The present invention relates generally to currency processing systems and, more particularly, to systems and methods for processing coins.
Currency processing machines generally have the ability to receive bulk coin and/or bank notes from a user of the machine. The currency processing machine may be a redemption type of machine wherein, after the deposited coins and/or bank notes are counted, funds are returned to the user in a pre-selected manner determined by the user, or to a card which stores electronic money, such as a smartcard. Alternatively, the machine may be a simple deposit type of machine where funds which have been deposited by the user are credited to his or her account.
In these currency processing machines, the bulk coins that are received from users are typically sorted into individual denominations and deposited into containers corresponding to each respective denomination as sorted. When these containers have reached their capacity, the operator of the currency processing machine must then physically remove the full container and replace it with an empty container so that the machine can be returned to its operational state. However, in many environments, the coins deposited by the user into the currency processing machine are removed from the currency processing machine and recirculated into other types of coin discharging machines.
According to some embodiments, a self-service currency processing machine disposed in a publicly accessible area for public use includes a user control panel, a coin hopper configured to receive input bulk coins, and a coin processing module configured to sort the input bulk coins by denomination and output the coins, via operation of at least one controller-controlled diverter, along a specified path to a coin receptacle station comprising at least one plastic coin bag. The self-service currency processing machine includes a controller configured to selectively distribute coins of one or more denominations to a selected plastic coin bag in the coin receptacle station responsive to an instruction received from one of the user control panel or a host system communicatively coupled to the self-service currency processing machine via a communication interface and a bag sealing device configured to seal the selected plastic coin bag following receipt of the predetermined number of coins of one or more denominations in the selected plastic coin bag.
In at least some embodiments, a self-service currency processing system in accord with aspects of the present concepts includes a plurality of self-service currency processing machines disposed in one or more publicly accessible areas for public use and a host system communicatively coupled via a communication interface to each of the plurality of self-service currency processing machines, wherein each of the plurality of self-service currency processing machines comprises a user control panel, a coin hopper configured to receive input mixed coins, a coin processing module configured to sort the input mixed coins by denomination, a coin distribution device, a controller configured to selectively distribute coins of one or more denominations to a selected receptacle responsive to an instruction received from one of the user control panel or the host system, and sealing device configured to seal the selected receptacle following receipt of the predetermined number of coins of one or more denominations in the selected receptacle, and wherein the coin receptacle comprises one or more plastic coin bags.
In at least some embodiments, a method for packaging coins in a self-service currency processing machine disposed in a publicly accessible area for public use, including the acts of receiving a user input for a desired coin mix comprising a specified number of coins of one or more specified denominations at a control panel of the self-service currency processing machine, receiving in a coin hopper a plurality of denominations, sorting the plurality of coins in a coin processing module, and routing coins relating to the desired coin mix from the coin processing module to a coin receptacle station comprising a plastic coin bag. The method further includes determining, using a controller, if the coins routed from the coin processing module provide the desired coin mix and, if not, outputting to the plastic coin bag one or more denominations one or more intermediate coin bins coins in an amount necessary to provide the desired coin mix and sealing the plastic coin bag with a bag sealing device following receipt of the desired coin mix in the selected plastic coin bag.
The above summary of the present disclosure is not intended to represent each embodiment, or every aspect, of the present invention.
The advantages of the present disclosure will become apparent upon reading the following detailed description in conjunction with the drawings in which:
a is a block diagram of a document processing device according to one embodiment of the invention;
b is a block diagram of an evaluation region of a document processing device according to one embodiment of the present invention;
c is a block diagram of an evaluation region of a document processing device according to another embodiment of the present invention;
d is a top view of a transport path of a document processing device showing a sequence of exemplary documents to be processed;
a is a perspective view of an evaluation region according to one embodiment of the document processing device of the present invention;
a-1 is a perspective view of an evaluation region according to another embodiment of the document processing device of the present invention;
b is a side view of an evaluation region according to one embodiment of the document processing device of the present invention;
b-1 is a side view of an evaluation region according to another embodiment of the document processing device of the present invention;
a is a perspective view of a compact document processing device having dual output receptacles according to one embodiment of the present invention;
b is a side cross-sectional view of the device shown in
a is a perspective view of a funds processing machine according to one embodiment of the present invention;
b is a side view of the funds processing machine of
a is a flowchart of a method for operating a document processing device according to any embodiment of the present invention in which the document processing device is adapted to process documents bearing more than one barcode;
a is a flowchart of a method of multiple batch processing according to another embodiment of the invention;
b is a continuation of the flowchart shown in
a is a flowchart of a method of multiple batch processing according to another embodiment of the invention;
b is a continuation of the flowchart shown in
a is an illustration of one side of a separator card according to one embodiment of the present invention;
b is a front view of the separator card shown in
a is a top perspective view of a batch of documents according to one embodiment of the present invention;
b is a bottom perspective view of the batch of documents shown in
a is a flowchart illustrating steps for clearing a document jam when processing at least one batch of documents according to one embodiment of the present invention;
b is an illustration of an exemplary computer screen shot of a jam reconciliation process according to one embodiment of the present invention;
c is another illustration of an exemplary computer screen shot of a jam reconciliation process according to one embodiment of the present invention;
d is yet another illustration of an exemplary computer screen shot of a jam reconciliation process according to one embodiment of the present invention;
e is an illustration of an exemplary computer screen shot of a manual currency menu according to one embodiment of the present invention;
f is an illustration of an exemplary computer screen shot of a currency processing device according to one embodiment of the present invention;
a is a back view of a separator card according to another embodiment of the present invention;
b is a back view of a separator card according to yet another embodiment of the present invention
a-50c illustrate one type of bag sealing device which is useful in the currency processing machine;
While the present disclosure is susceptible to various modifications and alternative forms, specific embodiments have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail herein. It should be understood, however, that the present disclosure is not intended to be limited to the particular forms and embodiments disclosed. Rather, the present disclosure is to cover all modifications, equivalents, embodiments, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the present disclosure as defined by the appended claims.
a is a functional block diagram of a document processing device 100 according to one embodiment of the present invention. The document processing device 100 generally includes an input receptacle 102, an evaluation region 104, a transport mechanism 106, and an output receptacle 108. As explained below, in alternate embodiments, the device 100 includes more than one output receptacle 108. The output receptacle 108 may also be variously referred to as a reject or offsort pocket or receptacle. Disposed along the transport path 106 is a currency detector 110 and a media detector 112 as functionally illustrated in
In the illustrated embodiment, the device 100 optionally includes a communications port 118 which is coupled to the controller 114. The controller 114 may comprise one or more processors which are adapted to control specific components in the device 100 and to process information associated with specific components in the device 100, the control unit 116, or the communications port 118. The communications port 118 may optionally be a serial port, a parallel port, a USB port, a wireless port adapted for wireless communication with a remote device, or any other suitable I/O port. In an alternate embodiment, the device 100 does not include the communications port 118. The controller 114 may further comprise memory, such as random access memory or any other suitable memory.
Although the currency detector 110 is shown to be disposed on one side of the transport path 106, it is understood that the currency detector 110 may instead be disposed on the opposite side of the transport path 106 only or on both sides of the transport path 106. In the same manner, the media detector 112 may be disposed on the opposite side of the transport path 106 only or on both sides of the transport path 106. These alternate embodiments are described in more detail in connection with
In the illustrated embodiment of
As used herein, a U.S. currency bill refers to U.S. legal tender, such as a $1, $2, $5, $10, $20, $50, or $100 note, and a foreign currency bill refers to any bank note issued by a non-U.S. governmental agency as legal tender, such as a Euro, Japanese Yen, or British Pound note. A “currency bill” can be either a U.S. or foreign currency bill. The terms “currency note” and “bank note,” are synonymous with the term “currency bill.”
The term “currency bills” or “currency bill” can also refer to bills, promotional media, substitute currency media or documents issued by casinos (e.g., casino script, casino tickets, cashout vouchers, coupons and the like such as “EZ Pay” tickets or “Quiket” tickets), other private entities such as “DISNEY DOLLARS®” (a registered trademark of Walt Disney Enterprises of Burbank, Calif.) or “GEOFFREY DOLLARS®” (a registered trademark of Toys 'R US), and entities which utilize bar coded transaction records (such as casino tickets, cashout tickets, retailer coupons, gift certificates and the like).
The term “substitute currency media” refers to redeemable documents. A redeemable document is a document that can be (a) redeemed for cash or (b) exchanged for goods or services or (c) both. Examples of substitute currency media include without limitation: casino cashout tickets (also variously called cashout vouchers or coupons) such as “EZ Pay” tickets issued by International Gaming Technology or “Quicket” tickets issued by Casino Data Systems or CashFree™ slot-machine tickets issued by Slot-Tickets.com; casino script, which is regularly issued by casinos in pre-set denominations such as $5 casino script, $20 casino script, for example; promotional media such as “DISNEY DOLLARS®” or Toys 'R Us “GEOFFREY DOLLARS®” or McDonald's Gift Certificates are also issued in pre-set denominations (e.g., a $1 Disney Dollar). While some types of “substitute currency media” are regularly issued in pre-set denominations such as the above-mentioned Disney Dollars, other types of “substitute currency media” include manufacturer or retailer coupons, gift certificates, gift cards, or food stamps.
Substitute currency media may include a single barcode or more than one barcode, and these types of substitute currency media are referred to herein as “barcoded tickets.” Examples of barcoded tickets 135, 136 include casino cashout tickets such as “EZ Pay” Tickets and “Quicket” cashout tickets and CashFree™ slot-machine tickets, barcoded retailer coupons, barcoded gift certificates, or any other promotional media that includes a barcode. The singular form of “substitute currency media” is referred to as “substitute currency medium” or “medium” for short.
As used herein, a “document” includes a currency bill or a substitute currency medium. Likewise, the term “documents” includes currency bills and/or substitute currency media.
The term “substitute funds” includes casino script, paper tokens, and barcoded tickets. The term substitute currency media encompasses substitute funds, such that the term substitute funds defines a subset of documents encompassed by the term substitute currency media.
As is known, the dimensions of a U.S. currency bill are about 2.5 inches×6 inches (6.5 cm×15.5 cm). All U.S. currency bills have the same dimensions, but in many foreign countries, the dimensions from one denomination to another varies. In addition, certain types of substitute currency media such as “EZ Pay” tickets have approximately the same dimensions of U.S. currency, however, it is understood that the dimensions of substitute currency media may vary from type to type. The device 100 of the present invention according to any embodiment described herein is adapted to process documents having the same dimension or documents having varied dimensions.
Still referring to
In the specific case of substitute currency media, the variables may also relate to what distinguishing characteristics of the substitute currency media are being examined, such as any combination of the following without limitation: a barcode, a magnetic ink character recognition (MICR) pattern, characters readable by optical character recognition (OCR), including information printed according to the OCR-A and OCR-B fonts, a magnetic pattern, an optical variable device (OVD) pattern such as a hologram, a magnetic or electrically conductive thread, conductive ink, magnetic ink, an electrically conductive polymer, perforations, a coded watermark, or other encoded information. The detection of these distinguishing characteristics may be carried out by the media detector 112, which, in alternate embodiments, may employ a variety of detection means including, but not limited to, any combination of the following: a barcode reader, an optical scan head, a magnetic sensor, a thread sensor, an infrared sensor, an ultraviolet/fluorescent light scan head, an image scanner, or an imaging camera. These detection means and a host of others are disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,278,795, entitled “Multi-Pocket Currency Discriminator,” previously incorporated by reference, and co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/965,428, entitled “A Document Processing System Using Full Image Scanning,” filed on Sep. 27, 2001, also previously incorporated by reference, and may be modified in accordance with the present invention to detect distinguishing characteristics associated with substitute currency media or to capture an electronic image of one or both sides of a medium.
Some environments, such as a casino environment, may desire to retain copies of processed substitute currency media for record-keeping or other purposes, such as compliance with gaming regulations. In such environments, the media detector 112 includes an imaging camera which captures an electronic image of one or both sides of a passing substitute currency medium and/or a currency bill. The electronic image may be analyzed by software for a barcoded pattern, and the barcoded pattern may be decoded by software. The use of software to analyze and decode the barcoded pattern eliminates the need to include a barcode reader in the media detector 112. After processing, the processed substitute currency medium can be discarded, and the electronic image is stored on one or more storage media, such as hard drives, CD-ROMs, or DVDs, for example. Accordingly, this embodiment eliminates the need for large physical storage space to house the processed substitute currency media. Moreover, the substitute currency media may also be electronically indexed or cross-referenced, simplifying future retrieval and archiving.
According to some embodiments, the document processing device 100 includes an image scanner. The image scanner can be a part of the currency detector 110, a part of the media detector 112, or the image scanner can be a separate device along the transport path 106. According to some embodiments, the document processing device 100 performs an image quality check. The image quality check can be used to determine if the images generated in the device 100 are of a sufficient predetermined quality. Quality characteristics can include, for example, image resolution, pixilation, blurriness, sharpness, and readability. In some embodiments, the quality of an image is determined based on whether a portion of the image or an indicia in the image can be successfully decoded by a software program. The indicia can be, for example, a barcoded pattern on a casino cashout ticket.
According to some embodiments, the media detector 112 scans an indicia on a passing substitute currency medium, which generates an electrical signal representative of the indicia (e.g., a barcoded pattern) on the substitute currency medium. The media detector 112 transmits the electrical signal to the controller 114, which decodes the electrical signal into characters, such as, for example, alphanumeric or numeric characters. The characters represent at least a ticket number, which uniquely identifies the specific substitute currency medium being processed. The image scanner can also capture an electronic image of the passing substitute currency medium bearing the indicia. The image scanner transmits the electronic image to the controller 114. The electronic image is analyzed by software for the indicia (e.g., a barcoded pattern). In the case of the indicia being a barcoded pattern, the controller 114 analyzes the barcoded pattern and decodes the barcoded pattern using software. The decoded barcoded pattern results in characters that represent, for example, a ticket number. According to some embodiments, the controller 114 compares the ticket number obtained from the media detector 112 and the ticket number obtained from the image scanner, which again, can be a separate device along the transport path, a part of the media detector 112, or a part of the currency detector 110. If the ticket numbers match, then the electronic image generated by the image scanner is determined to be of a sufficient quality and the image can be saved into a memory. If the ticket numbers do not match, then the specific substitute currency medium can be off sorted or flagged for further processing by an operator. According to some embodiments, if the ticket numbers match, then the specific substitute currency medium is transported to a document destruction device.
In other embodiments it is contemplated that instead of or in addition to an imaging camera, an image scanner is employed to scan one or both sides of a substitute currency medium or currency bill and save the captured images to a storage medium.
According to some embodiments, the currency detector 110, the media detector 112, or both contain an image scanner, which captures an electronic image of one or both sides of a passing currency bill and/or a passing substitute currency medium. Alternatively, the document processing device 100 contains a currency detector 110, a media detector 112, and a separate image scanner. In some embodiments, the image scanner contains an optical processing functionality, such as, for example, an optical character recognition (OCR) capabilities for processing the image (full or partial) to identify the information of interest. If desired, such optical processing functionalities can instead be implemented in the controller 114. For example, the identified information of interest may comprise the characters printed in one or more fields of the documents as identified by the OCR capability. The identified information of interest may also comprise printed features, patterns or relationships on the currency bills as identified through optical signal processing techniques.
According to some embodiments, the OCR capability may recognize certain fields within a currency bill 134 or a barcoded ticket 136. For example, the OCR may search the full or partial image for a serial number of the currency bill and extract the serial number once the field is located. In other embodiments, the OCR may search the full or partial image for a ticket number of the substitute currency medium and extract the ticket number once the field is located.
The imager/OCR implementation discussed above is not the only possible implementation for the image scanner of the device 100. Other technological options for scanning the document(s) and extracting the certain information of interest are known to those skilled in the art. For example, instead of imaging all or a portion of the document(s), the image scanner may instead implement a line or strip reflective scanning operation like that disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,815,592 and 5,982,918, the disclosures of which are each incorporated herein by reference in their entirety, to obtain scan data in the form of printed surface feature information such as that which may be obtained from detected reflectance data. Appropriate signal processing techniques, such as software-based pattern recognition algorithms, can then be applied to the scanned information by either the image scanner or the controller 114 in order to discern the printed features as the information of interest, such as, for example, serial numbers, ticket numbers, line widths, line directions, line relationships, and the like.
Other scanning modules and methods can be used in place of or in addition to the ones described above. These include CCD array systems, multi-cell arrays, contact image sensing, CMOS image sensors, and other well-known scanning techniques. Examples of these techniques and devices are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,023,782, 5,237,158, 5,187,750, and 4,205,780, all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties. The scanning module can also be a color image scanner such as the type described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,335,292, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The information of interest collected from each scanned document is then saved in a memory (not shown). This information may be managed by a processing functionality for storage by and/or through the controller 114. Alternatively, the image scanner may be linked for data transfer and delivery of information directly to the memory.
According to some embodiments, in which the image scanner operates to collect document images, the collected images are passed to the memory and stored therein as image files. The determined information of interest is also stored in the memory in association with its corresponding image using a process of tagging the information of interest as data to the image file.
According to some embodiments, the document images may not necessarily be collected, in which case, the determined information of interest is stored in the memory in a data file.
According to some embodiments, the information of interest is linked in some form or fashion known to those skilled in the art (for example, by database association) to other information and, if applicable, to the document image file.
Where the memory is used to store the images of the documents scanned by the image scanner, the memory may store the document as a full image of the document (e.g., a picture of the entire document). Alternatively, the memory may only store an image of a portion of the document (e.g., a partial picture of the document). It may be that the memory only needs to store an image of half of the document in order to obtain the fields needed for a given application. In another embodiment, the memory may only store data for a selected strip of the document, such as, for example, a horizontal or vertical strip.
According to some embodiments, the image scanner scans all documents, but only images of substitute currency media are passed to the memory for storage therein. In such embodiments, the images of the non-substitute-currency-media documents may be used, for example, to denominate and/or authenticate the non-substitute-currency-media documents. According to other embodiments, the image scanner only scans substitute currency media and passes the images of the substitute currency media to the memory for storage therein. According to other embodiments, the image scanner scans all documents and passes the images of all of the documents to the memory for storage therein.
b shows a functional block diagram of a portion of an evaluation region 104 according to one embodiment of the present invention. The evaluation region 104 generally includes a currency detector 110, a media detector 112, and a controller 114. The evaluation region 104 may optionally include a second currency detector 122a and/or a second media detector 124a which may be disposed on the opposite side of a transport mechanism 106 as shown in
In one embodiment, the barcode reader 128 is an MS-9 barcode reader manufactured by Microscan. In alternate embodiments, other barcode readers may be employed, such as, for example, the LM 520, LazerData 8000, LazerData 9000E, or LD12000 barcode readers manufactured by PSC, Inc., the MS-880, MS-7100 or MS-7180 barcode readers manufactured by Microscan, the Maxiscan 2100 or Maxiscan 3300 barcode readers manufactured by Intermec, or an LED barcode reader manufactured by Welch Allyn. It is understood that the present invention is not limited to any particular barcode reader. The selection of a particular barcode reader depends on a number of factors, including size constraints in the evaluation region 104 of the document processing device, the particular barcode symbology to be scanned, and the desired scan rate. For example, the LazerData 9000E, manufactured by PSC, Inc., has scan rates ranging from 500 scans per second to 2000 scans per second, and is adapted to scan a linear barcode. The dimensions of the LazerData 9000E are approximately 3.84″ (D)×2.52″ (L)×2.52″ (W), or 97.5 mm (D)×64 mm (L)×64 mm (W). The MS-9 barcode reader has dimensions of approximately 3″ (H)×2.13″ (W)×1.63″ (D), or 75 mm (H)×53.5 mm (W)×41 mm (D), and has a scan rate of up to 2000 scans per second.
In alternate embodiments, the barcode reader 128 reads less than 500 barcoded documents per minute, at least 500 barcoded documents per minute, 800 barcoded documents per minute, 1000 barcoded documents per minute, 1200 barcoded documents per minute, and 1500 barcoded documents per minute.
In the illustrated embodiment shown in
Still referring to
Still referring to
Barcodes are well known in the art, and there are numerous barcode symbologies, such as, for example, Codabar, Code 3 of 9, Interleaved 2 of 5, UPC, EAN 8, EAN 13, Postnet, Planet Code, Aztec Code, Code 11, Code 16K, Code 49, Code 93, Code 128, Data Matrix, MaxiCode, 3D or bumpy barcode, to name just a few. These and other barcode symbologies encode characters such as numbers, letters, and/or punctuation. Barcodes can be linear, like the UPC code, 2-D like the MaxiCode, or 3-D like the bumpy barcode. Barcodes are typically black and white, but they may also be in color. In the illustrated embodiment of
Still referring to
As explained previously, the currency detector 110 may comprise one or more sensors disposed at various locations along the transport mechanism 106. In the alternative embodiment in which the barcode reader 128 is integrated into the currency detector 110, the barcode reader 128 may be positioned among the plurality of sensors at any location within the currency detector 110 and along the transport mechanism 106. Furthermore, as emphasized previously, the currency detector 110 may be disposed on either side or both sides of the transport mechanism 106.
If the barcode reader 128 does not identify a barcode on the currency bill 134, the barcode reader 128 provides a “no read” electrical signal to the controller 114 indicating that no barcode was read or identified in that scan. As used herein, a substitute currency medium having an unreadable or non-existent barcode may be considered an “invalid” substitute currency medium. In the illustrated embodiment of
In the direction of arrow A shown in
In one embodiment, once the barcode reader 128 scans a valid barcode on the barcoded ticket 136, the controller 114 instructs the currency detector 110 to ignore the barcoded ticket 136. In an alternate embodiment, the controller 114 instructs the currency detector 110 to evaluate the barcoded ticket 136. In this alternate embodiment, if the controller 110 receives a signal from the media detector 124 that it has read a valid barcode and a signal from the currency detector 110 that it has detected an authentic currency, then the controller 114 provides an error signal to the operator alerting the operator that an unacceptable document has been detected. As used herein, the terms “operator,” “user,” and “customer” are interchangeable.
As stated above, the controller 114 may include a memory (not shown). In one embodiment, the memory includes master authenticating information. The master authenticating information includes information about authenticating characteristics of a currency bill, such as size, thickness, color, magnetism, reflectivity, absorbability, transmissivity, electrical conductivity, serial number, and so forth. The memory may also include master denomination information. The master denomination information includes information about denomination characteristics of a currency bill. Examples of such characteristics are disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 5,815,592, previously incorporated by reference. In another embodiment, the memory includes media information, which includes information about the substitute currency media. This information may include, in alternate embodiments, any combination of the following: an amount of money associated with a medium, a ticket number of a casino cashout ticket, the characters encoded on a barcode on a barcoded medium, self-checkout station identification information, casino gaming machine information, information about the identity of the person redeeming the redeemable document, or the time a medium was dispensed, for example. In this embodiment, the media information may be periodically updated in the memory via a computer network coupled to the document processing device 100, such as described in connection with
As explained above, the printer 120 may optionally be coupled to the device 100. When the device 100 is coupled to the printer 120, the printer 120 may print reports containing information about the documents processed by the device 100, such as the reports described in connection with
c shows an evaluation region 104 which is adapted to process currency bills and substitute currency media bearing more than one barcode. A barcoded ticket 135 includes a first barcoded pattern 137 and a second barcoded pattern 139 disposed on a surface of the barcoded ticket 135 in the same orientation. Note that the first barcoded pattern 137 and the second barcoded pattern 139 could be disposed on opposite surfaces of the barcoded ticket 135 or in different orientations. For example, one or both of the first and second barcoded patterns 137, 139 could be disposed in a vertical orientation instead of a horizontal orientation as shown.
In a preferred embodiment, the first barcoded pattern 137 and the second barcoded pattern 139 are encoded according to the same barcode symbology, though they may also be encoded according to different barcode symbologies, including any combination of the barcode symbologies mentioned above. Many commercially available barcode readers are capable of discerning among several different barcode symbologies, so the use of different barcode symbologies on a barcoded ticket would not necessarily call for multiple barcode readers. However, if multiple barcode readers are required, additional readers may be disposed in the media detector 112. An optional second barcode reader 129 is shown in the media detector 112 to scan for barcoded patterns on passing documents. Like the barcode reader 128, the optional second barcode reader 129 includes a light source 141 for illuminating the barcoded pattern. Barcode readers adapted to detect barcodes such as a bumpy barcode include an additional or alternate detection structure as is known in the art.
As explained in connection with
In embodiments having only one media detector disposed on one side of the transport mechanism 106, the substitute currency media would have to be faced such that the barcode(s) could be detected by the barcode reader 128. This facing may be accomplished manually by the operator before depositing the documents into the document processing device. Alternately, a document facing mechanism coupled to the transport mechanism 106 may be employed to rotate a document 180° so that the face position of the document is reversed. Further details of a document facing mechanism which may be utilized for this purpose are disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,074,334, entitled “Document Facing Method and Apparatus,” which issued on Jun. 13, 2000, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that the document facing mechanism disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,074,334 can be positioned downstream or upstream of the evaluation region 104. In the case where the document facing mechanism is positioned upstream of the evaluation region 104, a suitable detector, such as a barcode reader (not shown), may be disposed upstream of the document facing mechanism to detect the orientation of a substitute currency medium before it is evaluated by the evaluation region 104.
In the case where the document facing mechanism is positioned downstream of the evaluation region 104, the documents are transported past the evaluation region 104 and those documents which are not properly faced are then rotated by the document facing mechanism. Next, the properly faced document is fed back to the evaluation region 104 either along the same transport path or along a different transport path for processing. This embodiment avoids the scenario where an operator must reprocess wrong-way facing documents.
According to some embodiments, the controller 114 shown in
d depicts an exemplary set of documents that might be handled along a portion of the transport mechanism 106. The documents are transported in the direction of arrow A, and, in one embodiment, the first document to be transported is a batch identification card 150 or header card bearing a barcoded pattern 152. Except where distinction is warranted, the term header card is used interchangeably for both header card, which precedes a batch, and trailer card, which follows a batch. The barcoded pattern 152 disposed on the batch identification card 150 encodes a set of characters that is associated with the machine from which the documents that follow originated. For example, in a casino environment, there might be numerous slot machines, video-poker machines, and redemption machines which need to be emptied periodically and reconciled with the casino's accounting system. To identify from which machine a given batch of documents originated, a batch identification card is placed in the bill validator box of the machine. A number is encoded in the form of a barcoded pattern 152 and imprinted or embedded on the batch identification card 150. The card 150 is then placed in the bill validator box such that when the contents of the box is emptied and placed into an input receptacle of a document processing device, the card 150 will be the first document processed by the document processing device. For the sake of example, the barcoded pattern 152 encodes the number 00123, which represents slot machine number 123.
According to some embodiments, the bill validator box of the machine, also known as a slot box, contains a permanently mounted or affixed indicia. In some embodiments, the permanently mounted indicia is a barcode. In these embodiments, an operator or user of the document processing device 100 can scan the barcode on the sot box using a barcode scanning device. The barcode scanning device employs similar technologies and techniques as the barcode reader 128 discussed above. The barcode scanning device also includes a printer or printing device. After the operator scans a barcode on a particular slot box, the printer prints a barcoded ticket. According to some embodiments, these barcoded tickets are used as header cards and/or trailer cards as described above in relation to
The next documents to be processed are the currency bills and substitute currency media contained in the bill validator boxes of the machine identified by the batch identification card 150. For illustrative purposes only, a few currency bills and substitute currency media are shown in
The presence of the barcoded ticket 156 on the transport mechanism 106 means that a casino patron received the barcoded ticket 156, perhaps as part of a casino's promotion to entice the casino patron to play a game or perhaps because the patron won $100 at a gaming machine. Then, the casino patron exchanged the barcoded ticket 156 either for $100 cash or for game credits at a gaming machine. Thus, barcoded ticket 156 has been redeemed, and needs to be processed so that it can be reconciled with the casino's accounting system.
The next documents transported by the transport mechanism 106 are a second barcoded ticket 162, a twenty-dollar bill 164, and a five-dollar bill 166. Additional documents (not shown) will be transported by the transport mechanism 106 until there are no more documents in the input receptacle to be processed. If another batch identification card is detected, all subsequent documents (until another batch identification card is detected) will be associated with the batch identification card. In an alternate embodiment, batch identification cards are not used.
Although the documents shown in
According to some embodiments, subsequent to the processing of the documents, a separate process and apparatus for destroying documents may be provided. According to some embodiments, once substitute currency media have been imaged and an image file of each substitute currency medium is saved in a storage device and/or checked for quality, the substitute currency media can be destroyed. Imaging and saving image files of processed substitute currency media can eliminate the need for saving and storing the physical substitute currency media. Additionally, the direct destruction of the substitute currency media eliminates the need to remove sorted substitute currency media from the document processing device 100 for transport to storage or otherwise. For example, some casinos are required to keep records of each casino cashout ticket redeemed at the casino for a predetermined amount of time. The long-term or short-term storage and handling of these physical casino cashout tickets can be voluminous, burdensome, and costly. Thus, coupling a document destruction device to the document processing device 100 provides a direct path for each of the substitute currency medium successfully processed from the input receptacle 102 to the document destruction device.
According to some embodiments, a document is only destroyed after the document processing device 100 scans and images the document, saves an image file of the document, and verifies that the quality of the image file meets a set of predetermined standards. If the image file does not meet the set of predetermined standards, then the document will be flagged and/or off-sorted for further processing that does not directly include destroying the document. In some embodiments, the document destruction device only destroys documents other than currency bills. In other embodiments, the document destruction device only destroys casino cashout tickets. Yet in other embodiments, the document processing device 100 and the document destruction device can be configured to destroy or preserve any combination of documents.
The document destruction device can include, for example, mechanical devices assuring complete destruction (e.g., shredding and/or disintegrating documents using a mechanical shredder, press, etc.) or mechanical devices for causing a less than complete obliteration of the documents (e.g., using a marking, perforation, or printing device which would leave the document substantially intact, but clearly not redeemable or capable of recirculation). In other aspects, it is contemplated that document destruction devices can include state-changing devices for producing an irreversible change of state to the documents by chemical and/or incendiary processes (e.g., laser incineration).
Now turning to
The transaction/user identification number provides a mechanism to link the user or operator who is processing one or more batched of documents including, but not limited to, just currency bills, just substitute currency media, or both currency bills and substitute currency media, to the processed documents themselves. The transaction/user identification number may be any type of identifier, such as a casino name, time and/or date of transaction, employee name, an account number, PIN, merchant number, social security number, employee number, driver's license number, credit/debit/smart card number, and bar coded or other encoded number. The transaction/user identification number may be encoded based on user name or any other identifying number (such as driver's license number or social security number). The transaction/user identification number may also be an alphanumeric code, a fingerprint, or biometric scan. The transaction/user identification number may also be obtained by a video image of the user/operator or any other known way to identify a person. The transaction/user identification number may be obtained in any number of ways by an identification input device (such as entry through the operator control panel or customer control panel). Other options for the input device include a card reader or perhaps the image scanner itself. With respect to the latter option, the number may be read off an encoded sheet, such as a bar encoded slip or a MICR encoded slip, which is input for processing through the document processing device 100. For the control panel option, the number may be input into the device by the operator or by the user. If a card reader is available on the document processing device 100, the number may be read from an inserted debit/credit/smart card that is input into the document processing device 100. More generally, the transaction/user identification input device may be any known device capable of receiving commands, such as a keyboard, a keypad, a touch screen, or a mouse, and/or may also be any type of reader, such as a MICR reader, a bar code reader, an optical reader, biometric reader or others known in the art.
The documents are then transported by the transport mechanism one at a time (4210). Each transported document is then scanned in step 4215. As discussed above, this scanning operation may involve optically scanning each document to obtain a document image of one or both sides of the document. The document image may be an image of substantially the entire document (a “full image”) or of selected portions (a “partial image”) of the document. Alternatively or additionally, a line or strip reflective scanning operation may be performed. Other scanning operations may also be used. The performance of step 4215 produces scan data. At step 4220, this scan data is processed to identify certain information of interest with respect to each document. For example, the identified information of interest may comprise the characters printed in one or more fields of the document. The identified information of interest may also comprise printed features, patterns or relationships on the document. Even more specifically, the identified information of interest comprises currency bill serial number data or substitute currency media ticket number data.
In step 4225, the information of interest from the document is stored in memory in association with the transaction/user identification number. In this way, the information of interest is linked to a certain user or operator and that user's transaction.
Turning now to
As discussed above, the document identification characteristic information may be obtained by obtaining an image scan (full or partial) of the document. From the image scan, the characteristic information may be obtained by using optical character recognition (OCR) software for identifying the characters printed in the character information fields of the documents. For example, if the character information is the serial number, the OCR may search the full image for a serial number and then extract the serial number once the field is located. For another example, if the character information is the ticket number, the OCR may search the full image for a ticket number and then extract the ticket number once the field is located.
Next, in step 4217, the document identification characteristic information is associated with the user/operator identifier so that the document under examination can be linked for tracking and tracing purposes with the transaction. As discussed above, this can be accomplished by storing the data (characteristic information and customer identifier) in a memory. In the memory, the document is linked to the user/operator by tying the characteristic information to the user/operator identifier. For example, if the characteristic information is obtained via image scanning, the user/operator identifier, as well as the characteristic information, could be tagged onto the image file. Alternatively, the characteristic information can be stored in a memory in a file dedicated to the user/operator (as identified by the user/operator identifier). This way, someone searching the memory for the document or characteristic information could see that it is stored under a specific user/operator's identifier.
The document processing device 100 shown and described in connection with
According to some embodiments, the document processing device 100 includes an input receptacle 102, a currency detector 110, a media detector 112, an image scanner, at least one authentication detector, a transport mechanism 106, and at least one output receptacle 108. According to some embodiments, the document processing device 100 processes documents at a rate of at least about 1000 documents per minute. According to some embodiments, the document processing device 100 processes documents at a rate of at least about 1500 documents per minute. According to some embodiments, the processing of documents at the above processing rates includes the following: (1) transporting documents including at least currency bills and substitute currency media, one document at a time, from the input receptacle 102 to the at least one output receptacle 108, (2) denominating all of the currency bills with the currency detector 110, (3) scanning barcodes on all of the substitute currency media with the media detector 112, (4) imaging all of the substitute currency media to produce a raw image file for each scanned substitute currency medium, the raw image file having an image resolution of approximately 100 DPI by approximately 100 DPI (5) authenticating all of the currency bills using the at least one authentication detector, and (6) saving an image file for each of the images of the substitute currency media to a storage device in the document processing device 100.
According to some embodiments, the raw image file has an image resolution of approximately 200 DPI by approximately 100 DPI. Yet according to some embodiments, the raw image file has an image resolution of approximately 200 DPI by approximately 200 DPI. It is contemplated that the above processing rates are also applicable to various combinations of image file resolutions less than approximately 200 DPI by approximately 200 DPI.
According to some embodiments, the processing of documents at the above rates can further include: (7) prior to saving the image file, cropping each of the raw image files, thereby reducing the electronic file size, (8) deskewing the raw image file to square-up or orientate the raw image file in a predetermined manner and/or direction, and (9) compressing the raw image file to further reduce the electronic file size. In some embodiments, compressing the raw image file converts the raw image file, sometimes called a TIFF file, into a JPEG file. Other file formats are contemplated including, but not limited to, GIF file format, MPEG file format, and BMP file format.
According to some embodiments, the processing of documents at the above rates can further include: (10) sorting the substitute currency media from the currency bills and further sorting the currency bills by denomination into separate output receptacles.
According to some embodiments, the processing of documents at the above rates can further include: (11) after scanning and imaging each of the substitute currency medium, transporting the substitute media to a document destruction device to destroy each of the substitute currency medium.
According to some embodiments, the processing of documents at the above rates can further include: (12) prior to destroying each of the substitute currency medium, performing an image quality check of the image files of each of the substitute currency medium.
According to some embodiments, the document processing device 100 includes an input receptacle 102, an image scanner, a transport mechanism 106, and at least one output receptacle 108. According to some embodiments, the document processing device 100 processes documents at a rate of at least about 1000 documents per minute. According to some embodiments, the document processing device 100 processes documents at a rate of at least about 1500 documents per minute. According to some embodiments, the processing of documents at the above processing rates includes at least the following: (1) transporting documents including at least currency bills and substitute currency media, one document at a time, from the input receptacle 102 to the at least one output receptacle 108, (2) imaging all of the documents to produce a raw image file for each of the documents, the raw image file having an image resolution of approximately 100 DPI by approximately 100 DPI (3) denominating all of the currency bills from the raw image files, (4) using software to decode a barcoded pattern on each substitute currency medium raw image file, and (5) saving an image file for each of the images of the documents to a storage device in the document processing device 100.
It is contemplated that according to some embodiments the image resolution is sufficient to allow a controller and/or a processor to denominate the currency bills from the raw image file and/or from an image file created from the raw image file. It is also contemplated that according to some embodiments the image resolution is sufficient to allow a controller and/or a processor to decode a barcoded pattern in the raw image file and/or in an image file created from the raw image file. For example, in some embodiments, the raw image file has an image resolution of approximately 200 DPI by approximately 100 DPI. Yet according to some embodiments, the raw image file has an image resolution of approximately 200 DPI by approximately 200 DPI. It is contemplated that the above processing rates are also applicable to various combinations of image file resolutions less than approximately 200 DPI by approximately 200 DPI.
According to some embodiments, the processing of documents at the above rates can further include: (6) prior to saving the image file, cropping each of the raw image files, thereby reducing the electronic file size, (7) deskewing the raw image file to square-up or orientate the raw image file in a predetermined manner and/or direction, and (8) compressing the raw image file to further reduce the electronic file size.
According to some embodiments, the processing of documents at the above rates can further include: (9) sorting the substitute currency media from the currency bills and further sorting the currency bills by denomination into separate output receptacles.
According to some embodiments, the processing of documents at the above rates can further include: (10) after scanning and imaging each of the substitute currency medium, transporting the substitute media to a document destruction device to destroy each of the substitute currency medium.
According to some embodiments, the processing of documents at the above rates can further include: (11) prior to destroying each of the substitute currency medium, performing an image quality check of the image files of each of the substitute currency medium.
The document processing device 100 shown and described in connection with
As discussed above, according to some embodiments, the evaluation region 104 shown and described in connection with
In the illustrated embodiment, interposed in the transport mechanism 206, intermediate the evaluation region 204 and the lower output receptacles 208c-208h, is a document facing mechanism designated generally by reference numeral 203. The document facing mechanism 203 is capable of rotating a document (i.e., a currency bill or substitute currency medium) 180° so that the face position of the document is reversed. That is, if a U.S. currency bill, for example, is initially presented with the surface bearing a portrait of a president facing down, it may be directed to the document facing mechanism 203, whereupon it will be rotated 180° so that the surface with the portrait faces up. The leading edge of the document remains constant while the document is being rotated 180° by the document facing mechanism 203. The decision may be taken to send a document to the document facing mechanism 203 when the selected mode of operation or other operator instructions call for maintaining a given face position of documents as they are processed by the device 200. For example, it may be desirable in certain circumstances for all of the currency bills ultimately delivered to the lower output receptacles 208c-208h to have the currency bill surface bearing the portrait of the president facing up. In such embodiments of the device 200, the evaluation region 204 is capable of determining the face position of a bill, such that a bill not having the desired face position can first be directed to the document facing mechanism 203 before being delivered to the appropriate output receptacle 208. Further details of a document facing mechanism which may be utilized for this purpose are disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,074,334, entitled “Document Facing Method and Apparatus,” which issued on Jun. 13, 2000, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, and may be employed in conjunction with the present invention such as the device illustrated in
The document processing device 200 in
The operator can control the operation of the device 200 through the control unit 216. By selecting various user-defined modes through the control unit 216, such as via an input device such as a keyboard 219, or a switch, button, or touch screen (not shown), the operator can direct currency bills and substitute media into specific output receptacles, such as output receptacles 208a-208h. Note that fewer or more output receptacles may be employed in alternate embodiments. In still other embodiments, the user can select pre-programmed modes or create new user-defined modes based on the particular requirements of the application. For example, the operator may select a user-defined mode which instructs the device 200 to sort currency bills by denomination; accordingly, the evaluation region 204 would denominate the bills and direct one dollar bills into the first lower output receptacle 208c, five dollar bills into the second lower output receptacle 108d, ten dollar bills into the third lower output receptacle 208e, twenty dollar bills into the forth lower output receptacle 208f, fifty dollar bills into the fifth lower output receptacle 208g, and one-hundred dollar bills into the sixth lower output receptacle 208h. The operator may also instruct the device 200 to deliver those bills whose denomination was not determined, i.e., no call bills, to the first upper output receptacle 208a. In such an embodiment, the upper output receptacle 208a would function as a reject pocket. In an alternative embodiment, the operator may instruct the device 200 to also evaluate the authenticity of each currency bill. In such an embodiment, authentic bills would be directed to the appropriate lower output receptacles 208c-208h. Those bills that were determined not to be authentic, i.e., suspect bills, would be delivered to the second upper output receptacle 208b. A multitude of user defined modes are disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,278,795, previously incorporated by reference, which may be employed in conjunction with the present invention such as the device illustrated in
It should be noted that the control unit 216 provides the operator with a broad range of flexibility in selecting which output receptacles receive which documents. For example, the operator may instruct the device 200 to sort the currency bills by denomination and to deliver authentic currency bills according to their denomination into selected ones of the output receptacles 208c-208h. The operator may further instruct the device 200 to deliver no call bills and suspect bills into output receptacle 208a, and to deliver substitute currency media into output receptacle 208b. In addition, the device 200 may be unable to evaluate a particular document because, for example, it is damaged or excessively worn. The operator may instruct the device 200 to deliver any substitute currency media that cannot be evaluated to the output receptacle 108a. Alternatively, additional output receptacles (not shown) may be employed to receive any combination of no call bills, suspect bills, valid substitute currency media, or invalid substitute currency media. The delivery of such documents may occur without suspension of operation of the device 200, or with suspension of the operation of the device 200, as explained next.
According to some embodiments, the device 200 is configured so that when the evaluation region 204 is unable to identify certain criteria regarding a currency bill or substitute currency medium, the unidentified document is flagged and “presented” in one of the output receptacles 208a-208h, that is, the transport mechanism 206 is suspended or halted so that the unidentified document is located at a predetermined position within one of the output receptacles 208a-208h, such as being the last document transported to one of the output receptacles. In the case of currency bills, such criteria can include denominating information, authenticating information, information indicative of the currency bill's series, or other information the evaluation region 204 is attempting to obtain pursuant to a mode of operation. In the case of substitute currency media, such criteria may include, in addition to or exclusive of the criteria mentioned above, whether information, such as a valid barcode, is detected on the substitute currency media.
The user may determine in which output receptacle 208a-208h the flagged document is presented according to a selected mode of operation. For example, where the unidentified document is the last document transported to an output receptacle 208a-208h, it may be positioned within a stacker wheel or positioned at the top of the documents already within the output receptacle 208a-208h. While unidentified documents may be transported to any output receptacles 208a-208h, it may be more convenient for the operator to have unidentified documents transported to one of the upper output receptacles 208a,b, which are positioned such that the operator is able to easily see and/or inspect the document which has not been identified by the evaluation region 204. The operator may then either visually inspect the flagged document while it is resting on the top of the stack, or the operator may decide to remove the document from the output receptacle 208 in order to examine the flagged document more closely. In an alternative embodiment of the device 200, the control unit 216 may communicate to the user via the display/user-interface 217 information identifying which one of the output receptacles 108a-108h a flagged document is presented.
The device 200 may be adapted to continue operation automatically when a flagged document is removed from the upper output receptacle 208a,b or, according to one embodiment of the present invention, the device 200 may be adapted to suspend or halt operation and require input from the operator via the control unit 216. Upon examination of a flagged document by the operator, it may be found that the flagged document is genuine or valid even though it was not identified as such by the evaluation region 204 or the evaluation region 204 may have been unable to denominate the flagged document. However, because the document was not identified, the total value and/or denomination counters will not reflect its value. According to one embodiment, such an unidentified document is removed from the output receptacles 208 and reprocessed or set aside. According to another embodiment, the flagged documents may accumulate in the upper output receptacles 208a,b until the batch of documents currently being processed is completed or the output receptacle 208a,b is full and then reprocessed or set aside. In yet another embodiment, the control unit 216 of the device 200 includes denomination keys, such as disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 5,790,697, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. Upon inspection of a flagged currency bill, such as a no call bill, the operator may manually key in the denomination of the bill via a denomination key, and resume operation. In the case of a substitute currency media, the operator may manually enter into the device 200 via the control unit 216 information about the substitute currency media. Such information may include the barcode number when the substitute currency media is a barcoded ticket, the “denomination” of the substitute currency media, such as a $5 Disney Dollar, the value associated with the barcoded ticket, such as $100, and other identifying information.
According to other embodiments, when a document is flagged, the transport mechanism may be stopped before the flagged document is transported to one of the output receptacles. Such an embodiment is particularly suited for situations in which the operator need not examine the document being flagged; for example, the device 200 is instructed to first process United States currency and then British currency pursuant to a selected mode of operation where the device 200 processes United States $1, $5, $10, $20, $50, and $100 currency bills into the lower output receptacles 208c-208h, respectively. Upon detection of the first British pound note, the device 200 may halt operation allowing the operator to empty the lower output receptacles 208c-208h and to make any spatial adjustments necessary to accommodate the British currency. A multitude of modes of operation which may be employed in conjunction with the present invention are described in conjunction with bill flagging, presenting, and/or transport halting in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,311,819 entitled “Method and Apparatus for Document Processing,” which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
In the illustrated embodiment, with regard to the upper output receptacles 208a and 208b, the second upper output receptacle 208b is provided with a stacker wheel 227 for accumulating a number of documents, while the first upper output receptacle 208a is not provided with such a stacker wheel. Thus, when, pursuant to a preprogrammed mode of operation or a user-selected mode or other operator instructions, a document is to be fed to the first upper output receptacle 208a, there may be a further instruction to momentarily suspend operation of the device 200 for the operator to inspect and remove the document. On the other hand, it may be possible to allow a number of documents to accumulate in the first upper output receptacle 208a before operation is suspended or halted. Similarly, the second upper output receptacle 208b may be utilized initially as an additional one of the lower output receptacles 208c-208h. However, in the illustrated embodiment shown in
a and 4b illustrate the evaluation region 204 according to one embodiment of the device 200. The evaluation region 204 can be opened for service, access to sensors, to clear document jams, etc., as shown in
The direction of document travel through the evaluation region 204 is indicated by arrow A in
Additional details concerning the input receptacle 202, transport mechanism 206, and diverters 237 are disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,398,000, entitled “Currency Handling System Having Multiple Output Receptacles,” issued on Jun. 4, 2002, which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
a-1 and 4b-1 illustrate the evaluation region 204 according to another embodiment of the device 200. Similar to the previous embodiment, the evaluation region 204 can be opened for service, access to sensors, to clear document jams, etc., as shown in
The direction of document travel through the evaluation region 204 is indicated by arrow A in
Referring back to
A series of diverters 237a-237f, which are a part of the transport mechanism 206, direct the documents to one of the lower output receptacles 208c-208h. When the diverters 237 are in an upper position, the documents are directed to the adjacent lower output receptacle 208. When the diverters 237 are in a lower position, the documents proceed in the direction of the next diverter 237. Alternatively, the operator may instruct the device 200 to direct substitute currency media to one or more of the upper output receptacles 208a-208b such that only currency bills are presented to the diverters 237a-237f.
Additional details concerning the lower output receptacles 208c-208h, the escrow compartments 205, and the storage cassettes 207 are disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,398,000, entitled “Currency Handling System Having Multiple Output Receptacles,” incorporated by reference above. It should be emphasized that the operator may also instruct the device 200 to direct substitute currency media to one or more of the lower output receptacles 208. In the illustrated embodiment, only currency bills are directed to the lower output receptacles 208, however, in alternative embodiments, substitute currency media could also be directed to one or more of the lower output receptacles 208.
In some embodiments, the device 200 is dimensioned to process a stack of different sized currencies at the same time. In other embodiments, the device 200 can also be dimensioned to process a stack of different sized currencies and substitute currency media at the same time. For example, one application may require the processing of United States dollars (2.5 inches×6 inches, 6.5 cm×15.5 cm) and French currency (as large as 7.17 inches×3.82 inches, 18.2 cm×9.7 cm). The application may simply require the segregation of the U.S. currency from the French currency wherein the device 200 delivers U.S. currency to the first lower output receptacle 208c and the French currency to the second output receptacle 208d. In still other embodiments, the device 200 processes a mixed stack of U.S. ten and twenty dollar bills and French one hundred and two hundred Franc notes wherein the currency documents are denominated, counted, and authenticated. In such embodiments, the U.S. ten and twenty dollar bills are delivered to the first 208c and second 208d lower output receptacles, respectively, and the French one hundred and two hundred Franc notes are delivered to the third 208e and fourth 208f lower output receptacle, respectively. In yet other embodiments, the device 200 denominates, counts, and authenticates six different types of currency wherein, for example, Canadian currency is delivered to the first lower output receptacle 208c, United States currency is delivered to the second output receptacle 208d, Japanese currency is delivered to the third lower output receptacle 208e, British currency is delivered to the fourth lower output receptacle 208f, French currency is delivered to the fifth lower output receptacle 208g, and German currency is delivered to the sixth lower output receptacle 208h. In still other embodiments, no call bills or other denominations of foreign currency, such as Mexican currency for example, may be directed to the second upper output receptacle 208b. In other embodiments, suspect bills are delivered to the first upper output receptacle 208a. In still other embodiments, U.S. currency and cashout tickets are delivered to different output receptacles. These embodiments represent just a few examples of the numerous combinations of U.S. currency bills, foreign currency bills, and substitute media that can be delivered to the output receptacles 208.
Additional details concerning the processing of foreign currency are disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 5,875,259, entitled “Method and Apparatus for Discriminating and Counting Documents”; commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 5,960,103, entitled “Method and Apparatus for Authenticating and Discriminating Currency”; commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/626,324, entitled “Currency Handling System Employing an Infrared Authenticating System,” filed Jul. 26, 2000; and commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,493,461, entitled “Customizable International Note Counter,” each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
In other alternative embodiments of the device 200, the user can vary the type of documents delivered to the output receptacles 208. For example, in one alternative embodiment an operator can direct, via the control unit 216 (shown in
In still other alternative embodiments, no call bills and bills that are stacked upon one another are directed to the second upper output receptacle 208b. In yet other alternative embodiments, the operator can direct that all documents failing an authentication test be delivered to the first upper output receptacle 208a. In still further embodiments, the operator instructs the device 200 to deliver no call bills, suspect bills, stacked bills, etc. to one of the lower output receptacles 208c-208h. In yet other alternative embodiments, the currency bills are directed to one or more of the lower output receptacles 208c-208h, no call bills and suspect bills are directed to the upper output receptacle 208a, and substitute currency media are directed to the upper output receptacle 208b. In still other embodiments, U.S. currency bills are directed to selected ones of the lower output receptacles 208, foreign currency bills are directed to other lower output receptacles 208, no call bills, suspect bills, and invalid substitute currency media (i.e., media which cannot be identified) are directed to the first upper output receptacle 208a, and valid substitute currency media are directed to the second upper output receptacle 208b. Alternatively, a third upper output receptacle (not shown) may receive invalid substitute currency media so as to keep all substitute currency media separate from currency bills.
In still other alternate embodiments, genuine U.S. currency bills and foreign currency bills and identified substitute currency are directed to selected ones of the lower output receptacles 208, unidentified substitute currency media are directed to the first upper output receptacle 208a, and no call currency bills and suspect currency bills are directed to the second upper output receptacle 208b. In short, the device 200 as illustrated having eight output receptacles 208a-208h provides a great deal of flexibility to the operator. And in other alternative embodiments of the currency handling device 200 with a fewer or greater number of output receptacles 208, numerous different combinations for processing documents are available. What output receptacle receives which type of document, whether a U.S. currency bill, a foreign currency bill, or a substitute currency medium, is entirely customizable by the operator.
In the illustrated embodiment shown in
Document Processing Device Having a Single Output Receptacle
The evaluation region 104 shown and described in connection with
The device 500 in
A pair of driven stacking wheels 527a and 527b are located in the output receptacle 508 and come into contact with the documents as the documents are transported into the output receptacle 508. The stacking wheels 527a and 527b are supported for rotational movement about respective shafts journalled on a rigid frame and driven by a motor (not shown). Flexible blades of the stacker wheels 527a and 527b deliver the documents onto a forward end of a stacker plate 652 shown in
According to one embodiment, the document scanning device 500 is compact, having a height (H1) of about 9½ to 10½ inches, width (W1) of about 10¾ to 11¾ inches, and a depth (D1) of about 12 to 16 inches.
Like the device 200 shown and described in connection with
Document Processing Device Having Dual Output Receptacles
a and 7b illustrate an exterior perspective view and a side cross-sectional view, respectively, of a compact, document processing device 700 having dual output receptacles. The process for carrying documents through the device 700 is the same as discussed above, except that the device 700 has first and second output receptacles, 708a, 708b, respectively. A diverter 760, shown in
b shows a pair of stacker wheels 727a, 727b for delivering documents to the first and second output receptacles 708a, 708b. However, in alternate embodiments, the device 700 includes the stacker wheel 727a only, the stacker wheel 727b only, or neither the stacker wheel 727a nor the stacker wheel 727b.
The device 700 includes an evaluation region 704, such as the evaluation region 104 shown and described in connection with
According to one embodiment the device 700 is compact having a height (H2) of about 17½ inches, width (W2) of about 13½ inches, and a depth (D2) of about 15 inches. According to another embodiment, the device 700 has dimensions of: a height (H2) of about 18 inches; a width (W2) of about 13¾ inches; and a depth (D2) of about 16 inches. The device 700 may be rested upon a tabletop, countertop, desk, or the like.
Like the embodiments described above in connection with a device having multiple output receptacles, the device 700 may be instructed by an operator via a control unit 716, which may include a touch panel display or other suitable interface, to direct certain documents to one or the other of the first and second output receptacles 708a, 708b. These modes may be pre-programmed or operator-defined. For example, according to one embodiment, genuine currency bills and valid substitute currency media are directed to the first output receptacle 708a, whereas non-genuine currency bills and invalid substitute currency media are directed to the second output receptacle 708b. According to another embodiment, genuine currency bills are directed to the first output receptacle 708a, valid substitute currency media are directed to the second output receptacle 708b, and the device 700 is programmed to halt or suspend operation when a non-genuine currency bill or invalid substitute currency medium is detected by the evaluation region of the device 700. In one embodiment, the control unit 716 may include denomination keys, such as explained above. The control unit 716 may also be adapted to permit the operator to manually enter information about a flagged substitute currency medium, such as the information described above in connection with
Document Processing Device Coupled to a Coin Sorting Device
In other embodiments, the evaluation region 104 shown and described in connection with
An operator places a stack of documents into the document processing device 800 for processing, and places a plurality of coins and/or tokens into the coin sorting device 8000 for sorting and counting. The document processing device 800 processes the stack of documents, and the controller 814 in the document processing device 800 stores information representative of the documents being processed, such as the denomination of the currency bills, the value of the substitute currency media, the number of non-genuine currency bills, the number of invalid substitute currency media, and so forth. The coin sorting device 8000 sorts and counts the coins or tokens, and the controller 8014 in the coin sorting device 8000 stores information representative of the coins or tokens being sorted and counted, such as the value and denomination of the coins (penny, dime, nickel, etc.), the number and kind of tokens, and so forth.
In some embodiments, the stored information in the coin sorting device 8000 is transmitted to the controller 814 of the document processing device 800. The document processing device 800 organizes and presents the combined information to the operator via a display, such as a monitor or touch screen. In other embodiments, the stored information in the document processing device 800 is transmitted to the controller 8014 of the coin sorting device 8000, which organizes and presents the information combined from both devices to the operator via a display, such as a monitor or touch screen.
Referring now to
The coin sorter system 9000 includes a control panel 9016. In the illustrated embodiment, the control panel 9016 includes a display 9076 for displaying information about the coin sorter system 9000 and a plurality of keys 9078 for allowing the operator to enter information to the coin sorter system 9000. In some alternate embodiments, the control panel 9016 includes a touch screen.
Additional details concerning the coin sorter system 9000 are disclosed in commonly assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,139,418, entitled “High Speed Coin Sorter Having a Reduced Size,” and U.S. Pat. No. 5,997,395, entitled “High Speed Coin Sorter Having a Reduced Size,” each of which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety. In one embodiment, the coin sorter system 9000 shown in
Funds Processing Machine
In some embodiments, the evaluation region 104 of
Referring now to
The funds processing machine 1000 includes a coin receptacle 1044 which receives coins of a single denomination or of mixed denominations from a user. Additionally, an input receptacle 1002 is included within the funds processing machine 1000. The input receptacle 1002 is illustrated in its open position in
The funds processing machine 1000 includes a dispenser 1008a and a dispensed coin receptacle 1046 for dispensing to the user the desired amount of funds in both bank notes and coins. A return slot 1008b may also be included within the funds processing machine 1000 to return currency bills or substitute currency media to the user which cannot be authenticated or otherwise processed. Coins which cannot be authenticated may be returned to the user via the dispensed coin receptacle 1046. The funds processing machine 1000 further includes a document dispenser 1020 for providing a user with a receipt of the transaction that he or she has performed.
In its simplest form, the funds processing machine 1000 receives funds (currency, coins, substitute currency media) via the coin input receptacle 1044 and the input receptacle 1002, and after these deposited funds have been authenticated and counted, the funds processing machine 1000 returns to the user an amount equal to the deposited funds but in a different variation of bank notes and coins. For example, the user of the funds processing machine 1000 may input $102.99 in various small bank notes and pennies and in turn receive a $100 bank note, two $1 bank notes, three quarters, two dimes, and four pennies. Alternatively, the funds processing machine 1000 may simply return a receipt of the transaction or a barcoded ticket through the document dispenser 1020 which the user can redeem for funds by an attendant of the funds processing machine 1000. Alternatively, the funds processing machine 1000 can credit a user's account.
The funds processing machine 1000 may also include a media reader slot 1042 into which the user inserts his or her identification card so that the funds processing machine 1000 can identify the user. The touch screen 1016 typically provides the user with a menu of options which prompts the user to carry out a series of actions for identifying the user by displaying certain commands and requesting that the user depress touch keys on the touch screen 1016 (e.g., a user PIN). The funds processing machine 1000 includes a card media reader device which is capable of reading from or writing to one or more types of card media. This media may include various types of memory storage technology such as magnetic storage, solid state memory devices, and optical devices.
b illustrates the funds processing machine 1000 in a side view illustrating the various modules. The document processing module 1004 receives documents from the input receptacle 1002 for processing. The inward movement of the input receptacle 1002 positions a stack of documents at the feed station of the document scanning and counting device which automatically feeds, counts, scans, authenticates, and sorts the documents, one at a time at a high rate of speed (e.g., at least 350 documents per minute). In place of or in addition to the input receptacle 1002, the funds processing machine 1000 may include a single document receptacle which receives and processes one document at a time. The documents that are recognized by the document processing module 1004 are delivered to a storage area such as a currency canister (not shown). When a document cannot be recognized by the document processing module 1004, it is returned to the customer through the return slot 1008b. Exemplary machines which scan, sort, count, and authenticate currency bills as required by the bank note processing module are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,295,196, 5,870,487 and 5,875,259, each of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
In place of or in addition to the input receptacle 1002, the funds processing machine 1000 may include an input receptacle slot which receives and processes one document at a time. Such an input receptacle slot would be placed at the front of the funds processing machine 1000.
Additional details of the funds processing machine 1000 are disclosed in commonly assigned, co-pending U.S. Pat. No. 6,318,537, entitled “Currency Processing Machine with Multiple Internal Coin Receptacles,” which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
In accordance with the present invention, the document processing module 1004 of the funds processing machine 1000 shown in
The funds processing machine 1000 also includes a coin processing module 1048. The coin processing module 1048 sorts, counts and authenticates the mixed coins which are deposited in the coin input receptacle 1044 which leads directly into the coin processing module 1048. The coins are sorted in the coin processing module 1048 in a variety of ways but the preferred method is a sorting based on the diameter of the coins. When a non-authenticated coin is determined by the coin processing module 1048, it is directed through a coin reject tube 1054 towards the dispensed coin receptacle 1046. Thus, the user who has entered such a non-authenticated coin can retrieve the coin by accessing the dispensed coin receptacle 1046. Coin sorting and authenticating devices which can perform the function of the coin processing module 1048 are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,299,977, 5,453,047, 5,507,379, 5,542,880, 5,865,673 and 5,997,395, previously incorporated by reference. Alternatively, other coins sorters such as a rail sorter can be used to perform the function of the coin processing module 1048.
The funds processing machine 1000 further includes a document dispensing module 1040 which is connected via transport mechanism 1006 to the dispenser 1008a that is accessible by the user. The document dispensing module 1040 typically dispenses loose bills in response to a request of the user for such bank notes. Also, the document dispensing module 1040 may be configured to dispense strapped notes into the dispenser 1008a if that is desired. In one embodiment of the present invention, the user may select the denomination of the loose or strapped bills dispensed to the user. As noted above, the document dispensing module 1040 is modified in one embodiment to dispense both currency bills and substitute currency media. For example, in one embodiment, the document dispensing module 1040 may return to the user invalid substitute currency media. In addition, as mentioned above, the document dispensing module 1040 may dispense a barcoded ticket which the customer may redeem for funds.
The funds processing machine 1000 also includes a coin dispensing module 1050 which dispenses loose coins to the user via the dispensed coin receptacle 1046. The coin dispensing module 1050 is connected to the dispensed coin receptacle 1046 via a coin tube 1056. Thus, the user of the funds processing machine 1000 has the ability to select the desired coin denominations that he or she will receive in response to a transaction.
The coins which have been sorted into their denomination by the coin processing module 1048 are sent to coin tubes 1058 which correspond to each specific denomination. The coin tubes 1058 lead to a coin receptacle station 1052 for each of the denominations that are to be sorted and authenticated by the coin processing module 1048.
The funds processing machine 1000 includes a controller 1014 which is coupled to each module 1004, 1040, 1048, 1050 and 1052 within the funds processing machine 1000 and controls the interaction between each module. For example, the controller 1014 may review the input totals from the funds processing modules 1004 and 1048 and direct an appropriate funds output via the funds dispensing modules 1040 and 1050. The controller 1014 also directs the operation of the coin receptacle stations 1052 as described below. While not shown, the controller 1014 may also be coupled to a media reader associated with the media reader slot 1042 and also to a printer at the document dispenser 1020, if these devices are present in the funds processing machine 1000. The printer, for example, may print a barcoded ticket representative of the amount of funds deposited by the customer, or the printer may print a receipt of the transaction.
Document Processing Device Coupled to a Computer Network
According to some embodiments of the present invention, any of the foregoing systems may be communicatively coupled to a computer network, such as a casino gaming machine network or a retailer network. Examples of such embodiments will be discussed next.
In one embodiment, the computer network 1192 is a casino gaming machine network and includes a database for storing information about barcoded tickets that have been dispensed by the casino's gaming machines. When a barcoded ticket is dispensed, the ticket number is stored in a database along with the payout amount. A barcode, such as barcode 138 shown in
Alternatively, the barcode numbers associated with barcoded tickets identified by the document processing device 1100 are stored in the document processing device 1100. These numbers are periodically provided to the casino gaming machine network 1192. The casino machine gaming network 1192 may include a casino accounting system. The numbers are matched up with the payout amounts stored in a database associated with the casino machine gaming network 1192, and the payout amounts may then be reconciled in the casino accounting system.
In another embodiment, the casino gaming machine network 1192 is a retailer network that includes a retailer database for storing information about promotional media. For example, a retailer customer may deposit both currency bills and substitute currency media such as store coupons or gift certificates into a self-checkout station at the point of sale. The documents deposited at the self-checkout stations are deposited into a document processing device 1100. Documents from cash register tills may also be deposited into a document processing device 1100. The document processing device 1100 rapidly processes the documents, and identifies the barcode numbers from the barcoded media. These barcode numbers are then transmitted to the retailer network which determines the values associated with the barcode numbers (such as fifty cents off, or a $50 gift certificate) by querying the retailer database. These values are then reconciled in the retailer's accounting system. Optionally, these values may be transmitted back to the document processing device 1100 for display to the customer.
Operation of Document Processing Device
Turning now to
In some embodiments, the input receptacle is adapted to receive a stack of documents. In other embodiments, the input receptacle is adapted to receive one document at a time. The deposited documents are transported, one at a time, along a transport mechanism in the document processing device. In step 1202, a first document is transported past a media detector. In some embodiments, the media detector comprises a barcode reader adapted to scan for barcodes on a document. In step 1204, the media detector provides a signal representative of whether a valid substitute currency medium was detected. For example, if the barcode reader provides a “good read” signal in response to scanning the first document, the first document is a valid medium. However, if the barcode provides a “no read” signal, the first document is not a valid medium. If the first document is a valid medium, the first document is transported to an output receptacle (step 1206). Which output receptacle receives the first document depends on which output receptacle has been specified according to a preprogrammed or operator-defined mode. If there is only one output receptacle on the document processing device, then the first document is transported to that output receptacle.
Note that between steps 1204 and 1206, in some embodiments, the first document may be first transported to a bill facing mechanism before being transported to an output receptacle. According to some of such embodiments, the document processing device is adapted to determine which orientation the first document is facing, and if the first document is facing the wrong orientation, it can be transported to a bill facing mechanism. Alternatively, the desired face orientation can be predetermined either by the manufacturer or the operator. In other embodiments, the first document is not transported to a bill facing mechanism.
If a valid medium is not detected at step 1204, the document is transported past a currency detector at step 1208. If the currency detector detects an authentic currency bill (step 1210), the first document is transported to a pre-selected or operator-defined output receptacle at step 1212. The document processing device can also determine the denomination of the currency bill, and transport the first document to the appropriate output receptacle according to operator-specified instructions or preprogrammed instructions. In some embodiments, a genuine currency bill may optionally be transported to a document facing mechanism, such as the document facing mechanism 203 shown in
In other embodiments, steps 1208 and 1202 are reversed, such that a document is first transported past a currency detector and then past a media detector. In still other embodiments, steps 1202 and 1208 (or steps 1208 and 1202) are performed before steps 1204 and 1210 (or steps 1210 and 1204). In other words, in these other embodiments, the documents are transported past the media and currency detectors (in any order), and then the document processing device determines whether the document is a valid medium or authentic currency bill. Note that in the embodiments in which the document processing device has only a single output receptacle, steps 1206 and 1212 are identical because both valid media and authentic currency are transported to the same output receptacle.
At step 1214, the document processing device determines whether it is instructed to halt on detecting an unacceptable document, i.e., a document that is neither valid media nor authentic currency, such as a blank piece of paper. These instructions may be operator-specified or preprogrammed. In some embodiments, the document processing device is adapted to determine whether an unacceptable document is an invalid medium or a non-genuine currency bill, and can receive separate instructions on handling each. If the device is instructed to halt on detecting an unacceptable document, the operation of the device is halted or suspended at step 1216 to permit inspection and/or removal of the unacceptable document. At step 1218, operation of the device is restarted once the unacceptable document has been inspected and/or removed from the document processing device, and operation continues at either steps 1200 or 1222 depending on pre-programmed or operator-specified instructions. In some embodiments, the operator may, upon inspection, determine a bill's denomination. In such embodiments, the operator may manually enter the denomination of a currency bill, such a via a denomination key, deposit the bill into an output receptacle, and resume operation. In another embodiment, the operator may, upon inspection, determine information about the unacceptable substitute currency medium, such as the information described above.
Returning to step 1214, if the document processing device is instructed to offsort unacceptable documents, the unacceptable document is transported to the offsort receptacle at step 1220. The particular offsort receptacle which is to receive unacceptable documents may be operator-specified or preprogrammed. In embodiments in which the device is adapted to discriminate between invalid media and non-genuine currency bills, the unacceptable document may be routed to one of two offsort receptacles depending on what kind of unacceptable document was detected. This routing decision may be made under the control of operator-specified or preprogrammed instructions.
If there are no further documents to be processed at step 1222, the device may optionally display information associated with the processed documents at step 1224. This information may include any combination of the following according to one or more different embodiments: the total amount of authentic currency bills processed (e.g., $15,567); a breakdown of the denominations of currency bills processed (e.g., 140 $1 bills, 147 $5 bills, 268 $10 bills, and so on); the total number of valid media detected (e.g., 156 pieces of valid media processed); barcode information detected from barcoded media (e.g., barcode number 12345678); the total number of flagged currency bills processed (e.g., 5 flagged bills, where 3 bills are no call bills, 1 bill is a suspect bill, and 1 bill is both suspect and no call); the total number of invalid media detected (e.g., 16 pieces of invalid media processed); the total amount of media detected (e.g., $10,000 in media processed); the total number of unidentified documents—i.e., documents which were neither determined to be a currency bill nor a valid substitute currency medium, such as a blank piece of paper for example—detected (e.g., 27 pieces of unidentified documents processed); why a particular currency bill was not authenticated (e.g., 4 bills failed magnetic strip test, 2 bills failed ultraviolet test); the total number of documents processed (e.g., 11,253 documents processed); the number of batch identification cards processed (e.g., 4 batch identification cards processed); identification information of the gaming machine from which a batch of currency bills and substitute currency media originated based on information encoded on a batch identification card (e.g., batch identification card number 12345 which identifies gaming machine number 42); and other suitable information.
At step 1226, the device may optionally generate a report based on some or all of the information displayed at step 1224. This report may be formatted and displayed to the operator, and/or it may be printed, and/or it may be transmitted to a network computer for storage or further manipulation.
Note that in the embodiments described in connection with
Turning now to
At step 1312, the device determines whether any more documents remain to be processed. If there are, operation continues at step 1302 until there are no further documents to be processed. If no further documents are to be processed, the device retrieves the values associated with the stored barcode numbers from a computer network at step 1314. Alternatively, after each instance in which the device detects a barcode number, the device may retrieve the value associated with the barcode number from the computer network. The computer network may be a casino gaming machine network or a retailer network, for example. In a casino gaming environment, the barcode numbers may be associated with barcoded cashout tickets. In the retailer environment, the barcode numbers may be associated with store coupons, gift certificates, or other barcoded promotional media. In the casino gaming environment, one or more databases may be linked to provide information about the player who redeemed the ticket, when the ticket was dispensed, when the ticket was redeemed, and so forth, based on the barcode number from a cashout ticket. In the retailer environment, one or more databases may be linked to provide information about the product associated with the promotion, manufacturer data, and customer information based on data associated with customer loyalty cards, for example. This information and the other information described in connection with
Additional details concerning the operation of a document processing device according to the present invention may be found in connection with the description of
a illustrates a method of processing documents including currency bills and substitute currency media bearing more than one barcoded pattern in a document processing device according to any embodiment described in connection with
In the specific case where the substitute currency media are barcoded tickets, a valid substitute currency medium is detected when a media detector successfully decodes the barcoded patterns imprinted on the barcoded ticket into sets of meaningful characters. In a specific embodiment, one set of meaningful characters is a ticket number, and another set of meaningful characters is a value or amount of currency. Thus, a value of $12BB, for example, would not be a meaningful set of characters and the document would be flagged as an invalid substitute currency medium and processed as such at step 1334. Similarly, the ticket numbers may have to conform to a set of predetermined rules, such as being a six-digit number followed by an alphabet letter. Thus, a ticket number of 1234567 would not be a meaningful set of characters, and a document bearing that ticket number would be flagged and processed as an invalid substitute currency medium.
At step 1334, operation of the document processing device may be halted or suspended, or the invalid substitute currency medium may be directed to a reject output pocket, for example. If a valid substitute currency medium is detected, the first barcoded pattern is decoded into a ticket number at step 1328. The second barcoded pattern is decoded into a value at step 1330, and the ticket number and the value are stored to a file at step 1332.
At step 1336, the document processing device determines whether there are any more documents to be processed. If so, processing continues at step 1322. If there are no further documents to be processed, the document processing device transmits the ticket numbers and values generated at either or both of steps 1326 and 1332 to an accounting system for reconciliation at step 1338. Alternately, the document processing device can copy the file to a storage medium such as a floppy disk. The machine operator may then present the floppy disk to the accounting system for reconciliation. At step 1340, an optional report may be generated containing a summary of the processed documents.
Control Unit
Referring back to
As described above, an operator may select via the control unit 116 any one of a multitude of preprogrammed or user-defined modes, such as those disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 6,278,795, entitled “Multi-Pocket Currency Discriminator,” in U.S. Pat. No. 6,460,705, entitled “Method of Creating Identifiable Smaller Stacks of Currency Bills Within a Larger Stack of Currency Bills,” and in co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/688,538, entitled “Currency Handling System Having Multiple Output Receptacles,” which was filed on Oct. 16, 2000, previously incorporated by reference. The operator may select these and other modes via an interface such as the control unit 116 shown in
System of Networked Document Processing Devices
A casino environment includes a first gaming machine 1502, a second gaming machine 1504, and an nth gaming machine 1506 arranged about a casino floor. Casino patrons play games of chance on the gaming machines 1502, 1504, 1506 during which currency bills and substitute currency media are received and dispensed. At certain predetermined times, such as daily, hourly, every six hours, and so forth, or upon the occurrence of certain events, such as a full condition reported by a bill validator box, a casino operator empties the bill validator boxes which contain stacks of documents 1518, 1520, 1522 from the gaming machines 1502, 1504, 1506, respectively. The stacks of documents 1518, 1520, 1522 are brought into a soft-count room in a secure area of the casino for processing. One or more of the stacks of documents retrieved from the gaming machines are deposited into an input receptacle of a document processing device within the soft-count room. In
The document processing devices 1508, 1510 may be any document processing device shown and described above such as those described in connection with
In some embodiments where the substitute currency media include a barcoded pattern encoding a ticket number, the ticket numbers of the valid substitute currency media processed in the document processing devices 1508, 1510 are stored in a file in a storage medium such as the storage medium 119 shown in
The gaming machines 1502, 1504, 1506 are communicatively coupled to the network 1512. In one embodiment, the information encoded on the batch identification cards placed in the gaming machines is maintained in the accounting system 1514, which information includes the identity of the gaming machine in which the batch identification card is placed. The batch identification cards may be generated by a portable device carried by casino operators who empty the bill validator boxes from the gaming machines. When a bill validator box is emptied, the portable device dispenses a batch identification card bearing a barcoded pattern representative of the name or number of the gaming machine into which the card is placed. After the bill validator box fills up with currency bills and substitute currency media, the batch identification card, the currency bills, and the substitute currency media are placed into a document processing device for processing. The barcode on the batch identification card is decoded and stored in a file along with information about the currency bills and substitute currency media processed by the document processing device.
The casino operator removes the stack of documents 1616 and places them into the input receptacle of a document processing device 1650. The document processing device 1650 may be any document processing device shown and described in connection with
If the document under consideration includes one or more barcoded patterns, the barcoded patterns on the ticket are scanned by the barcode reader(s) 1620 and decoded into characters. For example, the barcoded pattern on a batch identification card would be decoded into a batch identification number 1622, which is a number associated with the gaming machine 1602. A first barcoded pattern of a multi-barcoded ticket would be decoded into a ticket number 1624. A second barcoded pattern would be decoded into a value 1626 representing the currency amount for which the barcoded ticket was redeemed. The values of the authentic currency bills processed, the batch identification number 1622, the ticket numbers 1624, and the values 1626 form the processed document data 1630. The processed document data 1630 is stored in a file on a floppy disk, a hard drive, a network drive, or any other suitable storage medium.
After the documents are processed, they are directed to one or more output receptacles at step 1628. The processed document data 1630 is provided to the network 1604. In an alternate embodiment, the processed document data 1630 may be provided to the accounting system 1606 or the ticket tracking system 1608. When the processed document data 1630 includes ticket numbers and values, the processed document data 1630 can be provided either via the network 1604 or directly to the accounting system 1606 for reconciliation.
The gaming machine 1602 is also coupled to the network 1604. The gaming machine 1602 produces preprocessed document data 1632 during operation. The preprocessed document data 1632 includes information about the currency bills inserted into the bill validator or acceptor in the gaming machine 1602 and information about the barcoded tickets redeemed at the gaming machine 1602. The preprocessed document data 1632 is provided via the network 1604 to the accounting system 1606 or the ticket tracking system 1608. After the processed document data 1630 is received in the accounting system 1606, the two sets of data are compared for discrepancies.
The ticket tracking system 1608 keeps track of the tickets dispensed and the tickets redeemed, and prevents redemption of the same ticket number more than once. For example, when a casino patron redeems a barcoded ticket at the gaming machine 1602, the ticket number may be flagged by the ticket tracking system 1608 as redeemed. Thus, for example, if the casino patron attempted to redeem a photocopy of the barcoded ticket he just redeemed, the ticket tracking system 1608 would inform the gaming machine 1602 not to award any credits or dispense any currency bills for that ticket.
In some embodiments, the bill validator in the gaming machine 1602 is adapted to detect only the ticket number from a barcoded ticket, even if the value is also encoded on the ticket. In such embodiments, when the barcoded ticket is redeemed in the bill validator of the gaming machine 1602, the gaming machine 1602 transmits the ticket number to the ticket tracking system 1608. The ticket tracking system 1608 looks up the ticket number in a database 1634, and the database 1634 returns the value associated with that ticket number. The ticket tracking system 1608 then credits the gaming machine 1602 with the value retrieved from the ticket database unless the ticket database 1608 indicates that the ticket has already been redeemed.
In other embodiments, the casino patron redeems a ticket at a redemption machine (not shown) by inserting the ticket into the device which validates the ticket and dispenses currency bills and/or coins commensurate with the value of the ticket. In such embodiments, the redemption machine is coupled to the ticket tracking system which keeps track of the tickets in the same manner as described above.
As explained in connection with
As indicated above, there are occasions where a bank or a casino have a large number of small batches. In other words, each batch, or sub-batch, might consist of as few as 0 notes (e.g., some casinos will process empty batches for completeness purposes) to maybe 100, 200, 300, or more notes. But the capacity of a typical input receptacle, also referred to as a hopper or feeder area, is much larger.
In one embodiment, the Source ID, which is captured from the source identification card, can be compared to a database (or any information library). The comparison can be used, for example, to validate the Source ID. The database can reside on the processing device or can be remotely accessible.
At step 1714, batch i is loaded into the processing device with a corresponding separator card. At step 1716, batch n is loaded into the processing device with a separator card. Batches 1 through n may be loaded at one time, if the input receptacle has enough capacity, or in groups of batches. At step 1718 multiple-batch processing is begun. If all of the batches could not be loaded, the remaining batches can be loaded as device capacity permits.
Continuing with the above example concerning ten gaming machines, assume ten batches can be loaded into the feeding area, or hopper, of the processing device. A barcode gun can be used to capture the Source ID from the header card for the first batch of currency at any time during document processing, including prior to feeding or loading the batches, as the batches are being fed into the machine, after some of the batches have been processed, or after all of the batches have been processed. The barcode gun can be used to capture the Source ID from the header card for the second batch, and then the second batch is placed in the feeding area. The header card for the third batch can be barcode gunned (scanned), and the third batch placed in the input receptacle. This process continues until all ten batches are placed in the feeding area. The start key of the processing device is pressed and the processing device begins to run to process the currency.
At step 1720, documents are transported, in seriatim, through the processing device. The device determines, at step 1722, whether or not a document is a separator card. If the document is a separator card, which in some embodiments is a barcode card, the card does not have to be read by the processing device as the card passes through the processing device. The card does not have to be read because the data on the card has already been captured by, for example, barcode gunning (scanning) the header card before loading the corresponding batch.
At step 1724, after determining the document is a separator card, the card is sent to a reject receptacle, such as the upper output receptacle 208a of
At step 1728, where the document is not a separator card, the document is processed for characteristic information to, for example, determine a denomination. At step 1730, the memory is updated with information based on processing the document. And at step 1732, the loop is continued until there is not another document, and then multiple-batch processing ends, at step 1734.
At step 1830, multiple-batch processing is begun. And as discussed in relation to
If the document is not a reject, then at step 1842, the processing machine processes the document to obtain characteristic information. At step 1844, memory is updated based on the information obtained from processing the document at step 1842. For example, the count of documents processed for the batch, or the current multiple-batch run, is incremented. Similarly, the total value for the batch may be adjusted based on the document.
If, at step 1846, there is another document to process, then the processing device determines, at step 1834, if the document is a barcode card. If there is not another document, then at step 1848, the processing device queries the operator as to whether or not there are any rejects, e.g., non-machine-readable documents to key in manually. If there are rejects to key in, then at step 1850, the operator can manually key in the rejects associated with the then current batch. If there are no rejects to key in, then at step 1852 the document information in memory for the batch is matched with the batch barcode information for that batch on a sequential basis due to the batches being processed in a sequence consistent with that in which the barcode information was entered.
At step 1854, the processing device determines if there are any more active batches. If there are more active batches then the device, at step 1848, cues the operator as to whether or not there are any rejects to key in. The rejects for the batches are keyed into the processing device in a sequence consistent with the sequence in which the batches were processed. If there are no more active batches, then at step 1856, multiple-batch processing is ended.
Rather than feeding the stacks of documents directly into the input receptacle of the machine, a stack of currency can be removed from a slot machine and placed into a cartridge or cassette with a retractable front gate and a unique number. The header card from the slot machine is electronically scanned or inputted manually and placed either in the front or in back of the stack of currency. The cartridge includes a pressure assembly to keep forward pressure on the documents as they are fed into the feeding mechanism of a document processing machine. This process is repeated for other slot machines until the cartridge is full. The cartridge is placed into the feeding mechanism and its unique number is entered manually or automatically into the machine. During processing, when a header card is present, the machine does not interpret the information encoded on the card. The header cards of each batch are sent to a reject pocket along with any rejected currency identified in the respective batch. The cartridge loading station terminal could be networked to the customer's host computer system whereby the transaction numbers could be downloaded to cross-check the validity of the entered number and provide the currency processing employees with a list of missing or duplicate entries.
Each document is then transported one at a time through the document processing device. If, at step 1920, a document is determined to be a separator card, then the device, at step 1922, sends the card to reject. In methods in which the separator card is used as a header card, the processing device then, at step 1924, sets a flag indicating a separator card has been reached so that information from processing documents between this separator card and the next separator card will be associated with bar code information corresponding to this separator card. The barcode information in memory is associated with the information from document processing on a sequential basis. For example, the barcode information entered from the ith barcode will be associated with the information obtained for processing documents of the ith batch of documents. The barcode information entries in memory can, for example, be stepped through on a first-entered-first-batch basis or a last-entered-first-batch basis. In methods in which the separator card is used as a header card, the documents following the ith header card belong to the ith batch of documents. In methods in which the separator card is used as a trailer card, then the information from processing documents between the previous separator card and the current separator card are associated with the current separator card. Then the current separator card, the ith separator card, is associated with the ith barcode information in memory, on a sequential basis.
If at step 1920 the document is not a separator card, then at step 1930, if the document is a reject, e.g., not readable or not genuine, then the document is, at step 1932 sent to reject. If the document is not a reject, then, at step 1940, the document is processed to, for example, determine its denomination. Memory is updated at step 1942. For example, the number of documents processed and the total denomination for a particular batch may be determined and stored in memory. That information is matched to, for example, the proper source ID in memory by stepping through source IDs in memory, by, for example, taking one step for each batch processed.
If, at step 1950, there is another document to be processed, then the process continues again, at step 1920. Multiple-batch processing ends at step 1960, if there is not another document to process.
At step 2014, the barcode card for batch 2 is scanned. Batch 2 is then, at step 2016, loaded into the device without corresponding barcode such that a paddle separates batch 1 and batch 2. This general routine continues until at step 2018, multiple-batch processing is begun.
With reference to the ith batch, at step 2020, the document processing device transports documents from batch i, one at a time, through the device. Each document of batch i is, at step 2022, processed to assess document characteristics. And then, at step 2024, the processing device automatically advances the paddle separating batch i from batch i+1. At step 2026, a separator is sent from a printer to reject to separate rejects of batch i from rejects of batch i+1. Then at step 2028 documents from batch i+1 are transported, one at a time, through the processing device. And at step 2030, batch i+1 documents are processed.
The separator is not required to be ejected from the printer to the reject receptacle, e.g., output receptacle 208c or 208a, prior to beginning to transport documents from batch i+1 through the device. The controller controls sequencing such that documents from i+1 that are rejected do not enter the reject until after the separator ejected from the printer enters the reject. This general process continues until, at step 2032, multiple-batch processing is complete.
As an alternative to the paddle method, another embodiment uses a sequence of input receptacles, each of which contains one batch to be sorted. The batches include header cards with either barcodes to be scanned or data to be entered manually using a keyboard. The receptacles are configured in-line, or in a “lazy susan” configuration. The receptacles approach the feeder sequentially, and when the first receptacle is empty, the second receptacle move to the feeder. This process continues until all input receptacles are empty. To differentiate the source of the bills in the reject receptacle, in an embodiment, a printer is coupled to the device and prints a card that is placed in the reject receptacle at the start of each batch processed. The information printed on the card informs the user as to which bills in the reject receptacle correspond to which batch sorted.
If, at step 2116, a document is determined to be a header card, then at step 2118, the card is sent to reject. At step 2120 a flag is set or pointer is moved in memory to indicate a separation between batches has been reached. If at step 2116 the document card is not a header card, then at step 2130, the document is processed to assess characteristic information. At step 2140 the memory is updated to reflect information from processing that document.
If at step 2150 there is another document to process, then processing continues again at step 2116. After all the documents have been processed, then at step 2160 information from each of the header cards, which have been collected in reject, e.g. output receptacle 208a or 205c, are entered into memory on a sequential basis. Then, at step 2170 document information in memory for each batch is matched with header information that has been entered for each batch on a sequential basis. To simplify the matching process, the information from the header cards, e.g. source ID, should be entered into memory in an order consistent with the order in which the batches were processed. As an alternative to matching document information in memory after all of the header card information has been entered, document information for each batch can be matched with information as the information from each card is entered from a header card that has been collected in reject.
In one method the operator enters all the rejected currency for a given batch, without the processing device prompting the operator each time for additional rejected currency from that batch. After the rejected currency for the given batch is entered, the operator notifies the processing device that all rejected currency for the given batch has been entered.
If there is no additional rejected currency for batch n, then at step 2238 the operator enters header card information for batch n from header card n collected in reject. At step 2240, document information in memory for batch n is matched to information from header card n.
This general process of entering rejected currency and header card information continues for each batch. For example at step 2242 rejected currency for batch i is keyed in. At step 2244 document information in memory corresponding to batch i is updated with the keyed in information. At step 2246, header card information for batch i is entered. And then at step 2248 document information for batch i is matched to header card information from header card i. This process continues until the header card information for batch 1 is entered, at step 2250. At step 2260, document information for batch 1 is then matched with information obtained from header card 1 that was collected in reject.
After the nth batch is placed in the input receptacle 202, multiple-batch processing is started. Transport mechanism 206 guides each document, one at a time, through the valuation region 204. Paddle 2308 automatically advances as documents are transported through the processing device 2300. After the last document from batch 1 is processed, printer 2310 ejects a separator to reject output receptacle 208a. Where output receptacle 208c is also used as a reject receptacle, printer 2312 can send a separator to escrow portion 205a through slot 2314. A controller controls the sequencing of the transport mechanism and printers 2310 and 2312 to provide a separator in reject 208a and escrow portion 205a in order to separate rejected documents from sequential batches.
In one embodiment, when paddle 2308 gets to the front of input receptacle 202, where the documents are being stripped into the transport mechanism 206, the paddle 2308 remains idle until the entire batch has been cleared through the machine, or the machine is timed out, for example. The paddle then automatically removes itself from the transport path by, for example, folding flush with the feed mechanism and allowing the feed mechanism to continue to advance.
Where Source ID information has already been entered into memory via, for example, barcode gun 2302, printers 2310 and 2312 can print the source identification information on the separator card by, for example, known ink jet, thermal, laser, dot matrix, or stamping methods.
In some embodiments it is desirable to separate two or more categories of reject documents into two or more reject receptacles. In a method in which a separator card is processed with the documents of the batch, the separator card can be sent to one reject, such as 208a, and printer 2312 can eject a separator card into another reject, such as 205a.
In other embodiments, a document processing device, such as shown in
Some casino gaming commissions may begin requiring that casino tickets be marked with the word VOID after they are collected in the back room. By incorporating a printing or marking device in the document processing device, the word VOID can be printed or marked on a casino ticket that has been processed.
The printing or marking device may also be used in connection with any of the methods described in connection with
Any of the embodiments described in connection with
In an embodiment, the separator cards described immediately above may be sequentially numbered, such as, 1, 2, 3, 4, etc., using a printing or marking device, and the sequence number is matched using software with a corresponding Source ID.
Finding a Document in a Stack of Documents
Referring now to
At step 2700, a stack of documents is deposited into an input receptacle of a document processing device. The stack of documents may include a combination of currency bills and substitute currency media, or it may include currency bills only or substitute currency media only. Sources of the stack of documents include a storage facility, a gaming machine, or a coupon machine, for example.
At step 2710, an operator inputs document information for verifying a specific document. The document information includes a document-identifier that is characteristic of the specific document which is sought. For example, a document-identifier can be a barcode, a serial number, a color or black-and-white pattern, a magnetic strip, or any other identifying characteristic that could distinguish one document from another document. In other embodiments, the document-identifier can be a combination of characteristics, such as, for example, a barcode and a color pattern. In a specific embodiment, the document-identifier is a ticket number. The operator inputs one or more document-identifiers by using an input device such as a control unit, which in alternate embodiments can be a control unit as described above in connection with
At step 2720, the document processing device searches the deposited stack of documents for the document bearing the document information which was inputted at step 2710. The documents are transported, one document at a time, past a detector, from the input receptacle to one or more of a plurality of output receptacles. The documents are transported via a transport mechanism along a transport path, and the transport mechanism can be any transport mechanism, such as any of the transport mechanisms described above in connection with
In one embodiment of the present invention, the control unit includes a visual indicator for indicating when a specific document has been found. For example, the visual indicator can be a plurality of lights, such as light-emitting diodes or display elements on a video display, which change from one color to a different color when a corresponding specific document has been found, e.g., the light changes from gray to green. The visual indicator may include a light or a display element on a video display that changes colors for each of the inputted document-identifiers. In an alternate embodiment, there is a single light or display element for all of the inputted document-identifiers. In still another embodiment, the light does not change colors, rather, it only turns on or off when a specific document has been found. It should be understood that the visual indicator may be any other indicator that provides the operator with a visual notification that a specific document has been found.
The present invention contemplates that the operator may input one document-identifier at a time or more than one, such as up to ten, document-identifiers at a time. Each time a document corresponding to the document-identifier under consideration is located, that document can be routed to any operator-specified or pre-programmed output receptacle.
In another embodiment of the present invention, the control unit includes an audio indicator for audibly indicating when a specific document has been found. For example, the audio indicator can be a single beep sound, a series of beep sounds, a continuous sound, a pre-recorded message (e.g., “Your document has been found”), or any other sound patterns. Alternatively, the audio indicator may be used in connection with the visual indicator for providing both a visual and an audio indication that a specific document has been found.
At step 2730, after making a determination that a document-identifier matches the specific document-identifier inputted by the operator, the document processing device directs the specific document to a designated output receptacle. In one embodiment, the document processing device stops after the specific document is directed to the output receptacle. The operator may remove the specific document and then instruct the document processing device to proceed in making additional identifications. Alternatively, the document processing device automatically restarts after the specific document has been removed from the output receptacle. As described above in connection with
In one embodiment, the limit of an output receptacle is 2,000 documents. If all the output receptacles are full, then the operator should clear at least one document from at least one output receptacle before the document processing device can continue processing the documents from the stack of documents. Alternatively, the operator can clear output receptacles on-the-fly without stopping of the document processing device. If a feed error (e.g., no calls, chains, doubles, skew errors, and suspects) or a jam occurs, it should be handled as described above in connection with
In another embodiment, the document processing device includes storage cassettes as described above in connection with
The searching stops when all the specific tickets have been found or when all of the documents in the input receptacle have been processed. In one embodiment, the searching stops after all the specific tickets have been found. The operator must remove the unprocessed documents from the input receptacle and combine them with the processed documents from the output receptacle(s). This embodiment can be used with a document processing device having a single output receptacle. The output receptacle receives the processed documents, and when a specific ticket is found, operation stops to permit removal of the ticket for inspection. The ticket can then be returned to the output receptacle, and the processing may continue or the two stacks from the input and output receptacles can be combined.
In another embodiment, all the tickets from the stack of documents received in the input receptacle are processed even if all the specific tickets are found before the last ticket from the stack of documents is processed. An advantage of this approach is that the operator does not have to combine the tickets from the input receptacle and the tickets from the output receptacle in order to recreate the original stack of documents.
In still another embodiment, when the last specific ticket is found, the operation pauses to give the operator an option of continuing to process the remaining documents or to halt operation and manually recreate the original stack of documents. For example, if the last ticket to be searched is found within the first few documents in the stack of documents, it may be faster to halt operation and manually recreate the original stack of documents, rather than allowing processing to continue through all of the remaining documents in the stack. On the other hand, if the last ticket to be searched is found towards the end of the stack of documents, the operator may wish to continue processing the remaining documents rather than manually combining the remaining documents with the processed documents.
As described above, a visual and/or audio indicator notifies the operator that a ticket has been found, and the operator can easily remove the ticket from the designated output receptacle for inspection. In another embodiment, the visual and/or audio indicator may notify the operator that a duplicate ticket having the same ticket number as a previously found ticket (e.g., a potentially counterfeit ticket), has been found. Duplicate tickets can be sent to the same output receptacle as the previously found ticket, or they can be sent to a different output receptacle. For example, if the previously found ticket is sent to a first off-sort pocket, then the duplicate tickets can be sent to a second off-sort pocket.
Referring now to
At step 2810, a cassette having a stack of casino tickets, which can be retrieved, for example, from a storage facility, is deposited into an input receptacle of the document processing device. Each of the casino tickets bears an encoded and/or unencoded ticket number for identification purposes. The operator, at step 2820, uses the numeric keypad or other suitable input device to enter up to ten ticket numbers that require verification. The entered ticket numbers are stored in the memory of the document processing device.
After all the ticket number have been entered, the operator presses the start button or otherwise initiates operation of the document processing device. At step 2830, a first ticket from the stack of tickets is processed by the document processing device. A detector in the document processing device scans the ticket number of the first ticket and, at step 2840, a determination is made whether there is a match between the scanned ticket number and any one of the entered ticket numbers. If a determination is made that a match does not exist between any one of the entered ticket numbers and the first ticket number, then, at step 2850, the first ticket is directed to a first output receptacle. If a determination is made that a match exists between any one of the entered ticket numbers and the first ticket number, then, at step 2860, the first ticket is sent to a first off-sort output receptacle and the indicator associated with the found ticket number notifies the operator that the specific ticket has been found. At step 2870 a determination is made whether all the tickets corresponding to the entered ticket numbers have been found. If tickets remain to be found, then the document processing device, at step 2880, processes the next ticket in the input receptacle. The next ticket undergoes a similar process as the first ticket, repeating steps 2840 through 2870, and the process ends when all the specific tickets have been found.
Finding a Stack of Documents in a Plurality of Stacks of Documents
Referring now to
At step 2910, a first stack of documents is processed, one document at a time, by a document processing device. The document processing device can be any document processing device, such as any of the document processing devices described in connection with
At step 2920, the document processing device assigns a stack-identifier to the first stack of documents. Like a document-identifier, which identifies a particular document, a stack-identifier identifies a particular stack of documents. More specifically, a stack-identifier may be anything that identifies a particular stack of documents, e.g., any combination of one or more numbers, a date, or a barcoded pattern. The number may be a reference number uniquely identifying a stack of documents or it may refer to the number of documents in the cassette containing the stack of documents.
In one embodiment, the stack-identifier is printed on a card, such as a batch identification card or header card as described above. In another embodiment, the stack-identifier is printed on a receipt after processing a stack of documents, which is placed at the head or at the back of a stack of documents. Alternately, the stack-identifier is printed on a sticker that may be affixed to the container or bag containing the stack of documents.
At step 2930, the document processing device correlates each document-identifier in the first stack of documents with the stack-identifier assigned to the first stack of documents. In one embodiment, the correlation is carried out by generating a list or table that associates each document-identifier with the corresponding stack-identifier. This list is stored in a memory of the document processing device.
At step 2940, a determination is made whether additional stacks of documents require processing. If so, then at step 2950, a next stack of documents is processed as described above in connection with steps 2920-2940. If additional stacks of documents do not require processing, then at step 2960, the operator inputs a specific document-identifier for verifying a specific document, wherein the specific document is the document corresponding to the specific document-identifier. The inputting of the specific document-identifier may be carried out in the manner described above in connection with
At step 2970, the document processing device determines the specific stack-identifier which corresponds to the inputted document-identifier. In one embodiment, the determination is made by software that executes instructions stored in memory for searching and retrieving the specific stack-identifier from a memory of the document processing device. The stack-identifier is displayed to the operator on a video display or may be printed on a receipt so that the operator can bring the receipt to the storage facility to retrieve the stack of documents corresponding to the stack-identifier.
At step 2980, a determination is made whether there are additional document-identifiers for which stack-identifiers need to be identified. If there are additional document-identifiers that need to be referenced, steps 2960 through 2980 are repeated. If there are no additional document-identifiers that require verification, then the process ends. Note that the operator may enter several document-identifiers at a time before the document processing device searches for the correlating stack-identifiers.
The document processing device displays to the operator which stack of documents corresponds to each inputted document-identifier. Alternately, the document processing device prints a receipt that shows the inputted document-identifier(s) along with the corresponding stack-identifier(s). The operator may bring this receipt to the storage facility to retrieve the proper stack(s) of documents to be searched.
Referring now to
At step 3030, as the document processing device processes the tickets, they are separated into stacks of up to 2,000 tickets. When a storage cassette is full, i.e., contains 2,000 tickets, subsequent tickets are automatically redirected to another non-full storage cassette. At step 3040, a stack-identifier, is assigned to each stack of tickets. A receipt may be optionally printed that shows the date on which the stack was created, the number of documents in the cassette, and the reference number corresponding to the cassette or stack of tickets. Then, at step 3050, a reference table is made that correlates each ticket to its corresponding stack of tickets, and the reference table is saved in a memory of the document processing device.
At step 3060, an operator uses a touchscreen or other suitable input device to enter a ticket number, which corresponds to a ticket that requires verification. For example, the document processing device may present to the operator a “Ticket Search” command and a data field for entering the specific ticket number for which the corresponding stack needs to be located. At step 3070, the document processing device determines which stack of tickets corresponds to the inputted ticket number and notifies the operator. At step 3080, the document processing device determines whether all the ticket number have been verified. In the current example, there was only one ticket number inputted and, therefore, the process is finished. If there are more ticket numbers to be processed, then the document processing device repeats steps 3060-3080. After locating the specific stack corresponding to the specific ticket number, the operator either manually searches the specific stack or uses the method described above in connection with
Processing Batches of Documents and Separator Cards
Referring now to
Each batch of documents 4010a,b,c,d includes one or more documents and corresponds to a respective separator card 4020a,b,c,d. For ease of understanding, currency bills will sometimes be used herein as an example of documents included in a batch of documents. However, as described above, the current invention can be used for processing a wide variety of documents, such as currency bills, checks, and casino tickets. Furthermore, each batch of documents can include documents of more than one type, e.g., currency bills and checks.
Referring now to
In other embodiments, the material 4120 can have any other shape or pattern (e.g., rectangular, circular, trapezoidal, triangular, snowflake pattern, etc.) and can be located anywhere on the separator card 4020 and on either or both sides of the separator card 4020. Furthermore, it is not necessary for the material 4120 to be in a single location. As can be seen in
On the front side of the specific separator card 4020 shown in
For example, the characters “LC” shown on the separator card 4020 shown in
The rectangular bar 4130 is an optional mark that corresponds to a printer registration mark used by a printer device to imprint the barcode 4140 and the set of characters 4150 in a consistent location on the separator card 4020.
Referring now to
In some embodiments, the batch 4010 may be collected in a cartridge or similar containing device and such device can be inserted or attached to a feeder assembly appropriately modified to accept such device. In such embodiments, the operator inserts into the cartridge a separator card 4020 behind the last document to be processed in the batch 4010, and inserts or attaches the cartridge to the feeder assembly.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
Referring now to
In embodiments where both steps 4200 and 4210 are performed, it should be noted that such steps can be performed in any order. In other embodiments, in lieu of step 4210, the first separator card can be recycled from a previously generated separator card and reused to identify a newly collected batch of documents 4010. Unless the set of characters identifying a source of documents is altered, a separator card identifying such source can be reused as often as desired.
As described above, the operator arranges the first batch of documents such that the first separator card is the last document to be processed and such that the foil on the first separator card faces outward so as to be visible by the operator. The other face of the separator card is concealed from view by the preceding documents in the batch. If the operator faces the separator card the wrong way in the document processing device, the separator card will still be sensed thanks to the field-effect sensing capabilities of the sensor assembly 4071.
At step 4220, the operator retrieves a next batch of documents from a source, if there is a next batch, and optionally generates, at step 4230, a next separator card that identifies the source of the next batch of documents. The same embodiments described in connection with steps 4200, 4210 also apply to steps 4220, 4230.
As with the first batch of documents, the operator places the next separator card behind the last document in the next batch of documents. The first and next batches of documents and corresponding separator cards can be arranged sequentially or maintained separately until depositing into the feeder assembly 4030. The documents must be arranged such that the separator card corresponding to a particular batch of documents is placed so as to be the last document to be processed after all the documents in the particular batch has been processed.
At step 4240, if there are additional batches of documents to be retrieved, step 4220 and optional step 4230 are repeated. If there are no additional batches of documents to be retrieved (step 4240), the retrieved batches of documents and corresponding separator cards are properly ordered and loaded into the feeder assembly 4030 of the document processing device 4000. The proper order of the documents, from the first document to the last document to be processed, is as follows: the documents in the first batch of documents followed by the first separator card followed by the documents in the next batch of documents followed by the next separator card.
At step 4250, the first batch of documents and corresponding first separator card are processed in a document processing device, such as the device 4000. The device 4000 maintains batch integrity, which refers to ensuring that no documents associated with other batches are co-mingled with the batch being processed, by pausing operation of the feeder assembly 4030 after a separator card has been sensed. Thus, the device 4000 will not resume feeding the next batch of documents until the first batch of documents has been successfully processed, for example, when all jams and rejects in the first batch have been reconciled.
The device 4000 processes the first batch of documents and, if there are no rejects, jams, or other processing anomalies, the first batch of documents is closed at step 4300 following detection of the source identification information on the first separator card. A closed batch refers to a batch that has been successfully processed such that the source identification information and batch totals can be transmitted to an accounting system. The accounting system reconciles the batch totals using the source identification information with associated account information to verify whether the batch totals equal the totals associated with a particular account or accounts in the accounting system.
A reject refers to documents such as a no call bill, a suspect bill, a document causing a feed error, or a separator card. In some embodiments, all rejects are routed to a common output receptacle, such as the second offsort receptacle 4060b shown and described above. Such embodiments promote batch integrity by arranging all rejects in one receptacle, providing confidence to the operator that all other documents not located in that receptacle processed successfully. Furthermore, the rejects are intuitively arranged in the same order in which they were arranged in the input receptacle, reducing operator confusion.
Referring again to step 4260, if the device 4000 rejects one or more documents associated with the first batch of documents, all the rejected document(s) including the first separator card are sent to a designated receptacle, such as the second offsort receptacle 4060b (step 4270). In other embodiments, the rejected documents are sent to any one or more pre-programmed or operator-specified output receptacle, such as the first offsort receptacle 4060a. For example, the rejects can be offsorted according to their type, e.g., no call, suspect, or separator card.
At step 4280, the operator reprocesses the rejects including the first separator card by replacing the rejects in the feeder assembly 4030 and directing the device 4000 to reprocess the rejects. The rejects including the separator card are removed from the offsort receptacle and replaced in the feeder assembly 4030 without having to reorient them. Maintaining the original order and facing orientation of the rejects preserves batch integrity by eliminating operator discretion in replacing the rejects for reprocessing. No reorientation is necessary, nor is there any doubt as to which batch the rejects belong.
Alternatively, instead of performing step 4280 the operator may choose to manually process the rejected documents and/or the first separator card by manually entering the characteristic information associated with each of the rejected documents, e.g., the amount of a currency bill, and the source identification information. For example, this option may be desirable when a relatively small number of documents are rejected or when the device 4000 rejects the same documents more than once.
Referring now to step 4300, the first batch of documents is closed after all the documents from the first batch have been successfully processed, meaning that any and all jams, rejects, and other processing anomalies have been reconciled, and all other documents processed normally have been evaluated. When the batch is closed, all documents in that batch are correlated to the source identification information associated with the separator card. After the first batch is closed, the first separator card may be discarded or may be reused for a different batch of documents that will be retrieved in the future from the same machine from which the first batch of documents was retrieved.
At step 4310, all the documents from the first batch of documents have been sent to one or more of the output receptacles 4070a-4070f, and the first separator card has been sent to the first offsort receptacle. Note that in this embodiment it is irrelevant which orientation the first separator card is facing when placed in the first offsort receptacle because the first separator card has no further use in relation to the closed first batch of documents. In other embodiments, the first separator card can be sent to any one receptacle of the second offsort receptacle and the output receptacles 4070a-4070f and the documents from the batch can be sent to one or more of the output receptacles 4070a-4070f and the first and second offsort receptacles.
At step 4320, after the first batch and the first separator card have been processed and sent to the appropriate output receptacles, the device 4000 determines whether any batches remain in the feeder assembly 4030. If the device 4000 determines that no additional batches remain in the feeder assembly 4030, the processing run is ended and the device 4000 is readied to receive another set of batches of documents into the feeder assembly 4030.
Referring again to step 4320, if the device 4000 determines that additional batches of documents require processing, operation of the feeder assembly is resumed, and the next batch of documents is processed at step 4330. Just like the processing of the first batch of documents, the device 4000 will not begin feeding another batch of documents until this next batch of documents has been successfully processed. Note that if there are no rejects or jams in the previous batch, The device 4000 will process the next batch of documents and, if there are no rejects or jams, this batch of documents will be closed at step 4380.
The procedure at step 4330 through step 4390 is similar to the procedure described above at steps 4250 through 4310. At step 4390, all the documents from the next batch of documents are sent to one or more of the output receptacles 4070a-4070f where they are stacked either by themselves or along with the documents from the first batch. As mentioned above, the processed separator cards may be collected and reused to identify future batches of documents.
Step 4330 through step 4390 can repeat until, at step 4400, the device 4000 determines that all the batches of documents 4010 from the feeder assembly 4030 have been successfully processed. At this point, device 4000 is ready for further loading of another retrieved batch of documents 4010 into the feeder assembly 4030.
Referring now to
At step 4510, the feeder assembly 4030 is cleared of all documents to prevent any new batches of documents from being processed until the jam reconciliation process has been completed. For example, in one embodiment of the invention, the device 4000 instructs the operator to “PLEASE CLEAR FEEDER AREA,” as shown in
At step 4520, the device 4000 is flushed to remove all the documents remaining in the transport path of the device 4000. This flush will ensure that all of the documents are transferred to designated or pre-programmed escrow receptacle. In alternate embodiments, an escrow receptacle can be any one of the lower output receptacles 4070a-4070f or the offsort receptacle 4060a, and it is a receptacle used for the temporary storage of flushed documents. In some embodiments, before flushing, the operator clears all processed documents from the escrow receptacle to prevent the co-mingling of processed documents and unprocessed documents.
At step 4530, the operator collects the flushed documents from the escrow receptacle and any reject documents and the separator card from the offsort receptacle 4060b, and reloads these documents into the feeder assembly 4030 to be re-fed into the device 4000. For example, in a specific embodiment of the invention the device 4000 instructs the operator to “PLEASE PLACE MONEY FROM ESCROWS AT FRONT OF FEEDER AND RERUN,” as shown in
At step 4540, the documents are reprocessed in the device 4000 to verify the original count prior to the jam condition. At step 4550, the device 4000 determines whether all the documents can be successfully processed. An optional manual entry screen such as shown in
Referring again to step 4550, if all the documents can be properly processed, at step 4570, the device 4000 finishes processing any remaining documents in the batch of documents before the jam condition. For example, in some embodiments, the device 4000 returns to a default screen such as the one shown in
In other embodiments, after each batch of documents 4010 is successfully processed, the device 4000 transmits the source identification information and batch total to a host accounting system. This transmission can be carried out while the device 4000 is processing a next batch of documents 4010. In still other embodiments, the transmission is carried out after the device 4000 has finished processing all the batches of documents 4010. The accounting system associates an account with the batch total and source identification information.
Funds Processing Machine with Coin Packaging
In some embodiments, a funds processing machine may include a coin packaging system to package coins.
The currency processing machine 5010 also includes a coin processing module 5032. The coin processing module 5032 sorts, counts and authenticates the mixed coins which are deposited in the coin input receptacle 5014 which leads directly into the coin processing module 5032. The coins are sorted in the coin processing module 5032 in a variety of ways but the preferred method is a sorting based on the diameter of the coins. When a non-authenticated coin is determined by the coin processing module 5032, it is directed through a coin reject tube 5033 which leads to the dispensed coin receptacle 5022. Thus, the user who has entered such a non-authenticated coin can retrieve the coin by accessing the dispensed coin receptacle 5022. Coin sorting and authenticating devices which can perform the function of the coin processing module 5032 are disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,299,977, 5,453,047, 5,507,379, 5,542,880, 5,865,673, 5,997,395. Alternatively, other coin sorters, such as a rail sorter, can be used to perform the function of the coin processing module 5032.
The coins which have been sorted into their denomination by the coin processing module 5032 are sent to coin tubes 5038 which correspond to each specific denomination. The coin tubes 5038 lead to a coin receptacle station 5040 for each of the denominations that are to be sorted and authenticated by the coin processing module 5032.
The currency processing machine 5010 includes a controller 5039 which is coupled to each module within the currency processing machine 5010 and controls the interaction between each module. For example, the controller 5039 may review the input totals from the funds processing modules 5030 and 5032 and direct an appropriate funds output via the funds dispensing modules 5034 and 5036. The controller 5039 also directs the operation of the coin receptacle stations 5040 as described below. While not shown, the controller 5039 is also coupled to the media reader associated with the media reader slot 5024 and also to the printer at the receipt dispenser 5023, if these devices are present on the coin processing mechanism 5010.
A controller (not shown) for the coin receptacle station 5040 moves the diverters 5044, 5046a and 5046b in response to receiving a communication from the controller 5039 of the currency processing machine 5010 indicating that a switch of the coin flow between the coin receptacles 5050 is necessary. The controller for the coin receptacle station 5040 actuates motors or solenoids which moves the primary diverter 5044 and or the secondary diverters 5046a and 5046b. Accordingly, the motors or solenoids, in conjunction with the primary diverter 5044 and secondary diverters 5046a and 5046b, can be used to selectively distribute the coins to the appropriate coin receptacles 5050. While the coin receptacle station 5040 may have its own controller as stated, the controller 5039 of the currency processing machine 5010 may directly operate the solenoids or motors.
When the currency processing machine 5010 is used in a casino environment, the coin bag 5052 which is chosen for an installation within the coin receptacle stations 5040 is of the type which is commonly referred to as a “hopper fill bag.” The hopper fill bag contains a known amount of tokens which is used to replenish a slot machine or other gaming machine that dispenses some sort of jackpot payout. Accordingly, the currency processing machine 5010 becomes the source for filled hopper fill bags that are available to be deposited in various gaming machines located throughout the casino.
It should also be noted that the number of coin receptacles 5050 per coin station 5040 can vary. While four are shown, the number of receptacles 5050 can be less than or more than four. Further, there may be a need for simply one receptacle 5050 at one or all of the stations 5040. For example, the receptacle 5050 may be the hopper fill bag described above such that the authorized casino employee simply exchanges the one hopper fill bag with an empty hopper fill bag. Also, in casino environments where the use of a particular token/coin denomination is more prevalent than other denominations (e.g. $1 tokens), the coin receptacle station 5040 for such a denomination preferably has more coin receptacles 5050 than the other denominations since these receptacles 5050 may become filled at a higher frequency.
Furthermore, in an alternative embodiment, the coin processing module 5032 only counts the coins and does not sort them. Or, it may tabulate the value of the coins that are processed without sorting them. In either of these situations, the coins are sent from the coin processing module 5032 to the coin receptacle station 5040 as mixed coins. Because the coins are not being sorted into denomination, the currency processing machine 5010 only requires one receptacle station 5040 which collects all of the mixed coins. Thus, the flow of the mixed coins into a plurality of receptacles 5050 at the one coin receptacle station 5040 can be controlled by the currency processing machine 5010 and, as discussed below, by an external host system.
Additionally, the rigid coin container 5054 includes a structure which allows it to be mounted to one of the receptacle mounting mechanisms 5058. As shown, the rigid container 5054 includes a plurality of hook mounts 5067 which would mate with projecting fingers present on the receptacle mounting mechanism 5058 to hold the rigid container 5054 in place. However, several other mounting mechanisms are available and can be used on the rigid container 5054. The rigid container 5054 preferably includes a handle 5068 such that the operator of the currency processing machine can easily grasp the rigid container 5054 when manually transporting it.
Preferably, the coin cartridge 5056 includes a plurality of semi-cylindrical coin recesses 5074 which are spaced from each other by a separating structure 5076. This allows for several stacks of coins of a particular denomination to be held within one coin cartridge 5056. The coin cartridge 5056 may include a cover not shown which is placed adjacent to but spaced from the main body shown in
The coin cartridge 5056 receives coins from a coin distributor 5077 near the entry end 5070. The coin distributor 5077 includes a plurality of diverters 5078 including a primary diverter 5078a, two secondary diverters 5078b, and four tertiary diverters 5078c. The coin distributor 5077 may also include a stacking mechanism 5079 which can be a coin stacking shutter/platform as used in a coin wrapping machine to hold coins in a stack before wrapping. This ensures that the coins lie within a stack that will fit into the cylindrical coin recess 5074. Alternatively, the stacking mechanism 5079 may simply include a funnel device which assists in the coins lying flat as they enter the cylindrical coin recesses 5074.
In a preferred embodiment, the coin cartridge 5056 that is filled by the coin receptacle stations 5040 for each denomination is the same type of coin cartridge that is used by the coin dispensing module 1050 (
Further, if the design of the coin cartridge 5056 is chosen to be compatible with the standard coin cartridges present in various coin-dispensing machines throughout a casino, the coin cartridges 5056 that are filled within each coin receptacle station 5040 can be used for replenishing an empty coin cartridge in those machines (e.g. a slot machine or a change machine). In other words, the currency processing machine 5010 would be the source for filled coin cartridges to be placed in various machines throughout the casino that dispense coins via coin cartridges.
Alternatively, the coin receptacle station 5040 may have a coin conveyor that is positioned in place of one of the coin receptacles 5050 that are filled at a coin receptacle station 5040. The coin conveyor would receive coins from the coin processing module 5032 and directly transport coins of a particular denomination from a coin receptacle station 5040 to the coin dispensing modules 5036 so that coins can be continuously recirculated between the coin receptacle station 5040 and the coin dispensing modules 5036.
Furthermore, each of the coin receptacle stations 5040 may include, instead of one of the coin receptacles 5050, a conveyor system which securely transports coins from the back of the currency processing machine 5010 to, for example, a casino money room or bank vault. Thus, coins may be directly removed from the currency processing machine 5010 as opposed to being received in the coin receptacles 5050. If the currency processing machine 5010 is used in a casino environment, the conveyor which is coupled to the coin receptacle stations 5040 may lead directly to an adjacent gaming machine such that the currency processing machine 5010 is used for recycling coins or tokens to that adjacent gaming machine.
The carousel 5080 is mounted to a shaft 5084 which is driven by a motor 5086. A bearing support 88 opposes the motor 5086 and supports the shaft 5084. The center point of the carousel 5080, where the shaft 5084 intersects the carousel 5080, is at a fixed position relative to the coin tube 5038 which is discharging coins of one coin denomination from the coin processing module 5032. The apertures 5082 are positioned on a radius from the central point of the carousel 5080 that is equal to the distance separating the coin tube 5038 from the center point of the carousel 5080. Thus, as the carousel 5080 rotates via the motor 5086, each of the apertures 5082 can be moved directly under the coin tube 5038.
The motor 5086 is controlled by the controller of the coin receptacle station 5040. In response to the controller for the coin receptacle station 5040 receiving a signal from the controller 5039 for the currency processing machine 5010 indicating that the coins should be deposited into a different coin receptacle 5050, the motor 5086 is actuated and rotates the carousel 5080 so that the desired aperture 5082 (and coin receptacle) is placed under the coin tube 5038. The controller 5039 for the currency processing machine 5010 sends this instruction in response to a preselected number of coins entering a certain coin receptacle 5050, as counted by the coin processing module 5032, or in response to a demand to fill a specific type of coin receptacle 5050 (e.g. a need for coin hopper fill bags in a casino). Alternatively, the motor 5086 can be directly controlled by the controller 5039 for the coin processing machine 5010.
Referring now to
To allow the rotatable distribution tube 5100 to rotate around the coin tube 5038, a bearing element 5108 is present at the interface of these two tubes. A belt 5110 which is coupled to a rotational driver 5112 is also attached to the rotatable distribution tube 5100. The driver 5112 is coupled to a motor 5114 which is controlled by the controller for the coin receptacle station 5040. Alternatively, the motor 5114 can be directly controlled by the controller 5039 of the currency processing machine 5010.
The coin tube 5038 is generally centered over the central point of the platform 5102. The rotatable distribution tube 5100 has a radius defined between its entrance portion adjacent to the coin tube 5038 and its exit portion through which the coins are discharged. This radius corresponds substantially to the radius at which each of the apertures 5104 is placed relative to the central point of the platform 5102. Thus, rotation of the rotatable distribution tube 5100 causes its exit portion to be moved between apertures 5104 in response to the controller 5039 of the currency processing machine directing the coin receptacle station 5040 to change the flow of coins to a particular coin receptacle 5050.
While the invention has been described thus far with three alternative coin distribution mechanisms within the coin receptacle station 5040, other possible configurations exist as well. For example, the coins may be distributed from a coin tube to one receptacle 5050 which, after being filled or in response to a demand for a different receptacle that must be filled, is physically moved away from the coin tube and automatically replaced by the alternate receptacle. Such a configuration can be accomplished, for example, by moving the receptacles 5050 on a chain and gear arrangement. Further, the receptacles 5050, once filled, can be transported to a secondary transport system which moves the filled receptacles to a desired location within the currency processing machine 5010 or removes the filled receptacles from the currency processing machine 5010. Such a secondary transport mechanism may be, for example, a conveyer system.
Referring now to
The denomination specific security doors 5122 allow for access to a single coin denomination having coin receptacles 5050 which must be exchanged or otherwise accessed. Thus, authorized personnel will not have access to the coin receptacles 5050 of the other denominations while performing functions relative to the coin denomination requiring attention.
This security process can be further enhanced by utilization of the media reader slot 5024 on the currency processing machine 5010. Here, the authorized personnel would first insert a card to the media reader slot 5024 which identifies him or her as a particular authorized person. The locks 5128 for each denominational specific security door are electronically connected to the controller 5039 of the currency processing machine 5010. Thus, after the authorized person has entered his or her card into the media reader slot 5024 and opens a particular denominational specific security door 5122, this action is logged into the memory of the currency processing machine 5010. Accordingly, the currency processing machine 5010 keeps track of which of the authorized personnel had access to which denominational specific security door 5122. In a further alternative to this security system, each of the coin receptacle mounting structures (e.g. mounting structure 5106 in
Referring now to
Near the hinge 5146, the right crimp arm 5142 and left crimp arm 5144 include apertures 5150 and 5152, respectively. The aperture 5150 provides an entrance for the sealing media 5162 (e.g. a wire, a tape which includes an internal metal structure, or tape with adhesive) into the crimp arms 5142 and 5144 after the crimp arms 5142 and 5144 have been clamped around the coin bag 5052 as shown in
The bag sealing device 5140 includes a feed mechanism 5160 for moving the seal media 5162 through the apertures 5152 when the crimp arms 5142 and 5144 are in their crimping position as shown in
To move the crimp arms 5142 and 5144 to their closed position, at least one motor 154 is provided which has linkages 5156 and 5158 attached to the left crimp arm 5144 and right crimp arm 5142, respectively. Thus, when the coin receptacle is a coin bag 5052 and a preselected number of coins has been deposited to the coin bag 5052, the coin receptacle station 5040 has the ability to provide a tamper-proof seal around the mouth of the bag 5052. Such a bag sealing device 5140 would be mounted adjacent to the receptacle mounting structure which holds the bag 5052.
Alternatively, the sealing device 5140 may simply employ a metallic band which can be placed around the bag near its mouth and crimped to close the mouth. The sealing device 5140 would then require a component that places the band around the bag 5052 and moves the free ends of band toward each other to clamp the bag 5052 shut.
Referring now to
Referring now to
In effect, the host system 5200 provides for a coin management system that externally controls the filling of the coin receptacles 5050 (and possibly the wrapping of coins, see
Moreover, the host system 5200 may link several currency processing machines 5010 and provide for the efficient filling and distribution of coin receptacles 5050. This is beneficial when, for example, after identifying the demand for one casino hopper fill bag, the host system 5200 determines that two currency processing machines 5010 are near a half bag level and instructs each currency processing machine 5010 to fill each bag to only the half-bag level so that the two bags can be combined to fill the gaming machine with effectively one hopper fill bag. Thus, the filling of receptacles (or wrapping of coins, or flow of coins to a coin conveyer) may be a function of temporal limitations, demand for a particular type filled coin receptacle, or demand for a particular number of coins in one receptacle that is less than the typical coin fill level.
Moreover, the host system 5200 may be connected to an accounting system which allows the user of the currency processing machine 5010 to credit his or her account after making a deposit.
While the present invention has been described with reference to one or more particular embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that many changes may be made thereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Each of these embodiments and obvious variations thereof is contemplated as falling within the spirit and scope of the claimed invention, which is set forth in the following claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/260,973, filed Oct. 29, 2008, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/967,232, filed Sep. 28, 2001, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/562,231, filed Apr. 28, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,318,537, and which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/502,666, filed Feb. 11, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,398,000; this application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/058,370, filed Mar. 28, 2008, which is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/939,938, filed Sep. 13, 2004, now abandoned, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/502,924, filed Sep. 15, 2003; this application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/544,228, filed Oct. 5, 2006, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/723,652, filed Oct. 5, 2005; this application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/638,231, filed Aug. 7, 2003, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/965,428, filed Sep. 27, 2001, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,187,795; all of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.
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20130178139 A1 | Jul 2013 | US |
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