Showing posts with label wearable computers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wearable computers. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Oh, patents! iTime

Copyright © Françoise Herrmann

Apple’s “iTime” patent made headlines on July 22, 2014, with a couple of surprises. The first is that this is an application that was filed already way back in 2012 as US 20120194976 A1, under the same title as the Patent awarded to Apple (but before it was assigned to Apple Inc.) so one wonders why there is so much delayed hype concerning the disclosures. And, the second surprise is that, oddly, there is very little comment on the watch’s primary function, which is to give you the time! Indeed, it seems that all the excitement generated by the watches’ connectivity, and additional circuitry board afforded by the strap, serves to completely obscure the watches’ usual and primary function, which would be keeping time!.  So, perhaps that this patent would be better described as the Apple iStrap patent, which converts a time keeping device into a connected and connectable device.

 Well… maybe that’s just the point! No one wants just the time anymore! And if you did, you could get it the old fashioned way, without Apple’s assistance!

 Maybe this is also the reason why you cannot find this patent anywhere when you search for “watch”!  Watch is already an outdated “keyword”, a descriptor that no longer corresponds to, or adequately describes, such a multi-functional device as the one disclosed. Apple’s patent, US8787006, is titled:  Wrist-worn electronic device and methods therefor.  And because the drawings indicate “iTime” on the display, even the term “iWatch” was ditched for this wrist-worn electronic device.

 There are two embodiments of the invention. In the first embodiment, the “iTime” central piece is built into the wristband, which serves as a circuitry board to augment its functionality and wireless connectivity to other devices.  In the second embodiment, the “iTime” central piece can be removed (like a mini iPod) from the wristband serving to augment its functionality, and used as an independent wireless device. So, one way or another, the time piece includes wireless circuitry to enable the multiplication of functions and the device’s wireless connectivity.

 This means, for example, that the electronic wrist device can be used as a portable media storage device [0021]. The electronic wrist device can also contain an antenna for GPS functions [0026], and it can be designed as a haptic device with touchscreen functions [0027-27]. The electronic wrist device could also be designed as an I/O device for an Iphone so that it could alert users with incoming call messages [0037]. Similarly the electronic wrist device could also display incoming messages from social media [0038].

 And of course no electronic device comes without time related functions, and the iTime, in this respect, is no exception…as it discloses all the possibilities of calendar functions and personal assistance, or stock alerts and weather notifications [0041]. The electronic wrist device also discloses the possibility of gesture-driven commands using sensors to control the wrist device [0055], for example declining an incoming call with a horizontal wrist movement or accepting it with a vertical wrist movement; or declining and accepting calls with various wrist shakes, a single shake for accepting, two shakes for declining. Plus  many more such functions, part mobile device, part computer, that could be designed, or added which would all fall within the scope of the electronic wrist device, integrated as a single piece of wearable hardware, or as two interconnected pieces of wearable hardware .

 Indeed, there is plenty to be excited about with this multi-function wearable wrist device that morphs in and out of traditional watch functions. And it looks like the future may hold yet another amazing Apple product, and competition in the emerging wearable computer market!  Wouldn’t you like to wear iTime?
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The abstract for US8787006/ US 20120194976 A1 titled Wrist-worn electronic device and methods therefor is included below as well as one of the figure drawings. And we shall see what the actual product looks like, when (and if) it is in the Apple production line agenda. For my part I wouldn’t mind some details about the time-keeping function, and how accurate to the billionth of a second it might be, using a satellite that defies the curvature of space. You know… something really special about measuring time… since after all this is supposed to be worn as a “watch”, even if it is so much more.

Embodiments of electronic wristwatches are disclosed. According to one embodiment, an electronic wristband can provide additional electrical circuitry or devices that can be made available for use as or with an electronic device. In one embodiment, the electronic device can be a mobile electronic device that can be removably coupled to the electronic wristband which provides the additional circuitry or devices. Advantageously, the electronic device can utilize the additional electrical circuitry or devices provided within the electronic wristband to augment the capabilities of the electronic device. In another embodiment, the electronic device can be integrally formed with the electronic wristband which provides the additional circuitry or devices. Abstract US8787006/ US 20120194976 A1

References
 Goldman, D. (2014) Is this Apple’s new iWatch ? CNNMoney, July 22, 2014
Etherington, D. (2014) Apple gets and extensive iWatch patent. TechCrunch.com, July 22, 2014.
La, L (2014) Apple iWatch: Rounding up every possible rumor surrounding Apple’s supposed smartwatch. CNET, July 18, 2014 http://www.cnet.com/products/apple-iwatch/

Thursday, March 21, 2013

You are on fire! - Google + Addidas smart talkin’ shoes!

Copyright © Françoise Herrmann
Google’s smart talkin’ shoes, developed in a partnership with Addidas, include Bluetooth technology for connection to your mobile device, a gyroscope for motion sensing, an accelerometer to further quantity energy expenditure, pressure sensors on the soles, and a speaker to give you voiced feedback on your level of activity…That is, the shoes will admonish you when you are lazy, and cheer for you when you are active!...
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“I love the wind in my laces” the shoes will tell you…. when you start to run! “Call 911, because you are on fire” they will say, when you are playing basketball… And, “This is boring…” if you are just sitting on a park bench…
These shoes must be designed for Mrs. Obama’s “Let’s move!” campaign to solve the national childhood obesity epidemic. In any event, they are part of a trend in health monitoring devices (like Nike Fuel Band or Motion X's Jawbone UP) that give you feedback on your body metrics and activity, except that the Google + Addidas smart talkin’ shoes really talk to you, and are sarcastic about it too, if you are lazy and inactive!
On the up side, Explorers testing the product have mentioned that these shoes are motivational since the testers found themselves trying to impress the built-in coach with a superior level of activity!
The Google + Addidas smart talkin’ shoes were unveiled at an SXSW® - South by Southwest conference & festival, in Austin, during the week of March 8 to17, 2013. There are apparently no plans yet for marketing this prototype of the smart talkin’shoes.
This is just another one of Google’s brilliant partnerships for exploration in the domain of ubiquitous computing, at the intersection of wearable computers, the Internet and the human body. Stay tuned! And listen below...


Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Oh, Patents! - Google's wearable computer (US2013002724)

Copyright © Françoise Herrmann
Have you seen anyone sporting Google Glass, a wearable, head-mounted computer?
The very first models are to be released this March 2013 to 1000 selected applicants who composed to the prompt:”If I had Glass….” , and then later this year, to the rest of the world. They come in 5 different colors: Tangerine, Charcoal, Shale, Cotton and Sky. With this featherweight, head-mounted computer in a tiny glass cube suspended over your right eye, you will be able, for example, to share what you are seeing in real time, take a picture, ask for directions and see them in front of you, record a message, or ask for a translation – all of this, hands free, voice-activated or with a few taps to the Glass side-arm!

Indeed, this is ubiquitous computing, at a whole new level of omnipresence and Amplifed Reality (AR). This Space-Age looking pair of spectacles has no lenses (and no plural) - Google Glass refers to the tiny glass cube embodying the computer- although eventually, you will be able to add your own prescription or sun lenses to the frame, and remove the Glass cube and its arm to dock it onto your own eyewear. Here is the official picture of the Google Glass, head-mounted computer... perfected for the ’hood :
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The patent for this invention, USUS2013002724, filed by Google. Inc, titled: WEARABLE COMPUTER WITH CURVED DISPLAY AND NAVIGATION TOOL, was awarded on January 3, 2013, to a team of inventors:HEINRICH MITCHELL [US]; TAUBMAN GABRIEL [US]; GEISS RYAN[US]; BRAUN MAX [US]; HO CASEY [US]. It comes complete with …..
….systems, methods, and devices for interfacing with a wearable heads-up display via a touch-operable input device. The wearable heads-up display may include a display element for receiving and displaying display information received from a processor, and may also include a wearable frame structure supporting the display element and having a side-arm extending away from the display element. In some embodiments, the display information may appear at least partially curved to a user. In some embodiments, only a portion of the display information is shown on the at least one display element. The side-arm may be configured to secure the heads-up display to a user's body in a manner such that the display element is disposed within a field of view of the user. The touch-operable input devices secured to the wearable frame structure is configured to sense at least one of a position and movement of a touch or finger along a planar direction relative to a surface of the input device, and to provide corresponding input information to the processor. A navigation tool may also be displayed on the at least one display element for indicating the location of the touch on the touch-operable input device”. [US2013002724]
And, here are some of the patent drawings of the wearable spectacled computer, and a picture of the final marketed product. You will notice the leap in styles from fiction to AR, from Harry Potter to state of the 21stcentury runway fashion and the ‘hood…enough to trump all the optometrists of the world during the long patent examination process…!
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