba et al. | Aug 2008 | B2 |
7496630 | Arellano et al. | Feb 2009 | B2 |
7564425 | Martinez et al. | Jul 2009 | B2 |
7748634 | Zehr et al. | Jul 2010 | B1 |
7782274 | Manning | Aug 2010 | B2 |
7911409 | Chatterjee et al. | Mar 2011 | B1 |
7941197 | Jain et al. | May 2011 | B2 |
20020091877 | Karidis | Jul 2002 | A1 |
20020129097 | Jia | Sep 2002 | A1 |
20030015632 | Dunn et al. | Jan 2003 | A1 |
20030041206 | Dickie | Feb 2003 | A1 |
20030055867 | King | Mar 2003 | A1 |
20040008155 | Cok | Jan 2004 | A1 |
20040080528 | Rand et al. | Apr 2004 | A1 |
20040116141 | Loven et al. | Jun 2004 | A1 |
20040196210 | Nagatsuka et al. | Oct 2004 | A1 |
20040223485 | Arellano et al. | Nov 2004 | A1 |
20050093768 | Devos et al. | May 2005 | A1 |
20050138576 | Baumert et al. | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20050168399 | Palmquist | Aug 2005 | A1 |
20050219223 | Kotzin et al. | Oct 2005 | A1 |
20050275602 | Murgolo et al. | Dec 2005 | A1 |
20060087993 | Sengupta et al. | Apr 2006 | A1 |
20060146765 | Van De Sluis et al. | Jul 2006 | A1 |
20070064147 | Kondo et al. | Mar 2007 | A1 |
20070182663 | Biech | Aug 2007 | A1 |
20070266119 | Ohly | Nov 2007 | A1 |
20070279315 | Laves et al. | Dec 2007 | A1 |
20080005233 | Cai et al. | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20080005656 | Pang et al. | Jan 2008 | A1 |
20080068291 | Yuan et al. | Mar 2008 | A1 |
20080177822 | Yoneda | Jul 2008 | A1 |
20080259057 | Brons | Oct 2008 | A1 |
20080320501 | Li et al. | Dec 2008 | A1 |
20090101716 | Mani et al. | Apr 2009 | A1 |
20090149218 | Chen et al. | Jun 2009 | A1 |
20090160731 | Schuler et al. | Jun 2009 | A1 |
20090221303 | Soliman | Sep 2009 | A1 |
20090309846 | Trachtenberg et al. | Dec 2009 | A1 |
20100013762 | Zontrop et al. | Jan 2010 | A1 |
20100082784 | Rosenblatt et al. | Apr 2010 | A1 |
20100115096 | Eruchimovitch et al. | May 2010 | A1 |
20100144283 | Curcio et al. | Jun 2010 | A1 |
20100156913 | Ortega et al. | Jun 2010 | A1 |
20100278345 | Alsina et al. | Nov 2010 | A1 |
20110102314 | Roux | May 2011 | A1 |
20110239101 | Rivers-Moore et al. | Sep 2011 | A1 |
Entry |
---|
Office Action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/493,864, mailed on Oct. 6, 2011, Kim, “Multi-Device Interoperability”, 26 pages. |
Final Office Action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/493,864, mailed on Apr. 13, 2012, John T Kim, “Multi-Device Interoperability”, 32 pages. |
Office action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/715,938, mailed on Apr. 24, 2013, Froment et al., “Mixed Use Multi-Device Interoperability,” 12 pages. |
Office action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/715,981, mailed on Mar. 26, 2013, Froment et al., “Composite Portable Devices”, 23 pages. |
Final Office Action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/715,938, mailed on Oct. 24, 2013, Froment, “Mixed Use Multi-Device Interoperability,” 11 pages. |
Final Office Action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/715,981, mailed on Sep. 25, 2013, Froment, “Composite Portable Devices,” 20 pages. |
Office action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/493,864, mailed on Mar. 14, 2014, Kim, “Multi-Device Interoperability,” 21 pages. |
Office action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/715,938 mailed on Oct. 19, 2012, Froment et al., “Mixed Use Multi-Device Interoperability,” 13 pages. |
Office Action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/715,981, mailed on Jan. 28, 2015, Arnaud Froment, “Composite Portable Devices”, 21 pages. |
Office Action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/493,864, mailed on Jan. 30, 2015, John T. Kim, “Multi-Device Interoperability”, 15 pages. |
Office action for U.S. Appl. No. 12/493,864, mailed on Oct. 3, 2014, Kim et al., “Multi-Device Interoperability”, 22 pages. |
Yurek, “Dot Color—The Difference between ‘color gamut’ and ‘bit depth’”, at http: l/dot-color .com/2011/10/08/the-difference-be\\Mlen-col or-gamut-and-bi !-depth/, 2011, 5 pages. |