This invention relates to handheld printing devices, and specifically to projector guides to assist in movement of a handheld printing device.
Handheld printers are a relatively recent development with a wide range of applicable uses. In particular, printing border effects across the edges of paper has been investigated as well as printing web pages from mobile (telephone) devices. To operate the printer, the user is typically required to manually move the printer across a substrate or sheet of paper. While the printer is in motion, and while it is in an active print mode (often achieved by pressing a button), the handheld printer will print. The printer can sense position on the paper and deposit ink on the page whenever the area under the print element matches an unprinted section of the page image to be printed. The printing can be accomplished using a print engine and print controller implemented in a manner known to persons skilled in the art.
When printing a page with a handheld printer, multiple passes across the paper are usually made to complete a document page. The operator will typically overlap these swaths of print so that no portion of the page is unprinted, leaving a void or print defect. Accordingly, there is a need for a device that assists the operator in locating areas where an image remains to be printed on the page so that adjacent swaths can be printed with minimal overlap and few print voids.
The present invention provides an improved handheld printer including projectors to project images, which can provide a visual indication of locations on the page that remain to be printed, onto the print medium to assist the user in operating the handheld printer. Accordingly, it is a first aspect of the present invention to provide a printing device including: a housing; a print engine and print controller disposed in the housing and adapted to print an image on a print medium; and at least one projector disposed in the housing; where the at least one projector is adapted to project a visual display onto the print medium that provides information to a user. In detailed embodiments, the visual display can be image or a block representation of page content remaining to be printed at a portion of the area of the print medium. Alternatively, the visual display can be a reference with which a user can align the printing device. Alternatively, the visual display can include symbols that provide information to a user, such as setup parameters, printer configuration settings, or instructions to be followed by the user.
In an alternative detailed embodiment of the first aspect of the present invention, the printing device further includes: a light source; a moveable mirror disposed in the housing and pivotable around at least two perpendicular axes; at least one fixed mirror disposed in the housing; where the moveable mirror directs light from the light source to the fixed mirror; and where the fixed mirror directs light from the moveable mirror to a point on a print medium, the location of the point on the print medium being determined by the position of the moveable mirror on its two perpendicular axes of rotation. In a further detailed embodiment, the location of the point on the print medium is moved rapidly by rapidly rotating the moveable mirror to a series of new positions on its at least two perpendicular axes of rotation, and the light source is illuminated each time the moveable mirror is in a position to cause light to be directed to a point composing a visual image on the print medium, whereby a visual image is produced on the print medium. The moveable mirror can be rotated about its at least two perpendicular axes of rotation by a piezoelectric or galvanometric actuator. A sequence of commands that control the illumination of the light source can be received by the printing device or can be generated by a central processing unit located in the printing device. The light source can be a light emitting diode, which can include an optical cap to direct the light into a substantially collimated beam, or the light source can be a laser.
In an alternative detailed embodiment of the first aspect of the present invention, the printing device further includes: a light source; optics configured to direct light emitted from the light source to a point on the print medium; and actuators controlled to rapidly move the location of the point on the print medium; whereby a visual image is produced on the print medium.
In an alternative detailed embodiment of the first aspect of the present invention, the printing device further includes: a light source; a means for directing light emitted from the light source to a point on the print medium; and a means for rapidly moving the location of the point on the print medium; whereby a visual image is produced on the print medium.
It is a second aspect of the present invention to provide a method of printing a page, including: (a) moving a printing device across a print medium by a user; (b) depositing ink on the print medium by the printing device when the printing device is positioned over a location on the print medium where a portion of a page content is to be printed; and (c) projecting a visual display, by the printing device, onto a portion of the print medium where a portion of the page content remains to be printed. The method can further include (d) in response to viewing the visual display projected in step (c), moving the printing device, by the user, over a location on the print medium onto which the visual image is projected. The method can further include (e) repeating steps (a) through (d) until the entire page content has been printed on the print medium. the moveable mirror is rotated about its at least two perpendicular axes of rotation by a piezoelectric actuator.
These and other aspects and embodiments will be apparent from the following description, the accompanying drawings, and the appended claims.
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The use of the projector guides described herein to illuminate areas of the page where content remains to be printed provides several operational advantages. The end of a swath or band in the page content can be readily identified for the operator, thus eliminating the need for the operator to sweep the handheld printer over areas of the page looking for content where there is none. This, in turn, makes the operator less likely to overrun the edge of the paper and risk loss of navigation. Additionally, the projector can be used to project signals or other meaningful information onto the page (for example, a blinking arrow) that point the operator towards void areas that have been missed. This affirmative feedback can result in a significant improvement in print quality by allowing voids in the printed page image to be filled in as soon as possible before cumulative positional errors or ink drying prevent successful repair. Such efficiency can provide a particular advantage in the printing of color images and high-resolution images, where the sequence of drop colors and dry time effects are more noticeable in the print quality than in monochrome print or simple, relatively lower resolution printing.
In addition to document information and pointing to a next print location, the projectors of the present invention can display operational information such as setup parameters or printer configuration settings to the operator, thus enabling the operator to select or change functional settings for the printer. For example, by pressing buttons on the printer, the operator may select display language, paper size, or print quality setting from available choices displayed in the projected area. The use of the projectors of the present invention to display this information can eliminate the need to rely on a computer or other device to communicate such information to the user. This advantage enables the handheld printer to be used for printing from mobile information devices such as mobile phones and PDAs that might not provide the level of interactive support and user intervention that personal computers typically allow. Additionally, the projectors of the present invention can display instructions or prompts for the operator to follow. For example, the operator might be alerted of lower battery power or low ink level, or the projected display might point to unprinted areas that the operator has bypassed. By illuminating the paper, the use of projectors to display this information offers the benefit of operation in less well lighted areas. As can be seen, this invention enhances the standalone capability of a handheld printer without requiring cost a size burden of adding a display to the handheld printer.
For any of the embodiments described herein, the locations on the page to be illuminated by the projectors at any particular time (i.e. the visual image to be projected onto the page), and therefore the times at which the light source is illuminated, can be determined computationally by a computer or other device that provides the page content to be printed, or this location information can be determined computationally by a processing unit located in the handheld printer.
Having described the invention with reference to embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is defined by the claims, and it is not intended that any limitations or elements describing the embodiments set forth herein are to be incorporated into the meanings of the claims unless such limitations or elements are explicitly listed in the claims. Likewise, it is to be understood that it is not necessary to meet any or all of the identified advantages or objects of the invention disclosed herein in order to fall within the scope of any claims, since the invention is defined by the claims and since inherent and/or unforeseen advantages of the present invention may exist even though they may not have been explicitly discussed herein.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080055384 A1 | Mar 2008 | US |