The present invention relates to the Applicant's concurrently filed U.S. patent application HP Docket No. 200503448-2 entitled “MARKING MATERIAL,” the content of which is entirely incorporated herein by reference.
This application claims priority from co-pending United Kingdom utility application entitled, “User-Interface System, Method & Apparatus” having serial no. GB 0522124.7, filed Oct. 29, 2005, which is entirely incorporated herein by reference.
The present invention relates generally to a user-interface, and more specifically, but not exclusively, to a user-interface system suitable for use with a digital pen and paper system.
When configuring or learning to use a product (or service) it is common to read instructions from an instruction manual. It is then generally necessary to carry out instructions on a real interface by pressing buttons on a device, or by interacting indirectly via a telephone keypad for example. Often, it is difficult to operate the real interface whilst holding and reading an instruction manual. Furthermore, it is often important to record information that has been used to configure a product or service, but there is generally no way to ensure that the information gets recorded.
Systems have been proposed which avoid this problem by including the equivalent of an instruction manual within the interface of the system. For example, web-based systems can use the page-like format of a web page to describe the system and the necessary configuration actions, and can also record configuration data entered on the page by the user of the system. Unfortunately this can make the system more complex than it would otherwise need to be, and may only work with systems having displays.
Paper-based instruction manuals sometimes invite users to write configuration data in specific sections of the manual so that they can refer to the data at a later date. If this is used properly, it preserves a record of the configuration but there is no way to ensure that the data is written into the manual or that it is entered accurately. It does nothing to avoid the awkwardness of operating the real user interface while reading (and writing) in the instruction manual.
According to a first aspect of the present invention there is provided a user-interface system for interfacing with a device, the system comprising a printed user-manual for the device, wherein a user is able to interface with the device by using a digital pen to mark a portion of the user-manual or otherwise indicate a desired configuration setting for the device using the pen and the manual.
According to a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a method for configuring a product using a printed user-manual for the product, the method comprising using a digital pen to mark at least a portion of the user-manual or otherwise indicate, using the manual, a desired configuration setting for the product, generating position data representing the position of the pen with respect to the user-manual where the mark or indication was made, using the position data to determine an instruction or configuration setting for the product, and executing the instruction or setting.
For a better understanding of the present invention, and to further highlight the ways in which it may be brought into effect, embodiments will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the following drawings in which:—
It should be emphasised that the term “comprises/comprising” when used in this specification specifies the presence of stated features, integers, steps or components but does not preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, integers, steps, components or groups thereof.
According to an embodiment, a user reading an instruction manual for a product (or service) can use a device, such as a digital pen, to operate representations of controls of the product, and can record data and/or configurations by using the device to write and/or draw onto the manual. The manual can be used as a user-interface for performing actions in connection with the product or service.
Referring to
A position identifying pattern 108 can be printed onto the parts of the manual which the user is expected to write on or mark, such as within check boxes and/or comments boxes and the send box 122 for example, or over an entire page of the manual.
Referring to
Referring to
Although reference is made herein to a digital pen (and paper system) comprising a camera this is not intended to be limiting. Particularly, the use of a data encoding pattern is not necessary. Such a device can be incorporated into a number of products, not just a pen. For example, an image capture device can be incorporated into a mobile station such as a mobile telephone or pager, or in a personal digital assistant where some form of functionality for marking the paper is included. For example, a stylus of a PDA can be used if it has the ability to sense which medium it is being used on and adjust a writing/pointing tip/nib appropriately.
According to an embodiment, an instruction manual for a product can be a conventional printed paper manual (and so is very cheap and can be printed in numerous versions for different languages, levels of skill, etc.). The manual can be a printed manual which comes with a product, or can be one which is retrieved from a network such as the internet for example, and printed by a user. The pages of the manual that offer interactive functions can comprise a pattern such as 108 described above. Alternatively, other position identifying methods for the device can be used. For example, the pen can comprise a GPS-type unit which is adapted to generate data representing changes in the position of the pen. This data can be used to determine a relative position of the pen with respect to the product. Alternatively, if knowledge of content, for example, printed on the product surface is known, this can be compared with an image of a portion of the product surface generated using an image capture device of the pen. The comparison can be used to determine the pen position relative to the product surface. Other alternatives are possible. For example, a product can comprise pieces of material, such as metal for example. The pen can sense its position by triangulating its position using the pieces of material. For example, the pieces of metal, or other material, can be adapted to have different properties, and the pen can use this fact to determine its position relative to the pieces and hence the product. So, for example, the pen can hold a digital map of the printed content on all the pages of a document. The pen can be pre-programmed with the appearance of the document for example. A camera in the pen then detects any printed content close to the position of the pen tip and searches the stored content to work out exactly where the pen must be (allowing for perspective distortions). Such a pen could not detect absolute position on a blank page (because there would be no content to reference the position from) but could construct relative pen motions (after beginning to write) by imaging the ink from the pen strokes or by using paper fibre sensing technology. Alternatively, a blank page could have content that is printed in invisible IR ink that can be imaged by the camera, but by avoiding the need for invisible ink markings, the document pages could be printed by the user on any available inkjet or laser jet printer, and a mechanism can be provided for loading the appearance of the pages into a digital pen. The pages of the document can be printed to ensure there are always enough visible points of reference. Text boxes, tick boxes, and representations of controls can all be printed to ensure that visually distinct images will be sensed by the camera in the pen to allow it to identify the exact page and position within the page.
Advantageously, according to an embodiment, pen 300 can issue wireless commands directly to the product in question (or indirectly via another device or network such as the internet for example). Pen 300 includes a conventional source of ink for marking the manual. As the user writes in the manual, the writing can be recognised and sent as configuration commands to the system thus ensuring that a record is made and avoiding direct operation of a physical interface while reading the manual. Hence the pen is used to mark a portion of the user-manual or otherwise indicate a desired configuration setting for the device using the pen and the manual. For example, a schematic representation of a volume control can be printed on the manual, and the pen can be used to adjust a volume of the device, in substantially real-time for example, by moving the pen over the printed volume control as if to adjust the level. In this case, no mark need be left by the pen since its function is to adjust a configuration setting of the device, and marks could interfere with the future adjustment of this setting. Other configuration settings of a device can be adjusted in this manner as will be appreciated, and the above is not intended to be limiting.
Furthermore, some devices that require configuration may be too small or may be too remote to support a convenient user interface. Similarly, a device may be accessible but difficult to configure whilst reading the manual (e.g. while reading the instruction book for a VCR from the comfort of a sofa). In other cases, the instruction manual may offer an interface to a service or software product that has no physical existence and hence cannot have its own conventional user interface. A printed manual can be easily tailored for different circumstances. It can provide separate instructions and controls tailored for different languages, skills levels, quick setup or in-depth setup, etc. As described, manuals can also be downloaded from a network such as the internet, and printed by users, or may be offered by third parties or as “how to” books detailing how to operate a particular device or piece of software for example. Thus the instructions and controls can be tailored at the point of use rather than during product manufacturing or during distribution in different countries. The instructions can also be reprinted easily to provide new controls if new device firmware is provided after initial purchase.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0522124.7 | Oct 2005 | GB | national |