U.S. patent application number 12/141110 was filed with the patent office on 2009-06-18 for family organizer communications network system.
Invention is credited to Robert BONEV, Samuel Louis PALAHNUK.
Application Number | 20090152349 12/141110 |
Document ID | / |
Family ID | 40751904 |
Filed Date | 2009-06-18 |
United States Patent
Application |
20090152349 |
Kind Code |
A1 |
BONEV; Robert ; et
al. |
June 18, 2009 |
FAMILY ORGANIZER COMMUNICATIONS NETWORK SYSTEM
Abstract
The following describes a system and methods that provide
integrated web-based graphic user interface to manage
communications for a variety of WEB-accessible mobile devices,
computers, and other consumer electronic devices. The user
interface provided in conjunction with a server architecture
simplifies all of a family daily communications and information.
The system logic is based on utilizing networked, online, or
web-based processing devices, such as servers, as the central
processing and database engine for content management and
communications. As the system is device and source agnostic, the
system is designed to work with any web-accessible device. As a
result, the user devices may provide a communications portal to
collect information from and present content to the family. The
system also facilitates organization and communication between
family members by providing a centralized depository of all family
data including calendars, shopping lists, and messages. In
addition, an automated barcode, shopping, and advertising feature
is provided.
Inventors: |
BONEV; Robert; (Grand Forks,
ND) ; PALAHNUK; Samuel Louis; (Burbank, CA) |
Correspondence
Address: |
MCNEELY BODENDORF LLP
P.O. BOX 34175
WASHINGTON
DC
20043
US
|
Family ID: |
40751904 |
Appl. No.: |
12/141110 |
Filed: |
June 18, 2008 |
Related U.S. Patent Documents
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Application
Number |
Filing Date |
Patent Number |
|
|
61051339 |
May 7, 2008 |
|
|
|
61014422 |
Dec 17, 2007 |
|
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Current U.S.
Class: |
235/383 ;
705/14.69; 715/753 |
Current CPC
Class: |
Y10S 715/963 20130101;
G06Q 30/0252 20130101; G06F 16/4393 20190101; G06Q 30/00 20130101;
G06Q 30/0273 20130101 |
Class at
Publication: |
235/383 ;
715/753; 705/14 |
International
Class: |
G06F 3/048 20060101
G06F003/048; G06Q 30/00 20060101 G06Q030/00 |
Claims
1. A method of providing a group graphical user interface generated
by a service provider system for display by a user client device,
the method comprising: storing contact information associated with
a group including two or more members; storing calendar information
associated with the group members; storing message information
associated with the group members; generating a dynamic webpage
providing content automatically customized for the group by
dividing the interface into a number of distinct thematically
organized areas based on the contact information, the calendar
information, and the message information, each area providing
content and inputs based on the distinct theme; receiving a user
input in response to a group member interaction with the interface;
and dynamically adjusting the content provided by the webpage in
response to the user input.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein dividing the interface into a
number of distinct thematically organized areas includes dividing
content into strips, each strip displaying the content and inputs
associated with the theme.
3. The method of claim 2 wherein dividing content into strips
includes providing a WHO strip to present user contacts for all
group members and their contacts.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein providing a WHO strip includes
providing contact information for people and groups.
5. The method of claim 2 wherein dividing content into strips
includes providing a WHAT strip to present group member message
content.
6. The method of claim 5 wherein providing a WHAT strip includes
providing indicators of received messages.
7. The method of claim 2 wherein dividing content into strips
includes providing a WHEN strip to present a group calendar
content.
8. The method of claim 7 wherein providing a WHEN strip includes
providing group calendar and event information.
9. The method of claim 2 wherein dividing content into strips
includes providing a WHERE strip to present location content.
10. The method of claim 9 wherein providing a WHERE strip includes
providing location information for contacts and events.
11. The method of claim 2 wherein receiving the user input includes
receiving an input generated by a user input device in one of the
strips, and dynamically adjusting the content provided by the
webpage in response to the user input includes focusing content
provided by each strip in response to the received user input.
12. The method of claim 2 wherein receiving a user input includes
receiving an indication of content from one strip has be dragged to
another strip, and dynamically adjusting the content provided by
the webpage in response to the user input includes providing a
system provider function.
13. The method of claim 1 further comprising: receiving data
generated by a barcode reader corresponding to a scanned item in
response to the input; automatically adding the received data to a
shopping list associated with the group; and providing the shopping
list for display on the dynamic generated webpage including a
representation of the scanned item.
14. The method of claim 13 further comprising storing
advertisements in a data base, determining an advertisement that is
relevant to the item in the shopping list, displaying the
advertisement on the dynamic generated webpage.
15. The method of claim 14 wherein determining an advertisement is
relevant includes filtering the advertisement based on the calendar
information.
16. The method of claim 14 further comprising storing user profile
information for the group members, and determining an advertisement
is relevant includes filtering the advertisement based on family
member user profile information.
17. The method of claim 5 further comprising: receiving data
generated by a barcode reader corresponding to a scanned item in
response to the input; automatically adding the received data to a
shopping list associated with the group; and providing the shopping
list for presentation by the WHAT strip on the dynamic generated
webpage including a representation of the scanned item.
18. The method of claim 14 further comprising receiving a user
input indicating the advertisement has been selected, and storing
the advertisement in association with the item on the shopping
list.
19. The method of claim 18 further comprising: automatically
contacting an online storefront; presenting the advertisement; and
purchasing the item for a price, wherein the advertisement is one
of a coupon, a discount, an offer, or an incentive affecting the
price or quantity of the item purchased.
20. The method of claim 13 further comprising automatically
contacting an online storefront and purchasing the item for
delivery to a family member.
21. The method of claim 13 further comprising transmitting the
shopping list to a mobile processing device or mobile phone.
22. The method of claim 1 wherein generating a web page includes
providing a one touch food delivery area to present depictions of
previous food orders of group members wherein selection of the
depiction causes an automated online food ordering and delivery
process.
23. The method of claim 1 wherein the group is a family.
Description
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C.
.sctn.119(e) of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/014,422, titled
"Communications System" filed on Dec. 17, 2007 in the U.S. Patent
and Trademark Office and U.S. Provisional Application No.
61/051,339, titled "Dynamic Communications, Data, and Marketing
System" filed on May 7, 2008 in the U.S. Patent and Trademark
Office, both of which are herein incorporated by reference in their
entirety for all purposes.
TECHNICAL FIELD
[0002] The following description relates generally to an integrated
web-based communications service, and in particular to a family
organizer network and communications system.
BACKGROUND
[0003] A recent poll reveals the average computer user has four
different email addresses--which is just one indication that users
have too many sources of incoming communications to competently
maintain. In addition, conventional systems place the burden of
electronic communications squarely on the shoulders of the user.
Users also are presented with many different types of
communications devices. Many users are simply overwhelmed by the
numbers and choices of functions of these devices and software they
use such that many functions go unused. And to make matters worse,
communications and conversation topics often jump between a variety
of mediums including voice mails, text messages, faxes, and
conversations. Therefore, an improved organizational system is
needed to simplify, aid, and organize this information.
SUMMARY
[0004] In one general aspect, a method of providing a group
graphical user interface generated by a service provider system for
display by a user client device includes storing contact
information associated with a group including two or more members,
such as a group; storing calendar information associated with the
group members; storing message information associated with the
group members; generating a dynamic webpage providing content
automatically customized for the group by dividing the interface
into a number of distinct thematically organized areas based on the
contact information, the calendar information, and the message
information, each area providing content and inputs based on the
distinct theme; receiving a user input in response to a group
member interaction with the interface; and dynamically adjusting
the content provided by the webpage in response to the user
input.
[0005] Dividing the interface into a number of distinct
thematically organized areas may include dividing content into
strips, each strip displaying the content and inputs associated
with the theme. Dividing content into strips may include providing
a WHO strip to present user contacts for all group members and
their contacts. Providing a WHO strip may include providing contact
information for people and groups. Dividing content into strips
also may include providing a WHAT strip to present group member
message content. Providing a WHAT strip may include providing
indicators of received messages. Dividing content into strips also
may include providing a WHEN strip to present a group calendar
content. Providing a WHEN strip includes providing group calendar
and event information. Dividing content into strips also may
include providing a WHERE strip to present location content.
Providing a WHERE strip may include providing location information
for contacts and events.
[0006] Receiving the user input may include receiving an input
generated by a user input device in one of the strips, and
dynamically adjusting the content provided by the webpage in
response to the user input may include focusing content provided by
each strip in response to the received user input.
[0007] Receiving a user input may include receiving an indication
of content from one strip has be dragged to another strip, and
dynamically adjusting the content provided by the webpage in
response to the user input may include providing a system provider
function.
[0008] The method also may include receiving data generated by a
barcode reader corresponding to a scanned item in response to the
input; automatically adding the received data to a shopping list
associated with the group; and providing the shopping list for
display on the dynamic generated webpage including a representation
of the scanned item.
[0009] The method also may include storing advertisements in a data
base, determining an advertisement that is relevant to the item in
the shopping list, displaying the advertisement on the dynamic
generated webpage. Determining an advertisement is relevant may
include filtering the advertisement based on the calendar
information.
[0010] The method also may include storing user profile information
for the group members, and determining an advertisement is relevant
may include filtering the advertisement based on family member user
profile information.
[0011] The method also may include receiving data generated by a
barcode reader corresponding to a scanned item in response to the
input; automatically adding the received data to a shopping list
associated with the group; and providing the shopping list for
presentation by the WHAT strip on the dynamic generated webpage
including a representation of the scanned item.
[0012] The method also may include receiving a user input
indicating the advertisement has been selected, and storing the
advertisement in association with the item on the shopping
list.
[0013] The method also may include automatically contacting an
online storefront; presenting the advertisement; and purchasing the
item for a price, wherein the advertisement is one of a coupon, a
discount, an offer, or an incentive affecting the price or quantity
of the item purchased.
[0014] The method also may include automatically contacting an
online storefront and purchasing the item for delivery to a family
member.
[0015] The method also may include transmitting the shopping list
to a mobile processing device or mobile phone.
[0016] Generating a web page may include providing a one touch food
delivery area to present depictions of previous food orders of
group members wherein selection of the depiction causes an
automated online food ordering and delivery process.
[0017] Other features will be apparent from the detailed
description, drawings, and claims.
DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0018] FIG. 1 shows one exemplary block diagram of a communications
system.
[0019] FIG. 2 is an exemplary process for a user profile
questionnaire.
[0020] FIG. 3 is an exemplary block diagram of a contact aggregator
system.
[0021] FIG. 4 is an exemplary contact fill-in form.
[0022] FIG. 5 is an exemplary process for message threading.
[0023] FIG. 6 is an example of a message thread.
[0024] FIG. 7 is an exemplary screen map of a user interface
including examples of dynamic WHO, WHAT, WHERE, and WHEN
strips.
[0025] FIG. 8 is an example of a lozenge for use in a strip of the
user interface.
[0026] FIG. 9 is an exemplary illustration of the WHO strip.
[0027] FIG. 10 and FIG. 11 are exemplary illustrations of the WHAT
strip.
[0028] FIG. 12 is an exemplary illustration of a message pop-up
window.
[0029] FIG. 13 is an exemplary illustration of the WHAT strip.
[0030] FIG. 14 is an exemplary illustration of the WHERE strip.
[0031] FIG. 15 is an exemplary illustration of the user interface
with an extra large people lozenge and a large calendar
lozenge.
[0032] FIG. 16 is an exemplary illustration of the WHEN strip.
[0033] FIG. 17 is an exemplary illustration of the user interface
including an event popup window.
[0034] FIG. 18 is an exemplary illustration of the WHO strip with
the calendar lozenge focused on a contact.
[0035] FIG. 19 is an exemplary illustration of the WHO strip with
the calendar lozenge filtered for the family category.
[0036] FIG. 20 is an exemplary illustration of the WHO strip with
the calendar lozenge in the Month view.
[0037] FIG. 21 is an exemplary illustration of the WHO strip with
the calendar lozenge in the Expanded Week view.
[0038] FIG. 22 is an exemplary illustration of the WHO strip with
the calendar lozenge in the Expanded Day view.
[0039] FIGS. 23, 24, and 25 illustrate an exemplary sequence of
selecting and dragging to add a contact to an existing group.
[0040] FIGS. 26, 27, 28, 29, and 30 illustrate an exemplary
sequence of selecting items from multiple lozenges to drag to
create an event.
[0041] FIGS. 31, 32, 33, and 34 illustrate an exemplary sequence of
create an event by dragging a location to the calendar lozenge.
[0042] FIG. 35 shows an exemplary focusing process for items
displayed in the lozenges of the WHO, WHAT, WHERE, and WHEN
strips.
[0043] FIG. 36 shows an exemplary focused search process.
[0044] FIG. 37 show a schematic representation of information
associated with a Glad.
[0045] FIG. 38 shows an exemplary glad placement process.
[0046] FIG. 39 shows an exemplary process of application of glad
filters.
[0047] FIG. 40 shows an exemplary process for responding to user
interaction with a glad.
[0048] FIG. 41 shows an exemplary a shopping map route.
[0049] FIG. 42 shows an exemplary system partner user interface
screen for Glad creation.
[0050] FIG. 43 shows an exemplary system partner user interface to
monitor Glad campaigns.
[0051] FIGS. 44, 45, 46, and 47 illustrate the dragging and
dropping of a glad to a strip of the user interface.
[0052] FIG. 48 shows an exemplary family organizer system.
[0053] FIG. 49 illustrates one example of a family user interface
screen for the family organizer.
[0054] FIG. 50 illustrates a second display for the customized
family organizer.
[0055] FIG. 51 shows an exemplary directory listings search
interface.
[0056] FIG. 52 shows an exemplary food delivery screen
interface.
[0057] FIG. 53 illustrates one exemplary process for shopping with
the family organizer.
[0058] Throughout the drawings and the detailed description, like
reference numerals refer to the like elements.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0059] The following describes a system and methods that provide
integrated web-based graphic user interface to manage
communications for a variety of WEB-accessible mobile devices,
computers, and other consumer electronic devices. The user
interface provided in conjunction with a server architecture
simplifies all of a user's daily communications and information.
The system logic is based on utilizing networked, online, or
web-based processing devices, such as servers, as the central
processing and database engine for content management and
communications. As the system is device and source agnostic, the
system is designed to work with any web-accessible device. As a
result, the user devices may provide a communications portal to
collect information from and present content to the user. The
system also facilitates organization and communication between
family members by providing a centralized depository of all family
data including calendars, shopping lists, and messages. The family
organizer user interfaces, website, system, and various processes
are described in further detail below.
System Architecture
[0060] FIG. 1 shows one block diagram of an exemplary
communications system 100. The communications system 100 includes
one or more user devices 101, a service provider system 110, other
Internet Service Providers and websites 120, system partners 125,
and various communication paths 130. As the communications system
100 is device and source agnostic, the communications system 100 is
designed to work with any web-accessible user device, as explained
in further detail below.
[0061] The user device 101 may be any type of electronic device
that presents content received from the service provider system to
the user. For example, the user device 101 may be a consumer
electronics device, a mobile phone, a smart phone, a personal data
assistant, a digital tablet/pad computer, a hand held/mobile
computer, a personal computer, a notebook computer, a work station,
a vehicle computer, a game system, a set-top-box, or any other
device that can implement a user interface and/or browser to
communicate with and present content from the service provider
system 110.
[0062] The user device 101 may include a processing device, one or
more storage devices, and one or more communications interfaces. A
user device 101 also may include additional elements, such as, for
example, one or more displays or screens, one or more speakers, one
or more user input devices, and a microphone. A user device 101
also may include one or more associated peripheral devices, such
as, for example, a display, a memory, a printer, an input device,
an output device, and speakers. The user device also may be a
specialized user device 150 which may be stand alone or installed
in an appliance 155, for example, as described below with respect
to the family organizer.
[0063] The processing device may be implemented using any
general-purpose or special purpose computer, such as, for example,
a processor, a digital signal processor, a microcomputer, a field
programmable array, a programmable logic unit, a microprocessor or
any other device capable of responding to and executing
instructions in a defined manner. The processing device may run one
or more software applications that communicate with the service
provider system 110 and present content received from the server
provider system 110 to the user. The processing device also may
access, store, manipulate, process, and create data in response to
the applications. The software applications may include a computer
program, a piece of code, an instruction, or some combination
thereof, for independently or collectively instructing the
processing device to operate as desired. Examples of software
applications include: a browser, a mini browser, or other programs
that interact with a front end interface application (FEIA)
provided by the service provider system 110 to provide content, a
login/signup, a user interface, and email among other features.
Other examples of applications, include a mobile front end
interface applications (e.g., for a cell or a smart phone) that
allow the user device to communicate with the system service
provider 110.
[0064] The applications, content, and data may be embodied
permanently or temporarily in any type of machine, component,
physical or virtual equipment, storage medium or device, or
propagated signal wave capable of providing instructions or data to
or being interpreted by the processing device. In particular, the
applications or data may be stored by a storage medium or a memory
including volatile and non-volatile memories that store digital
data (e.g., a read only memory (ROM), a random access memory (RAM),
a flash memory, a floppy disk, a hard disk, a compact disk, a tape,
a DROM, a flip-flop, a register, a buffer, an SRAM, DRAM, PROM,
EPROM, OPTROM, EEPROM, NOVRAM, or RAMBUS), such that if the memory
is read or accessed by the processing device, the specified steps,
processes, and/or instructions are performed and/or data is
accessed, processed, or stored. The memory may include an I/O
interface, such that data and applications may be loaded and stored
in the memory allowing the applications, programming, and data to
be updated, deleted, changed, or augmented. The memory may be
removable, such as, for example, a card, a stick, or a disk that is
inserted in or removed from the unit.
[0065] The communications interface may exchange data and content
with the service provider system 110 using various communications
paths 130. The interface allows the processing device to send and
receive information using the communications paths 130. The
communications interface may be implemented as part of the
processing device or separately to allow the processing device to
communicate using the communications paths 130. The interface may
include two or more types of interfaces, including interfaces for
different types of hardware and/or software to interact with
different types of communications media and protocols and to
translate information/data into a format that may be used by the
processing device. Similarly, the interface may translate
information/data received from the processing device to a format
that may be transmitted to the service provider system 110 via a
communications path 130.
[0066] The communications paths 130 may be configured to send and
receive signals (e.g., electrical, electromagnetic, or optical)
that convey or carry data streams representing various types of
analog and/or digital data including content for presentation to a
user. For example, the communications paths 130 may be implemented
using various communications media and one or more networks
comprising one or more network devices (e.g., network interface
cards, servers, routers, switches, hubs, bridges, repeaters,
blades, processors, and storage devices). The one or more networks
may include a local area network (LAN), a wide area network (WAN),
a global area network (GAN), a plain old telephone service (POTS)
network, a digital subscriber line (DSL) network, an integrated
services digital network (ISDN), a synchronous optical network
(SONNET), Passive and Active Optical Networks (PON or AON), or a
combination of two or more of these networks. In addition, the
communications paths 130 may include one or more wireless links
(e.g., microwave, radio, and satellite) that transmit and receive
electromagnetic signals, such as, for example, radio frequency,
infrared, and microwave signals, to convey information/data signal.
In one example, a communications path 130 may include the Internet
or World Wide Web.
[0067] The service provider system 110 facilitates communication
by, organization of, and presentation of content to users. The
service provider system 110 also stores and manages user associated
information in a centralized location. In particular, the service
provider system 110 implements a user interface to aggregate,
consolidate, organize, and simplify a user's daily communications,
such as email and instant messaging into a central point for
one-stop organization, data, and content management.
[0068] The service provider system 110 includes one or more
communications devices, processors, memories/storage devices,
communications interfaces, network devices, and communications
paths to store, process, manipulate, organize, consolidate,
maintain, and present content and data for a user. In the example
shown in FIG. 1, the service provider system 110 may include a one
or more security devices 141 (e.g., firewalls), web servers 142, an
application server 144, an SQL server 145 and a mirror SQL server
148, and associated memory 150 and backup memory devices 152. It is
understood, however, that the example given in FIG. 1 is for
illustrative purposes only, and that different configurations,
combinations of devices, and numbers of devices may be provided for
any particular service provider system 110. For example, the system
service provider may include multiple banks of servers as need to
supply adequate bandwidth for the number of users supported by the
system. In addition, the system 110 may be geographically
distributed.
[0069] In one example, the web server 143 may be implemented using
a Dell PowerEdge 1900 2-Socket, Quad-Core Tower Server with a Red
Hat Enterprise Linux 5 operating system using an apache HTTP server
programming language to provide JavaServer Pages (JSP). The web
server 143 may run a FEIA to aid in login, signup, and creation of
a user account, and receive information from the first time wizard.
The application server 144 may be implemented using a Dell
PowerEdge 1900 2-Socket, Quad-Core Tower Server with a Red Hat
Enterprise Linux 5 operating system using programming languages
YoLinux Java, Eclipse C/C++ IDE. The application server 144 The
application server may run system applications, such as, for
example, the contact importer, harvester, and maintainer, calendar
maintainer and syncer, mail fetcher/sender, threader, glad logic,
glad placement applications, route mapper, item finder, client
communicator, and user interface. The SQL Server 145 may be
implemented using a Dell PowerEdge 1900 2-Socket, Quad-Core Tower
Server with a Red Hat Enterprise Linux 5 operating system using an
Oracle Database 11g Enterprise Edition for Linux (or equivalent) to
maintain various databases, such as, for example, a contact
database (DB). The mirror SQL 148 server mirrors the SQL Server
145. to maintain a user DB and a glad, advertisement, or customer
incentive database, a store DB, a item DB, a contact DB, a message
DB, among other described herein. The user database may include a
user profile, user events, shopping lists, to-do lists, user groups
and contact DB, and user locations DB. The mirror SQL server
mirrors the SQL Server. The term database DB includes not only the
data but may include the programming of the database application
for maintaining the data.
[0070] In order to interact with the service provider system 110, a
user needs to establish an account. The user must activate the
account from a user device 101 running an application allowing the
user device 101 to communicate with the service provider system
110, such as a browser. A browser may include any application that
communicates with a web server primarily using hypertext transfer
protocols HTTP (e.g., HTTP/1.1) to fetch content or provide a
portal to service provided by the service provider system 110. HTTP
allows the browser to submit information to servers in addition to
fetching content from them. Content may be located by the browser
using a uniform resource locator (URL) as an address. Many browsers
also support a variety of other URL types and their corresponding
protocols, such as Gopher (a hierarchical hyperlinking protocol),
file transfer protocol (FTP), real-time streaming protocol (RTSP),
and an SSL encrypted version of HTTP (HTTPS). Content may be
provided in a hyper-text markup language (HTML) that is identified
using a MIME content type. Most browsers natively support a variety
of formats in addition to HTML, such as the JPEG, PNG, and GIF
image formats, and can be extended to support more through the use
of plugins and/or scripts. The combination of HTTP content type and
URL protocol specification allows images, animations, video, sound,
and streaming media to be embedded in the content.
[0071] The browser may include coding that interacts with the FEIA.
The initial code that is run in the browser may be downloaded from
the service provider system 110 (e.g., with purchase of an account)
or retrieved from a storage medium (e.g., a CD promotional gift).
The browser running on the client device 101 connects with the FEIA
application run by the service provider system 10 web server 143 to
initiate login, account activation, and provide a first-time
questionnaire. During the initial account setup, the user may
create a password and/or user identification (ID). In addition, the
service provider system 110 may configure settings and data on the
user device 101 (e.g., set cookies). The service provider system
110 also provides the user with a user profile questionnaire.
[0072] FIG. 2 illustrates an example 200 of how the service
provider system 110 conducts the initial user profile
questionnaire. As shown in FIG. 2, when the user login is first
initiated 201, the service provider system 110 asks the user
several questions to help tailor the content and services that are
delivered to the user. After the initial questionnaire is
completed, an edit function provided by the user interface allows
the user to update their profile information at any time. After the
user completes their initial registration, the user then responds
to the questionnaire provided by the user interface, which may be
updated or changed at any time. The questionnaire may be provided
in any number of formats that allow a user to provide information
to the service provider system 110. For example, the questionnaire
may be a webpage that includes content, such as a series, list, or
groups of questions for the user to answer. Various windows,
fields, boxes, lists, or drop down menus may be provided to solicit
and receive information from a user. Some examples of questions
asked or information requested may include personal information
205, personal reminders 210, email contacts 220, and business
information 225.
[0073] Examples of the personal information 205 may include: a user
name, a zip code, a name of spouse, and the names of children. The
user also may provide their address/contact data or the system can
automatically provide address data.
[0074] The service provider system 110 also collects information
about personal reminders 210 so the service provider system 110 may
remind the user of important dates, such as, anniversaries;
birthdays (e.g., spouse, kids, relatives, and friends); an
unlimited number of special dates and names of those events; and
reminders (e.g., such as vacation, appointments, activities, or
retirement). The personal reminders may be used as a source of
greeting events, as explained in further detail below.
[0075] The user also is prompted to input email addresses 220
(e.g., family, friends, business contact, and relatives, among
other important contacts). The user is asked to input their user
names/aliases/IDs/account numbers and passwords for any online
accounts, such as Yahoo!, Google, MySpace, kut, Hi5, Facebook,
Friendster, Linked In, XING and Twitter. The user also is asked for
any other important contact information, such as phone numbers
(e.g., work, cell, and home).
[0076] Business Information 225 also may be collected by the
service provider system 110, such as business zip, business email
account(s), business cell phone (if different), business log-in
(user name and password) for contacts and calendar.
[0077] Once this information is collected, the information is
stored in the user profile database 270.
[0078] As shown in FIG. 3, the service provider system 110 works to
collect, harvest, organize, and maintain contact information
through the use of a contact aggregator system 300. The contact
aggregator system includes a content aggregator 301. The content
aggregator includes a suite of software/applications including a
contact importer 310, a contact harvester 320, and contact
maintainer 325 run by one or more servers 330 of the service
provider system 110 that runs applications in conjunction with
maintaining the client contact DB and a one or more storage devices
340. In one example, the server 330 may be implemented using the
applications server 144 and associated hard disk 150 and shadow
storage 152. The server 330 communicates with the rest of the
service provider system 110 through communications path 350 (e.g.,
a communications path 130 secure link to the web server 143 and the
SQL server 145).
[0079] The contact importer 310 imports contacts from various user
client devices 101 and any other accounts, software, and systems
associated with the user that store user contact information. The
contact importer 310 also uses various user accounts information,
such as the user names, the IDs, the aliases, and the passwords
gathered during the initial account set up to masquerade as the
user and download the user's contact information associated with or
stored by any portal and/or social networking websites that user
might belong to.
[0080] Using the passwords provided by the user during account
setup, the contact maintainer 310 implements an automated process
to login as the user on all supported address book/contact storage
accounts, such as Yahoo!, Google mail, and Outlook. Any contacts
that are identified from these accounts are imported into a
temporary database. All imported contacts are compared against each
other, and, if possible, the data is merged, the duplicates are
deleted, and a final list of contacts and their associated
information is created and placed in the user contact DB, which
stores all of the user contacts.
[0081] For each contact associated with a user's account stored in
contact DB, the contact DB may include a number of data-fields to
store information regarding the contact. For example, the data
fields may include a contact name, one or more email addresses, a
fax number, one or more mobile phone numbers, a voice phone number,
a business phone number, a home number, a home address, a business
address, and various IM IDs. The contact importer 310 also captures
any user avatar images when available. During the automated import
process, the contact importer 310 merges the data collected from
various sources and eliminates any duplicate information. For each
contact the importer finds in one the user's existing contact
formats, the contact importer attempts to populate as many the
fields provided by the contact DB as possible with the information
available from the importation process. Any contacts that are
missing information may be provided to the contact harvester 320 in
an attempt to retrieve the missing information. The contact
importer then writes this information stored in a temporary
database to the Contact DB.
[0082] The contact harvester 320 is an application that is used to
retrieve, supplement, and/or update contact information that may be
incomplete, out of date, or in error. The service provider system
110 examines the contact DB after initial setup and periodically
thereafter. As part of the examination, the service provider system
110 provides the contact harvester 320 with contacts that have
information fields that are missing information, are incomplete, or
may be suspected of being incorrect or out of date. The contact
harvester 320 spawns a web page for such contacts to solicit
missing or information in need of updating. The web page may be
hosted by the web server 143. The web page may be populated with
all or a portion of the existing information for the contact stored
in the contact DB. In addition, information associated with one or
more fields that are blank, incomplete, or missing may be requested
or solicited. The web page may include window, boxes, fields, menus
that may be used by a contact to provide the missing information in
conjunction with a browser. The contact harvester 320 generates an
email that is sent to the contact at one or more of the email
addresses stored for the contact in the contact DB. The email
contains a link to this spawned webpage which may then be filled
out by the user. To assure the contact being solicited of the
authenticity of the web page and the email with the link to the
webpage, a personal message from the user may be included or other
information known to the contact may be provided. For example, a
photo or avatar of the user and/or a portion of the user's personal
information may be included with the message and/or website.
[0083] The contact harvester 320 also may interface with a
telephony based, or web-telephony based device with voice prompts
and voice recognition capability. As a result, the contact
harvester 320 may get in touch with a contact at a provided phone
number and use automated voice recognition technology and/or
automated menus to request the missing contact information directly
from the contact. This is especially helpful for tracking down
contact information for contacts without valid email addresses. The
automated voice system translates answers from the contact into
digital data that is stored in the contact DB. The contact
harvester 320 may then provide a spawned website and email to the
contact to verify the information received by the automated voice
system. The contact harvester 320 provides a report to the user if
the contact harvester 320 is unable to contact a user and/or
determine missing information.
[0084] When the service provider system 110 spawns a custom website
for a contact to fill out their contact information, all known
contact information may be filled out in the spawned form. The
contact is then asked to fill in any missing info or update and
change information that may be incorrect. Certain items or fields
having missing or incomplete information that can be looked up with
high accuracy may are filled in automatically by contact harvester
320. For example, if the contact information contains an address
with the word "Calgary" in the city field, the contact harvester
safely fills in the State/Province field with "Alberta" and the
country field with "Canada." If the contact includes an address
field of "503 Aniston Place, Apt 43," a city field of "Salisbury,"
and a State/Province field of "WI," the contact harvester safely
fills in the Zip Code/Postal Code field with 91234 and the country
field with "USA." A sample spawned webpage which may be used by a
contact to fill in missing information is shown in FIG. 4.
[0085] As shown in FIG. 4, the webpage 400 may include a personal
greeting 401 and a listing of the contact data stored in the
contact DB for the contact. Missing elements may include an entry
field 410 for the contact to supply the missing information through
use of a user input device. Check box 420 may be provided to toggle
features on and off. In addition, there may be a solicitation for
additional information 430 which can spawn additional web pages to
supply the requested information. In addition, the webpage may
include a verification 440 for the existing information. No
response or a yes indication does not trigger any change; however a
negative indication may spawn an additional webpage to correct
and/or supplement the contact information displayed. Alternatively,
the user may be able to change the information directly in the
webpage by using a user input device and selecting the user
information to change and change the information.
[0086] The contact maintainer 325 is an application that helps to
maintain the integrity of contact information stored in the contact
DB. For example, the contact maintainer 324 keeps track of failed
email deliveries associated with the user account. If the contact
maintainer 325 suspects that a contact has changed their email
address (thereby accounting for the failed email deliveries), the
contact maintainer 325 provides the information contact to the
contact harvester 320. The contact harvester 320 may then generate
a spawned webpage and/or use the automated phone system to
determine correct contact information and/or update the contact
information in the contact DB.
[0087] The contact maintainer 325 also scans or reviews user emails
to detect key words and/or phrases, such as "my new phone number
is," "we're moving," and "my new address is." If such key words,
phrases, or combinations of key words are detected, the contact
maintainer 325 parses the text to determine if the email is a
change of address/email/phone message or is otherwise
updating/change information associated with contact. If the contact
maintainer 325 determines with a predetermined level of confidence
that the email does contain such information, the contact
maintainer prompts the user with a message, for example, like
this:
[0088] "Hi, we think that Cynthia Alvarez might be changing her
phone number from 310.234.1234 to 818.334.4456. Select here to make
this change, or select here to read the email."
[0089] The user may then select to update the user information or
make further inspection of the information to determine if the
contact information should be updated. The message may be provided
in any number of formats including email, instant messages, or
directly through a user interface of the user device 101.
[0090] As described above, the service provider system 110 also
gathers personal reminder information for users, such as contact
birthdays. The contact maintainer 324 uses the personal reminder
information as greeting events to automatically send greetings to
contacts. Examples of greeting events include birthdays,
anniversaries, and holidays, among others. The contact maintainer
325 uses the greeting event as an opportunity to periodically
contact all members of the contact list. When the contact
maintainer 325 determines the occurrence of a greeting event, the
contact maintainer 325 sends a greeting to one or more contacts,
such as "Happy New Year!" The greeting may be an email or instant
message. The greeting may include a question for the contact, such
as "Do you have new contact info?" If the user responds in the
affirmative, the contact harvester 320 may spawn a webpage for the
contact to review their stored contact information and
update/change information as necessary. As a result, the greeting
provides an opportunity to the contact to update their contact
information and for the service provider system 110 to spread this
information. More importantly, the contact maintenance is done
without any additional effort or input required by the user.
[0091] The contact aggregator is described in further detail in
co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/141097, titled
"Contact Aggregator" filed Jun. 18, 2008, which is herein
incorporated by reference in its entirety for all purposes.
[0092] As shown in FIG. 5, the service provider system 110 works to
collect, harvest, organize, and maintain a user's calendar
information through the use of a calendar aggregator system 500.
The calendar aggregator system 500 includes a calendar aggregator
501. The calendar aggregator includes a suite 501 of
software/applications including a calendar importer 510, a calendar
harvester 520, and calendar maintainer 525 run by one or more
servers 530 of the service provider system 110 that runs
applications in conjunction with maintaining the client calendar DB
and a one or more storage devices 540. In one example, the server
530 may be implemented using the applications server 144 and
associated hard disk 150 and shadow storage 152. The server 530
communicates with the rest of the service provider system 110
through communications path 550 (e.g., a communications path 130
secure link to the web server 143 and the SQL server 145).
[0093] The calendar importer 510 imports calendar data from various
user client devices 101 and any other accounts, software, and
systems associated with the user that store user calendar data and
information. The calendar importer 510 also uses various user
accounts information, such as the user names, the IDs, the aliases,
and the passwords gathered during the initial account set up to
masquerade as the user and download the user's calendar information
associated with or stored by any portal and/or social networking
websites that the user might belong to.
[0094] Using the passwords provided by the user during account
setup, the calendar importer 510 implements an automated process to
login as the user on all supported calendar storage accounts, such
as Yahoo!, Google calendar, and Outlook. Any calendar items or data
that are identified from these accounts are imported into a
temporary database. All imported calendar items are compared
against each other, and, if possible, the data is merged, the
duplicates are deleted, and a final set of calendar data calendar
is created and placed in the user calendar DB, which stores all of
the user calendar information. The calendar importer 510 and its
processes may be run in conjunction with the contact importer
510.
[0095] The calendar DB may include a number of data-fields to store
information regarding the user's calendar. For example, the data
fields may include a years, months, weeks, days, a timeline of
hours and minutes during a day, and events, reminders, meetings,
tasks, to-do items, shopping items, and there associated data and
information. During the automated import process, the calendar
importer 510 merges the data collected from various sources and
eliminates any duplicate information. For each calendar the
importer finds in one the user's existing calendar formats, the
calendar importer 510 attempts to populate as many the fields
provided by the contact DB as possible with the information
available from the importation process. The calendar importer 510
then writes this information stored in a temporary database to the
calendar DB.
[0096] The calendar harvester 520 is an application that is used to
retrieve, supplement, and/or update calendar information by
periodically logging into the users various calendar accounts to
retrieve information and update the user's calendar information.
The calendar harvester 520 is an application that is used to
retrieve, supplement, and/or update calendar information by
periodically checking these other calendar account databases either
by accessing their data APIs, or by logging into these accounts
utilizing user log on information (user name and password) provided
by the user during setup. The calendar harvester has the ability to
masquerade as the user, log onto their other calendar accounts, and
harvest the data.
[0097] Depending on the type of access (API or masquerade) the
frequency of the checking varies. With an API checking can happen
very often, whereas masquerading may happen only a few times a
day.
[0098] The calendar harvester reads the information from the user's
other accounts, interprets that data thus converting it to a
compatible format with the system, and then installs that data into
the user's calendar.
[0099] The calendar manager 525 receives user input provided
through the user interface to manage the user's calendar. The
calendar manager provides calendar information and data to the user
interface and receives use input to setup, schedule, and maintain
user events. The calendar manager also has access to all system
user calendars which allow to instantly providing information about
a user's other contacts maintained by the system service
provider.
[0100] In addition, to maintaining a user's contacts and calendar
information, the system also manages a user's various dialogs with
other users. For example, emails sent to a user account are stored
by the service provider system 10 in an archive database that is
associated with a user account. The archive database stores the
communications in their original form (e.g., STMP). The archive
database also store threads of previous user communications. The
threads are chronically arranged communications between two or more
individuals that have a common subject. The threads contain the
actual body copy of the communication with other non-essential
information removed, such as, for example, headers, signatures,
boiler plate or legal disclaimers, text history, wallpaper,
animations, avatars, demarcations, line or extraneous
characters.
[0101] FIG. 6 shows one example 600 the service provider system 10
processing of emails. As emails are received by the system service
provider 110 (605), the emails are stored in the archive database
(610). The address of the email sender is compared to the
recipient's contact data to match the identification or name of the
contact sending the email with information in the contact DB (620).
For example, the server compares the text string in the FROM or
SENDER fields with all of the contacts stored in the contact DB
that are associated with a user. The system service provider
determines if the user is in the contact DB 630. The service
provider system 10 scans the archive DB of all current and previous
communications sent or received by the user. The service provider
system 110 identifies those communications between the user and the
identified contact. By examining the text history in the email
(i.e., the content displayed at the bottom of emails preceded by
the ">" characters) and by examining the subject line, the
service provider system 110 determines whether or not the email is
a response to a previous communication stored in the archive DB
640.
[0102] If the email is a response, the service provider system
determines a probability of which communication it is a response to
645. The service provider system 10 examines the subject, text
history, and key words in the list of current conversation threads
database, to determine which conversational thread the
communication belongs to 650. Once a thread is determined, the
system service provider 110 strips all data from the email except
the actual body copy that was last typed by the contact sending the
email 655. When stripping the email, the system removes all header
information, all text history, signature boxes, wallpaper, avatars,
animations, legal boilerplate, demarcations, lines, and extraneous
characters to leave only the body copy or new communications
characters sent by the contact. The body copy is then placed as a
last entry to the communications thread. The updated thread is
stored and an indication is provided by the user interface, as
explained in further detail below 660.
[0103] If the communications is not determined to a response a new
thread is created 665. When creating the new thread, the system
includes only the actual body copy of the communication stripping
all other data, as explained above. The new communication thread is
stored in and an indication is provided by the user interface
660.
User Interface
[0104] As the number of technological advances in daily
communications grows, many users find themselves overwhelmed by the
sheer amount of information and content available to them. In
addition, many of the user devices providing this information and
content have a substantial number of functions associated with them
to view and manipulate this content. As the amount of content and
number of functions have grown, a typical user does not use many of
the functions provided because it is difficult to access or utilize
the information or the functions provided are only useful to a
relatively small number of users. Therefore, a new user interface
is provided to facilitate user access and manipulation of content
and services provided by the service provider system 110.
[0105] The user interface provides a primary point of interaction
between the user and service provider system 110. The web server
143 provides content and services to the user through a browser
operating on the user device 101. The user device 101 establishes a
connection to a web server 143 of the service provider system 110
using a communications path 130. After the connection is
established, the primary interface is presented as screen rendered
by a browser on a display of the user device 101. The screen may be
a dynamic webpage provided by the web server 143 that is
supplemented by additional programs, applications, and plugins
operating on the user device.
[0106] The user interface provides electronic content generated by
the applications, servers, and databases of the system service
provider 110. The once the use device establishes a link with the
service provider system 110, the user device and system exchange
data. Data is transmitted from the system 110 to the browser in a
markup language used by a client application or browser resident on
the user device 101 and its operating system to render the page and
present the user interface screen. Data also is transmitted from
the user device 101 to the system 110 to provide indications of
user interaction with the user interface. The data sent to the user
device may be in any markup language that may be interpreted by the
client application or browser running on the user devices that is
presenting the system webpage. In one application, Flash
technologies may be used and AJAX technologies may be used to
provide the webpage of the user interface using the hypertext
markup language (HTML), the JavaScript programming language,
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) and/or the eXtensible Markup Language
(XML).
[0107] In one example, data may be transferred between the service
and the user device using an HTML and/or XML format to render the
page. Within the data of the markup language for the page, an
instant messaging protocol application may be provided. The markup
language is interpreted by the browser to run/assemble the instant
messaging protocol application. Once operating in the browser, the
instant messaging application may be used to establish an instant
message link between the client application or browser and the
system server. This may be done by providing the system server with
connection information (e.g., an IP address and number of the port
assigned to the client user device). In addition, the client device
also is provided with the connection information (e.g., an IP
address and number of a port on the system server). Because the
client device and server both have the IP address and port number
of the other, the two devices may be considered "linked." As a
result, certain user interactions with the browser while
manipulating the user interface are sent directly to, and received
directly from the server in real time. The direct "link" may be
used to provide certain information directly to and from the server
and client. For example, any information for calendar events may be
provided directly without, for example, the need for any page
refresh between the browser and the server in order to display the
associated information. In addition, all online system users have
this link established. As a result, when one person updates their
calendar to add an event, the calendar of another system user may
appear to be updated almost instantly or in real time. Similarly
other items inputted by on the interface, such as tick boxes may be
updated in this manner.
[0108] The user interface may include one or more areas, portions,
boxes, windows, scroll/slider bars, tools, menus, buttons, and
tabs; however, the numbers and arrangement of these items is
selected so as to not overwhelm a user with functionality. The
functionality of the user interface may be accessed or activated
through use of one or more user inputs of the user device 101. For
example, items and content on the screen may be selected and
manipulated using one or more screen position indicators or visual
effects (e.g., a pointer, a cursor, a highlighting, a transparency,
a color, an animation, or an effect) controlled by one or more user
input devices (e.g., a key, a keyboard/pad, a touch screen/pad, a
mouse, a joystick, a track ball, and a stylus) as is common in
graphical user interfaces (e.g., a pointer controlled by a mouse to
click and double-click to activate, select, and drag items within a
window, browser, or desktop environment).
[0109] In most cases, items in lists can be: selected, clicked, or
tapped to designate, activate, or expand the item; double-selected,
clicked, or tapped to edit an item; dragged within a list to
reprioritize the item; dragged from a window, a list, a tab, or a
button and dropped to another to convert an item to another type of
item or to activate a function; and a special selection process,
such as holding down a specific key (e.g., the Ctrl key or shift
key) to allow multiple items on a list to be selected and/or
dragged.
[0110] Characters and text may be entered in specific locations
(e.g., a text box or entry field) using a keyboard, a keypad, a
number pad, or a virtual keyboard/keypad (e.g., provided through a
touch screen).
[0111] As the user interacts with items, functions, and content
presented by the user interface, the items, functions, and content
may be focused based on their interaction. Further examples of the
user interface and its functionality are given in greater detail
below.
[0112] As pointed out above, many users find the number, type, and
functionality of the many different user interfaces to be
overwhelming or at a minimum burdensome. Accordingly, the user
interface described herein presents content in manageable portions
for a user. Each portion includes items, data, functions, and
content concerning an area of interest to the user. In particular,
the data and content of most interest to a user may be distilled
into four basic areas of interest which govern their daily
communications: who, what, when, and where. In addition, the user
interface automatically focuses information provided within these
areas to the information that is most likely desired by the user at
any given moment. To aid the user and avoid confusion, all
contacts, messages, and appointments may be color coded or
otherwise visually distinguished to indicate which category they
belong to (e.g., Red=Personal, Green=Family, Purple=Friends, and
Blue=Business). As a result, items belonging to these groups may be
shown in, bordered, highlighted or otherwise visually distinguished
with these colors. Finally, because the user interface data, items,
content, and functionality are provided by the service provider
system 110, they may be accessed by the user using any web
accessible device with a browser. As a result, the user has access
to their information from virtually anywhere and because the
information is presented consistently, the user does not need to
re-familiarize themselves with different operations and
functionality even when accessing the information from different
user devices. Nor does the user have to worry about a lost or
stolen device resulting in lost information or having it
compromised.
[0113] FIG. 7 shows a screen map 700 or layout of a user interface
window 701. The screen map 700 of the user interface is implemented
by the service provider system 110 in conjunction with a browser
and other applications and plugins of the user device 101. Screen
resolutions may be dimensions that are proportional to screen width
and resolution used depending on type of display associated with
the client device 110. The display also may be fully scaleable. As
such, the screen dimensions and resolution shown in the figures is
merely for illustration purposes only.
[0114] The user interface window 701 is divided into three primary
areas: an information bar 705, a graphic bar 707, and a user
organizer 709. As shown in FIG. 7, the first portion includes an
information bar 705 that may be used to present various information
pertaining to a particular user, such as, for example, a user
avatar 710, a user name 712, any high-level alerts 714 (e.g., tips
or message "3 new events"), and a system logo 717. In addition, a
custom web search input field 719 may be provided to allow a user
into input information (e.g., key words) through use of an
associated user input device. The input information is supplied to
a search engine to perform a query and present a response in a
separate browser window. Searches of the web may be performed using
Google, Yahoo, AltaVista, or any other web-based search engine.
However, the service provider system 110 may automatically narrow
or focus the search based on the user's personal profile stored in
the user DB. In addition, the system service provider 110 may use
its own propriety search engine to perform a search. Two buttons
are provided, an Internet search button 721 and a system search
button 722, to select where the search is to be performed. The
search features are described in further detail below.
[0115] A second area 707 includes a graphic bar that provides a
space or window 724 for a user photo gallery to display user photos
(e.g., stored in the user database). The graphic bar also may
include a products and services branding area 726 to display
advertising (i.e., glads) and logos for business clients 120 (e.g.
a system sponsor). This area 707 also may be customized or used to
promote a business for a sponsored user interface. The area may
include identification of the business, such as a name, symbol, or
logo. Selecting the business logo causes the user interface to open
an additional browser to present the user with a website or other
online content associated with the business. This area 707 of the
user interface also may provide advertising content including
coupons. The advertising display and glads are described in further
detail below.
[0116] A third portion 709 of the user interface provides a user
organizer that organizes a user's daily communications, contacts,
appointments, content and other information in several key contexts
to facilitate the user's access to and manipulation of the
information. As shown in FIG. 7, the user organizer is divided into
four general themes, contexts, or strips: a WHO strip 731, a WHAT
strip 733, a WHERE strip 735, and a WHEN strip 737. Each strip
provides data, content, and functionality to a user in manageable
portions based on a general aspect, context, or theme. The WHO
strip 731 provides content and functionality regarding a user's
contacts including people and groups of people. The WHAT strip 733
provides content and functionality regarding a user's daily
activities, communications, shopping, and to-do items, and other
events of a user's daily life. The WHERE strip 735 provides
information about locations and points of interest to a user, such
as addresses, points of interest, information related to points of
interest, and maps associated with those locations. The WHEN strip
737 provides access to scheduled activities, events, appointments,
and any other time sensitive data associated with the user. Each of
the strips also dynamically focuses content and information based
on user interaction with the strips. The strips also are automated
such that simple manipulation of item between and within the strips
causes the system to provide certain functions and service
automatically. Each of the strips, their functionality, and
focusing are described in further detail below.
[0117] The information and functionality provided by each strip are
accessed through manipulation of one or more lozenges provided in
each of the strips. FIG. 8 shows an example 800 of a lozenge. The
lozenge 800 is an interactive, dynamic window that provides content
and functionality to a user. Each lozenge allows a user to quickly
arrange and display information and functionality within the theme
or context of the strip. The lozenge may include one or more of the
following: a title bar 801 including an expand icon 810 and a
contract 812 icon, a information/item area 819, navigation aids
(e.g., a scroll or slider bar) 820 and a search/add field 830. The
area or window occupied by the lozenge 800 within a strip expands
and/or contracts based on a user request or via automatic
processes. Generally the lozenges may be presented as: small,
medium, large, and extra large. In addition, the size of one
lozenge may automatically and reciprocally affect the size of the
one or more other lozenges within a strip based on user interaction
with the strips.
[0118] A small lozenge generally occupies a minimal area of a
strip, for example, less than 15% of the area of a strip and
provides minimal information and functionality. For example, a
small lozenge may include a title bar and some additional
information, such as a minimal alert or counters. A medium lozenge
provides a portion of the overall content associated with a lozenge
focused generally, for example, on the most used or most needed
content or functionality associated with the lozenge, such as
alerts and/or counters. In one example, a medium lozenge occupies
approximately up to half of a strip. A large lozenge may be
considered full size providing multiple ways to view data while
providing all the functionality associated with the lozenge. In one
example, a large lozenge occupies a majority of the strip. Finally,
an extra large lozenge provides additional space with an emphasis
on editing data, adding/reordering items, and viewing of additional
information provided by the lozenge. In one example, the extra
large lozenge occupies a space larger than a strip, for example,
the space of up to three large lozenges or additional strips. The
individual lozenges are described below within the context of their
strips.
[0119] At the bottom of a lozenge a data search/add field 820
(e.g., a text box) may be provided in which a user enters
characters using user input device. As a user enters characters
into the field, the system performs a character-by-character
analysis to determined items featuring the letters the user is
typing. The system displays in or next to the field any items that
correspond with the characters. At any time the user may select one
of the displayed items. If the user types in a character string
that is not present in the database, and selects the items using a
user input device (e.g., pressing ENTER), then the item is added to
the database. The field may be used, for example, to add an item to
the list or perform a search within the context of the lozenge.
[0120] The WHO strip 731 includes two lozenges: people 740 and
groups 742. The WHAT strip 733 includes six lozenges: activities
744, to-do 748, shopping 750, buy (not shown), read 752, and send
753. The WHERE strip 735 includes two lozenges: locations 760 and
maps 762. The WHEN strip 737 includes one lozenge: dynamic calendar
770. Expanding a lozenge causes a corresponding reduction in the
size of one or more other lozenges within a strip, as explained in
further detail below. Similarly, expanding a strip to accommodate
an extra large lozenge, causes a correspond reduction in the size
of one or more other strips. Any strips or lozenges that are shrunk
may be done so in order of the oldest to the most recently
used.
[0121] FIG. 9 shows examples of the WHO strip 731 of the user
interface which is used to create, maintain, and access a user's
contact information. In FIG. 9 the reciprocal relationship between
a small, a medium, and a large people and a small, a medium, and a
large groups lozenge is shown.
[0122] The small people lozenge 901 includes a title bar
"People."
[0123] The medium people lozenge 905 includes a list 907 of a
subset of a user contacts. In one example, the medium lozenge
includes a list of the most popular and/or the contacts most
recently communicated with. The list of contacts may include a
visual indicator and label, such as stars and the word popular (not
shown). The list 907 may include up to ten contacts; however, other
numbers of contacts may be provided. While connected to the service
provider system 110, the web server 143 in conjunction with the
applications server 144 monitors the user's interaction with the
user interface to populate the list with the most relevant contacts
of interest to user. The medium people lozenge 905 also includes a
search/add data entry field 820. The search/add field 820 may be
used to search for a contact within the user's contact database. As
a user enters characters within the field, the system automatically
provide a list of contacts (not shown) matching those letters typed
by the user. The user may select any contact from the list at any
time or continue adding characters. If a contact entered in the
field is not in the database, the system asks the user if they wish
to add the contact to the database.
[0124] The large people lozenge 910 includes a configurable list
912 of a user's contacts. A navigation aid 830 (e.g., a scroll bar
or slider) may be provided for use in conjunction with a user input
device to configure, manipulate, and/or sort the contacts displayed
by the list 912. For example, the configurable contact list 912 may
be sorted by: recently accessed contacts, a first name, a last
name, those contacts with whom a user is currently communicating,
those contacts with whom a user has planned events, appointments or
activities on the calendar, those contacts for whom a user has
extended an invitation, those contacts with whom a user owes a
response to a message, a specific letter in a contact name, and
those contacts in order of proximity to a location selected on or
inputted to the "Where" strip. The desired sort option may be
selected from a menu or corresponding input (e.g., a button or
check box). If there are more names in a list than may be displayed
within the area provided by the people lozenge, a navigation aid
(e.g., a scroll bar, a slider bar, direction arrow keys, grab and
move pointer, or a pointing device) may be used to navigate through
or see the remaining portion of the list. Items within the list
also may be rearranged by a user selecting a name with a user input
device and dragging the name within the list. The large people
lozenge 910 also includes a search/add field 820.
[0125] The extra large people lozenge 915 includes a full list 920
of all user contacts with a navigation aid 830 (e.g., scroll or
slider bar) that may be sorted by: a contact first name and a
contact last name. In addition, inputs (not shown) may be provided
to jump to a specific letter of a contact's name in the list. A
number of fields of data for each contact are also displayed. For
example, fields for a contact address 921, a contact phone number,
and a contact email address may be provided for each contact.
Information in the displayed fields also may be edited. The extra
large people lozenge 915 occupies roughly three times the size of a
normal strip.
[0126] Four additional inputs (not shown) are provided to interact
with the displayed lists of the extra large people lozenge 915:
select, edit, add, and aggro. Using the "select" input or directly
selecting a name from a list using a user input device (e.g., using
a mouse to single click on any contact name) causes the name to be
visually indicated (e.g., highlighted, bolded, outlined, etc.). In
addition, selecting a name causes the other strips to focus on or
present content associated with the selected contact, as explained
in further detail below. Selecting the "edit" input or a name
directly from a list using a user input device (e.g., by
double-clicking on the name) allows the user to update the contact
information. Selecting edit provides a pop-up area (not shown) with
information fields populated with a selected contact's information
that is stored in the contact DB. The user may edit any of the
fields and save the edited contact information. Selecting the "add"
input creates a pop-area including a number of blank data fields
which may be populated with a new contact's information. Selecting
the "aggro" input causes the contact aggregator to verify the
contact information stored for the selected contact in the contact
DB.
[0127] A number of symbols and indicators (not shown) may be used
in association with the names listed in the people lozenge to
provide additional information to a user. For example, a tiny email
envelope next to a contact name may be used to indicate, at a
glance, that a new message has been received from the contact. A
tiny calendar/clock icon next to a contact name may be used to
indicate a new calendar event has been established for the contact.
A tiny clock next to a contact name may be used to indicate that
the contact aggregator is in the process of aggregating this
contact's information. Colors (e.g., red, blue, purple, or green)
may be used to display the contact name of the list to indicate the
type of contact if the contact has been indicated to be one of
personal, work, friend, or family contact.
[0128] FIG. 9 also shows examples of a small, a medium, a large,
and an extra large "groups" lozenge of the WHO strip 731. The
groups lozenge allows the user to define and select groups in order
to organize their communications with multiple contacts. A color
(e.g., red, blue, or green) may be associated with each group name
to indicate the type of group based on the types of contacts the
group is composed of, such as, for example, personal, work, or
family. A group name listed in black indicates a group of contacts
from multiple groups. If there are more group names than space in
the tab a scroll bar or slider may be provided to navigate the
list.
[0129] The small groups lozenge 930 includes a title bar
"Groups."
[0130] The medium lozenge 935 includes a list 937 of a subset of a
user groups contacts. In one example, the medium groups lozenge 935
includes a list of the most popular and/or the groups most recently
communicated with. The list 937 may include the names of the top
ten groups; however, other numbers of groups may be provided. While
connected to the service provider system 110, the web server 143 in
conjunction with the applications server 144 monitors the user's
interaction with the user interface to populate the list with the
most relevant group names of interest to user. The medium groups
lozenge 935 also includes a search/add field 820.
[0131] The large groups lozenge 940 includes a full list 945 with a
navigation aid 830 (e.g., a scroll bar or slider) that may be
sorted by: the most recently selected group, a group name, a groups
with whom the user is currently communicating with, a group with
items that are on the calendar, a group that has been invited to an
event, a group size (e.g., number of members), a group's creation
date, and an RSVP or a not RSVP group. Any person, group, or
activity may be tagged by the user as an RSVP. This means that any
activity that includes the RSVP person or RSVP group must have all
contacts or groups of contacts tagged as RSVP agree to attend the
activity before the service provider system 110 identifies the
activity as booked. If a person, a group, or an activity is not so
tagged, then the activity may be booked regardless of how many
invitees agree to attend. The large groups lozenge 940 also
includes a search/add field 820.
[0132] The extra large groups lozenge 950 includes a full list of
all groups names 955 associated with the user and a navigation aid
830. For each group a list of contacts 957 in the group is
provided. In addition, a number of fields associated with each
group may be presented, such as, for example, a first name, a last
name, an email address, an address (e.g., house number and street
name) 958, a city, a state/province, a zip code/postal code, a
country, a home land line phone number, a mobile phone number, a
work land line phone number, a relationship to the user (e.g.,
friend, family, or business), and a RSVP flag (either yes or no).
All fields may be selected and edited by the user. Five additional
inputs (not shown) are provided on extra large groups lozenge 950:
select, edit, create a group, add a person, and aggro. Using the
"select" input or directly selecting a group name from the list
using a user input device (e.g., using a mouse to single click on
any group name) displays the names of all contacts within the group
(e.g., highlighted, bolded, outlined, etc.). In addition, selecting
a group name causes the other strips to focus on or present content
associated with the selected group. Focusing is described in
further detail below. Selecting the "edit" input or a group name
directly from the list using a user input device (e.g., by
double-clicking on the name) allows the user to edit the contacts
listed in the group. Selecting the "create a group" input allows a
user to create or define a group. Selecting the input "add a
person" allows the user to add a new contact to an existing group.
Selecting the "agro" input causes the contact aggregator to verify
the contact information of the contacts listed in the group.
[0133] A user also may create a group using the add/search field
820. The user may type in a new group name in the field 820 using a
user input device. The new group name is then displayed in the list
of groups 937 or 945. The user may then drag and drop one or more
names of contacts from the people lozenge to the group name in the
groups lozenge to automatically add those people to their groups.
Similarly, a user may automatically add a new contact to any
existing group by dragging a name of a contact from the people
lozenge to the group name in the groups lozenge.
[0134] In addition, the size of the people and groups lozenges have
a reciprocal relationship with each other. For example, when the
people lozenge is small, the groups lozenge is large. When either
the people or groups lozenges are medium the other lozenge also is
medium. When the group lozenge is small, the people lozenge is
large. When either the people or groups lozenges are extra large,
the lozenge occupies the entire WHO strip 73 1.
[0135] The WHAT strip 733 provides content and functionality
regarding a user's daily communications and activities. The WHAT
strip 733 helps the user manage and organize these communications
and activities through use of five lozenges: activities, to-do,
shopping, read, and send.
[0136] As shown in FIG. 10, the activities lozenge provides a list
of activities that a user frequently engages in order to help a
user plan events. The activities lozenge may be small or medium.
The small activities lozenge 1001 just includes a title "Lozenge."
The medium activities lozenge 1005 includes a list of activities
1007, for example, a top-ten list of activities. The top-ten list
is automatically populated based on a combination of the most
recently used user activities combined with activities that have
been most frequently repeated. A search/add data 820 entry field
also is provided. The data entry field 820 may be used to search
through a list of a user's prior activities or add a new activity
to the list. Adding a new activity causes a pop-up window to be
shown with fields that the user may choose to fill to further
define the activity.
[0137] In addition, the user interaction with the other lozenges
affects the list of activities provided through focusing. For
example, when a person or group's name is selected on the people or
groups lozenge, the activities lozenge shows the top-ten activities
that have been scheduled in the past with that person or group.
When a location is selected from the locations lozenge, the
activities lozenge is populated with up to ten activities that have
most frequently occurred at or in the vicinity of the location.
When a calendar date is selected, the activities lozenge is
populated by the most common activities that occur on that date.
For example, if a user selects Sunday morning, "Go to Church" might
appear in the activities list. If the user selects the evening of
February 14th, then "Valentines Day Dinner" may appear in
activities list. If a user selects their own name from the people
lozenge, then the activities lozenge is populated with the top ten
activities attended by the user. A user may select an activity from
the list 1007 with a user input device, and drag the activities
onto the calendar lozenge to a particular day and/or time to create
a calendar event for that activity, as explained in further detail
below.
[0138] FIG. 10 also shows an example of a small, a large, and an
extra large a To-Do lozenge. The To-Do lozenge helps keep of list
of items that a user wants to complete and keep track or be
reminded of.
[0139] The small To-Do lozenge 1010 just includes the title
"To-Do." The medium To-Do lozenge 1015 includes a list of up to the
ten oldest To-Do items 1017. Each To-Do item on the list 1017 may
include a user selectable input to indicate completion of the item,
such as a check or tick box. Using a user input device the user may
select the input to cause a visual mark to appear in the box (e.g.,
a check mark or x) to indicate that an item has been completed. In
addition, the marked item may be visually distinguished (e.g.,
highlighted or low lighted or grayed out) moved to the end of the
list and marked as "done." A search/add data field 820 may be
provided to search for a particular To-Do item from the list and to
add a new item to the To-Do list.
[0140] The large To-Do lozenge 1020 includes a complete list 1022
of all a user's To-Do items. In addition, a navigation aid 830 is
provided to navigate or scroll through the entire list if there are
more items on the list than may be displayed in the space provided.
A search/add data field 820 also is provided.
[0141] The To-Do items may have associated with them information
fields about chores and/or tasks that a user wishes to remember and
complete, such as a name field, a description field, a start
date/and or time field, a reminder field, and an indication of
completion of the item (e.g., "Done" or a completion date and/or
time). When open to the large or extra large lozenge, To-Do items
may be created by the user directly typing a new item in the list.
The To-Do list items may be re-ordered, edited, checked off by the
user. Items may be reordered simply by selecting an item and
dragging it to another position on the list. Each item may include
a user selectable input to indicate completion of the item, such as
a check box. Using a user input device the user may select the
input to cause an indication to appear in the box (e.g., a check
mark or x) to indicate that an items has be completed. In addition,
the checked item may be visually distinguished (e.g., highlighted
or low lighted or grayed out), moved to the end of the list and
marked as "done."
[0142] The extra large To-Do lozenge 1025 also includes a complete
list 1026 of all To-Do items and the various information fields,
such as, a completion indicator 1027, a date added 1028, a date
completed 1029, and a reminder date (not shown). The items may be
re-ordered, edited, checked off. The list may be sorted by: due
date, reminder date, when added, letter or alphabetically, and done
and/or completion date.
[0143] FIG. 10 also shows examples of the shopping lozenge. The
shopping lozenge may be used to keep track of all items to be
purchased by a user. FIG. 10 shows a small, a medium, a large, and
an extra large shopping lozenge. The small shopping lozenge 1030
just includes the title "Shopping." The medium shopping lozenge
1032 includes a list 1034 of up to ten oldest shopping or highest
priority shopping items. Each shopping item on the list 1034 may
include a user selectable input (e.g., a check or tick box) to
indicate the item has been purchased. Using a user input device the
user may select the input to cause a visual mark to appear in the
box (e.g., a check mark or x) to indicate that an item has been
purchased. In addition, the marked item may be visually
distinguished (e.g., highlighted or low lighted or grayed out)
moved to the end of the list and/or removed. A search/add data
field 820 may be provided to search for a particular shopping item
from the list and to add a new item to the list.
[0144] The large shopping lozenge 1040 includes a complete list
1042 of all a user's shopping items. The complete shopping list
1042 may be re-ordered, edited, checked off. Items may be reordered
simply by selecting an item and dragging it to another position on
the list. Each item may include a user selectable input to indicate
purchase of an item, such as a check box. Using a user input device
the user may select the input to cause an indication to appear in
the box (e.g., a check mark or x) to indicate that an items has
been purchased. Alternatively, purchased items may be removed from
the list. In addition, a navigation aid 830 is provided to navigate
or scroll through the entire list if there are more items on the
list than may be displayed in the space provided. A search/add data
field 820 also is provided to add items or items may be added by
directly typing them in the list.
[0145] The extra large shopping lozenge 1043 also includes a
complete list 1045 of all shopping items in addition to various
information fields, such as, a user selectable input to indicate
purchase of an item 1046, a description 1047, a date added, a date
purchased, and an amount 1049. Shopping items may be created and
added to the shopping list by the user directly typing a new item
in the list. The items may be re-ordered, edited, checked off. The
list may be sorted by: description, date purchased, amount, date
added, and by letter or alphabetically.
[0146] FIG. 10 also shows an example of a small, a medium, a large,
and an extra large read lozenge. The read lozenge also a user to
receive and manipulate various communications directed to the
user.
[0147] The small read lozenge 1060 just includes the title
"Read."
[0148] The medium read lozenge 1062 includes a list of identifiers
1064 for the most recent, unopened, new messages and/or threads
that have been received by the service provider system 110 directed
to the user. The list may include an indicator of the contact from
whom the message was sent and a subject indication.
[0149] The large read lozenge 1065 includes a complete list 1067 of
identifiers for all new messages and/or threads stored by the
service provider system 110 which have not yet been responded to by
the user. The identifiers may include a name of the contact sending
the message and a topic of the thread. In addition, an indication
(not shown) of the number of new messages associated with the
thread or topic may be provided. If there are more message
indicators than may be displayed in area of the lozenge a
navigation aid 830 (e.g., a scroll bar, a slider bar, direction
arrow keys, grab and move pointer, or a pointing device) may be
used to navigate through or see the remaining portion of the list.
In addition, search/add field 820 may be provided to search for a
message.
[0150] FIG. 11 shows and example of the extra large read lozenge
1070. The extra large read lozenge 1070 includes a complete list
1075 of identifiers messages and/or threads stored by the service
provider system 110 in addition to various information fields, such
as, a contact sending the message 1076, a topic of the message
1077, a date the message was received 1078, a number of entries in
the message thread 1079, and who is to respond to the message 1080.
Next to each identifier (not shown) an indication of how long
(e.g., minutes, hours, days) the sender of a message has been
waiting for a response. The user may select any identifier of any
thread to read, edit responses, add responses, and perform other
actions. Five input filtering options selections are provided for
these threads: current subjects, by person, by date, by lateness,
and archived. The current subjects input may be selected to display
indicators of threads that are current. Current may be defined as a
period of time set by the user's preferences and/or may include
indicators of threads that have not been responded too. The by
person input sorts the list of thread indicators alphabetically by
contact name. The by date input sorts the list of threads
indicators by date listing the newest threads first. The by
lateness input sorts the list of thread indicators by respondent
lateness. The archived input opens a complete list of indicators of
archived threads that have previously been closed by the user.
[0151] As shown in FIG. 12, selecting any thread or message
indicator from either the list with a user input device (e.g.,
using a cursor or pointer or highlighted area controlled by a
mouse, keypad/board, pointing device, touch-screen/pad to select
the thread indicator) opens the thread in a popup window 1200 for
viewing by the user. The window 1200 may include an informational
area 1201 and a message area 1202. The informational area 1201
includes the type of message (e.g., personal, business, group) (not
shown), the message thread identifier 1205, a start time of the
message thread (not shown), and a time of last response (not
shown). The message area 1202 includes an area 1210 (e.g., a
rounded box) at the top of the message thread 1211 where the user
may enter or type their response to the latest received message
1212. Below the box is the text of each piece of the message thread
1211 and an indicator 1215 of whom the piece text of the thread was
generated by. A message type/link icon 1220 may be provided in the
window next to each received text which notifies the user which
account or media type (e.g., POP3 work, POP3 home, virtual fax, IM,
SMS, site specific email, etc.) that was used to send the text
associated with the message. Selecting the icon 1220 with a user
input device opens another window (not shown) to display the
original message in its full original format.
[0152] FIG. 10 also shows an example of the send lozenge. The send
lozenge is used to send messages to contacts. The send lozenge may
be locked at the end of the WHAT strip 733 and is provided in only
as a small send lozenge 1080. In one example, the small send
lozenge 1080 may be slightly larger than other small lozenges to
accommodate one or more inputs 1081. In one example, the inputs are
share, chat, and organize (not shown).
[0153] To send a message the user simply selects a name of a
contact from the people lozenge, or the name of a group from the
group lozenge of the WHO strip 731 using a user input device. After
selecting the name, the user drags the name from the list of the
WHO strip 731 onto any one of the buttons: share, chat, and
organize. Alternatively, the user may select one of the inputs 1081
with a user input device. Selecting one of the send inputs 1081
causes the service provider system 110 to create a pop-up window
for display as a screen on the user device. The screen (not shown)
includes the message "Who shall I send the message to?" The screen
also includes a window in which the user may type the contact or
group name or select a name from a drop down menu.
[0154] The share button may be used to share pictures, videos, web
sites, computer documents (e.g., PDF, MS Word, etc.), FYI, change
of address, newsletter, and a vacation notification) and other
content with contacts and groups. The chat button may be used for
personal talk, group talk, polls, and event creation. The organize
button may be used to create an event (one-time or repeating), such
as, an appointment, a meeting, a party/group event; an RSVP party
(e.g., a wedding or a birthday), a potluck or any other gathering
of contacts. Each input causes a popup window to request
information typically specific to that type of communication. If
the name of the group or contact is dragged to the button, the
popup window is automatically populated with the contact
information for the type of message. Once the user enters the
requested information, the message is sent by the service provider
system 110 using the selected format and/or protocol for the type
of message. In addition, the threader adds the message to the
message archive.
[0155] The WHAT strip 733 also may include a buy lozenge as shown
in FIG. 13. The buy lozenge may be small, medium, large or extra
large. The WHAT strip 733 also may include a buy lozenge. FIG. 13
shows examples of the small, medium, large or extra large buy
lozenge. The small buy lozenge 1301 just includes the title "buy."
The user can drag any item to the buy lozenge to instruct the
service provider system 110 to purchase the item. The medium buy
lozenge 1310 includes a list 1315 of the top five items that the
system is currently trying to buy for a user. The large buy lozenge
1320 includes a complete list 1325 of all items being purchased by
the system. The extra large buy lozenge 1330 provides a complete
list 1333 of all items being purchased by the system. If there are
more items that can be displayed, a navigation aid 820 is provided.
A description area 1335 provides information 1340 about a selected
item 1345 from the list. The information may include a name,
delivery date, delivery location, total price, account payment was
made by. In addition, a change buying preferences button 1350 is
provided to access various fields that store user preferences
allowing a user to specify price ranges for products, payment
information, delivery addresses and other instructions pertinent to
making a purchase.
[0156] The personal profile allows a user to specify specific items
and types of items the system service provider 110 may
automatically buy for the user. The user may specify what price
ranges (e.g., a maximum, a minimum or both) that are okay for the
system service provider to user in determining whether to make a
purchase. The user profile buy information may include payment
information, such as credit card, debit card, paypal, online
banking information, a single purchase spending limit, a monthly
purchase spending limit, and a card balance limit. The user also
may specify shipping preferences, such as carrier preference (e.g.,
UPS, Fed-X, USPS, etc.), transit preference (e.g., overnight, 2
day, "slow and cheap"), shipping address, special shipping
instructions (e.g., doorbell inoperative), and instant delivery
preferences.
[0157] The buy lozenge may be withheld or not appear on the WHAT
strip 733 until a user provides their user buy information. Once
set up, the user can drag any item to the buy lozenge to instruct
the system service provider to purchase item. For example, a user
has a To-Do item that identifies "Replace flapper valve." The user
drags the item to the BUY button. The service provider system 110
determines the best price available online for a toilet flapper
valve, orders it using the provided customer buy information, and
places an item or event on the user's calendar with the expected
arrival date.
[0158] In another example, the user has an item, or items on the
shopping list that they are unable to find time to buy, or would
prefer not go shopping for the item at this time. The user drags
the entire shopping list, or individual items to the BUY button,
and the service provider system then buys those items for the user.
In another example, a user has a calendar appointment, such as BBQ.
In this example the user drags that item to BUY causing the service
provider system 110 to look up a user profile and determine a
user's identified foods associated with an event, such as a BBQ.
The service provider system 110 then purchases the user's
identified BBQ foods. Similarly, a calendar appointment "ski trip"
causes the service provider system 110 to book transportation
(flight from local air port to destination), lodging (e.g., hotel
for nights specified by trip event in calendar), and activities
(e.g., advance purchase of lift tickets for closest ski resort). In
yet another example, the user drags a contact name onto the BUY
button. The service provider system 110 identifies any dates,
events, or activities associated with the contact (e.g., birthday,
Christmas, retirement party). The service provider system 110 may
purchase a gift for the specified contact. If the contact is a user
of the service provider system 110, the system may use receiver's
profile in determining a suitable gift.
[0159] The WHERE strip 735 provides information above a user's
favorite places (e.g., restaurants), locations, destinations,
addresses, and other information such as maps and navigation aids.
The user may look at or create instant maps to link any locations
together and/or receive point-to-point directions. The WHERE strip
735 includes two lozenges: maps and location. FIG. 14 shows
examples of small, medium, large and extra large maps and locations
lozenges.
[0160] The locations lozenge includes locations of interest to a
user. The small locations lozenge 1401 just includes a title
"locations." The medium locations lozenge 1405 includes a short
locations list 1410 of up to ten locations that may be interest to
a user at any particular moment. Examples of locations: may be
restaurants, businesses the user frequents (stores, malls,
markets), contact's address, institutions frequented by the user
(schools, DMV, church, parks). In particular, the system service
provider 110 focus the locations provided in the list 1410 based on
the user's interaction with the other lozenges of the user
interface. For example, when the user selects a contact from the
people lozenge, the list 1410 is populated with the "Top Ten"
locations associated with that person. When a user selects a group
from the group lozenge, the list is populated with the "Top Ten"
locations associated with that group. When an activity from the
activities lozenge is selected, the list 1410 is populated with the
"Top Ten" locations associated with that activity. When any time
and date in the calendar is selected, the list 1410 is populated
with the "Top Ten" locations associated with that day at that time.
The medium locations lozenge 1401 also includes a search/ add data
entry field 820. The search/add field 820 may be used to search for
a location within the user's database of locations associated with
the user. As a user enters characters within the field, the system
automatically provide a list of locations (not shown) matching
those letters typed by the user. The user may select any location
from the list at any time or continue adding characters. If a
location entered in the field 820 is not in the database, the
service provider system 110 asks the user if they wish to add the
location to the database. If so, the system saves the location in a
database of locations associated with the user.
[0161] The large location lozenge 1415 includes a complete list of
user locations 1417. If there are more locations than may be
displayed in area provided by the lozenge, a navigation aid 830
(e.g., a scroll bar, a slider bar, direction arrow keys, grab and
move pointer, or a pointing device) may be used to navigate through
or see the remaining portion of the list. In addition, search/add
field 820 may be provided to search for or add a location.
[0162] FIG. 14 also shows the maps lozenge. The maps lozenge
provides an easy to use interface to allow a user to search for and
find information about a location.
[0163] The small maps lozenge 1425 just includes a title
"locations." The medium maps lozenge 1430 includes small map window
1435 for a selected location. An address 1437 for the location also
may be displayed along with several inputs (not shown), such as
print directions, send to mobile device, and share location.
[0164] The large maps lozenge 1440 also includes a map window 1435,
a location address area 1437, user inputs 1439, and a custom finder
1450. The extra large maps lozenge 1455 has the same functionality
as the large map lozenge but includes a larger map window 1435 and
a driving directions window.
[0165] The map window 1435 shows a map of a location. The maps
lozenge location is focused based on a person selected from the
people lozenge or an activity selected from the activities lozenge,
or as a result of selection a location or using the input field 820
to look up an address on the locations lozenge. The map displayed
by the map window 1435 may be scalable to zoom in and out from a
birds-eye-view using a user input device. For example, user inputs
(not shown) neighborhood, city, county, state, and region may be
provided to adjust the area displayed by the map, a slider bar may
be selected to zoom in and out, or buttons 1460 may be selected to
increase or decrease the scale of the map. In addition, the user
input device may be used to control the zoom feature (e.g., a
scroll wheel provided on a mouse). The map may include an indicator
of the location within the context of the map.
[0166] Using a screen position indicator (e.g., a cursor or a
pointer) in conjunction with a user input device (e.g., a key
pad/board/buttons or a mouse) or using input directly from a user
input device (e.g., a stylus or finger touching a touch screen) the
user may select a point on the map. Maintaining selection on the
map, the user may manipulate the position indicator or stylus in
along one or two axis to draw a box or rectangle on the map. After
drawing the box, the system automatically populates the area
outlined by the box with information and/or indicators of all
contacts and/or events that have addresses stored by the system
databases that correspond to the location on the map within the
user drawn box. Position of a cursor or pointer on the indicators
causes a pop address (not shown) to appear associated with the
indicator.
[0167] The maps lozenge includes several user selectable inputs
1537: directions to this location, find near this location, and
transfer data to GPS/Smartphone. Selecting directions to this
location provides directions to the selected location from a
current location of the user (as determined from the user database
or GPS data provided by the user device 101). Additionally, the
user may provide a start location to manually configure a desired
route.
[0168] The find near this location inputs include a dynamic list of
a number of inputs that are most likely to be desired by a user
viewing the location information. The service provider system may
determine the dynamic list based on data stored in the user profile
(e.g., favorites and dislikes provided by the user) and/or
empirical information of data found most useful by users. For
example, the inputs fuel stations, restaurants, and WIFI hotspots
may be selected. Selecting any one of the inputs causes a visual
indicator to appear on the map of the locations associated with the
selected input. Placing a cursor, a pointer, or other user
controllable selection mark over the indicator causes a small popup
to display in association with the indicator giving more details
and a dynamic hyperlink to a webpage for the entity represented by
the indicator. In addition, selecting the indicator allows the user
to obtain directions to the address associated with the displayed
entity.
[0169] The transfer data to GPS/SMART phone input allows a user to
transfer information, such as directions or files stored by the
system service provider 110 to a user's mobile device. As a result,
the user may access the directions or files using the mobile
device.
[0170] The custom map finder 1450 provides a window that includes a
number of inputs 1466 that may be selected by the user to populate
the map with information. The service provider system 110
automatically populates the list with inputs based on the user's
profile and interaction with the system. The list shown in the
example of FIG. 14 includes inputs for Mexican food, pizza, Ford
parts, and Art Theatres. Selection of in input, for example, fuel
stations, causes the map to display indicators for fuel stations
within the displayed area of the map window. The list of inputs is
dynamic and is automatically populated at any particular time by
the system to display those inputs to be of most use to a user. For
example, the system may use time of day (e.g., lunch time or diner
time) to display inputs for food choices based on the user profile
stored in the system DB. Other inputs may be chosen based on
information provided by the user questionnaire and user profile
stored in the database, for example, indicated interests and
hobbies of the user. The system may also search a user's upcoming
events to populate the list with inputs. For example, if a task on
the To-Do list includes "Get oil changed for Car" the dynamic list
may be populated with the input service stations. If the user has
an event scheduled, the list may provide an input "hotels" to
suggest places to stay based on the event location.
[0171] The search/add window 820 may be provided to allow a user to
manually enter in a location, name, contact, or business using a
user input device. The input is provided to the system (e.g., by
selecting an enter button or selecting and icon such as a
magnifying glass). The system performs a search based on the input
information and displays a result. The user selects an item from
the list. The address is then displayed as the location and the map
is automatically adjusted to display the location based on the
selection.
[0172] The WHEN strip 737 keeps track of time sensitive or related
information for the user. The WHEN strip 737 includes a single
lozenge: a calendar lozenge. The calendar lozenge displays
information for a user including indicators, identifiers, and data
for all activities, to-do items, appointments, and other data items
having a time based element that the system 110 tracks for the user
to allow a user to manage and organize their daily events. The size
of the days and weeks dynamical adjust based on user interaction
with the calendar lozenge, as explained in further detail below.
The calendar lozenge may be large and extra large. FIG. 15 shows an
example of the large calendar lozenge 1501. The large calendar
lozenge 1501 provides an agenda area 1510 and a mini calendar 1515.
The agenda area 1510 shows a list of the user's next ten events.
The mini calendar is a smaller calendar that shows busy and free
times but no details. The large calendar is two columns wide.
[0173] FIG. 16 shows the extra large calendar lozenge 1601. The
extra large calendar lozenge 1501 is approximately three columns
wide. The extra large calendar lozenge 1601 includes a calendar
indication days of the week (e.g., Sunday-Saturday) and days of the
month (e.g., 1-28, 1-29, 1-30, and 1-31). The calendar also
includes an information bar 1615. The information bar 1615 includes
an indicator of the month 1617, the year 1619, a today button 1620,
and inputs 1625 personal, family, friends, and business to control
display of items within the calendar to present events associated
with a selected input. The month indicator 1617 displays the month
(e.g., May) currently displayed by the calendar. The month may be
changed by selecting the arrow inputs 1627 to either side of the
month indicator 1617 to move to the next or previous month from the
month displayed. The year indicator may be selected to change the
year displayed. Additional inputs week view 1630 may be used to
adjust the size of any week displayed, as described below. One or
more the inputs 1625 may be selected at anytime to toggle the
display of events associated with the selected event category
(e.g., personal, family, friends, and business). For example,
selecting personal and family causes the calendar to display user
events of type personal and family. Unselecting an input removes
those corresponding events. In this example, unselecting family
causes all events of family type to be removed leaving only
personal events displayed.
[0174] Within each day displayed on the calendar are indicators for
any calendar events stored by the system associated with that date
for a user. As shown in FIG. 16, the calendar is focused on
personal calendar events of the user. The calendar events may
include To-do items or reminders (e.g., 7 am May 1.sup.st "walk the
dog"), shopping items (not shown), activities (e.g., 8 pm May
16.sup.th "Bowling League" and "Ski Trip"), and appointments,
seminars, engagement, and meetings (e.g., 4 PM may 3.sup.rd "BBQ"
and "Management Retreat"), and coupons and/or advertisements from
the glad bar (not shown).
[0175] The user may create an event by selecting an item from any
lozenge with a user input device and dragging the item from the
originating lozenge to a date and/or time within the calendar
lozenge. For example, a user can drag a name from the people or the
group lozenge, an activity from the activities lozenge, a to-do
item form the to-do lozenge, an email from the read lozenge, a
shopping item from the shopping lozenge, and address from the maps
lozenge, a location from the locations lozenge, to a calendar date
to create an event. For example, the user may select contacts
"Bob", "Cindy", and "Jennifer" from the people lozenge, "Ski Trip"
from the activities lozenge, and "Big Bear" from the locations
lozenge, and drags them all to the Sunday May 4.sup.th to create a
ski trip calendar event 1635. A calendar event popup window with
data fields is then presented to the user, as shown in FIG. 17.
[0176] FIG. 17 shows a user interface with the event popup window
1601. The window 1601 includes a number of data entry fields that
are automatically populated with information corresponding to the
items dragged onto the date (e.g., the people, the activity, and
the location in this example). For example, the window 1701 may
include the data entry fields nickname 1710, location 1720,
description 1730, attendees 1733, start 1735, end 1737, and
category 1740 (e.g., personal, family, friends, and business).
Information missing from the data entry fields may then be supplied
by the user. Once the information is supplied, the user may select
the save button 1745 to stored information in the user database for
the event and close the popup window. A cancel button 1750 may be
used close the window and cancel the event. A calendar event also
may be created by selecting a date and/or time directly from the
calendar using a user input device causing the event popup window
1701 to be presented in which the user may enter information in any
pertinent field and/or drag items from other lozenges onto the
popup window.
[0177] A calendar event may be given a nickname (e.g., "Ski Trip)
as the identifier displayed in the calendar for easy reading and/or
identification by a user. The item name field may be used to
automatically build a nickname. For example, if the nickname is
left blank the system automatically picks the name of a lozenge
item dragged to create the event. For example, if ski trip is
dragged for the activity lozenge then the event nickname may
default to ski trip. The nickname may be edited by the user to
override any automatically generated nickname.
[0178] In another example, items directly dragged to a calendar
date may automatically create an event. If a lozenge item is
dragged to any date on the calendar in the month view, an event is
automatically created at for noon on the that date with whatever
content is associated with the lozenge. For example, if Bill is
dragged to June 1, an event nickname Bill is provided for a 1 hour
meeting with Bill at noon on June 1.sup.st. A message is sent to
invite Bill. The user may select the item on the calendar to access
the event and to edit or provide further details. If a lozenge item
is dragged to the expanded week view or day view, then the event is
scheduled for the hour time slot the item is dragged to on the
calendar as a default. The hour slot is also visual highlighted or
shaded to indicate the planed time of the meeting. The user may
then adjust the timing of the event using a pointing user input
device to select the a border or portion of the highlighted region
to expand or contract the highlighted area to increase or decrease,
respectively, the time scheduled for the event.
[0179] The service provider system stores the calendar event
information in the user database. The database has a number of
associated fields, such as a general type (e.g., appointment,
activity, entertainment, travel, and meeting). In addition, the
fields also provide for time and date, start and end, attendees,
invitees, a location, items needed, event category type (e.g.,
personal, friends, family, and business), among others. Any
information associated with a lozenge that is dragged to create the
event is populated in the fields. This information may be changed,
deleted or supplemented by the user. In addition, the fields also
may be customized for information solicited based on the type of
event (e.g., a particular activity, such as "BBQ" may include
additional information like catering, potluck, bring an item). The
information requested by the fields may be filled in by entering
information in the field using a user input device. In addition,
further items may be dragged from lozenges to the popup window to
continue to fill out the event information. For example, additional
names may be dragged from the people lozenge, a location from the
location lozenge, a shopping list from the shopping lozenge. In
addition to the nickname, a descriptor, a description/notes, and an
advertisement or coupon from the graphic/advertising bar may be
provided.
[0180] Once the information fields are filled in and provided to
the system, an event may be automatically organized by the system
as described in U.S. application Ser. No. 12/141104, titled
"Communications System with Dynamic Calendar," filed Jun. 18, 2008,
which is herein incorporated by reference in its entirety.
[0181] All items shown in the calendar are color coded based on an
event type, such as personal, family, business, and friends. In
addition, inputs 1625 are provided to filter information displayed
in the calendar. For example, inputs 1625 personal, business,
family, friends may be provided to filter or overlay display of
calendar items of the type selected or a combination thereof. One,
several, or all of the inputs 1625 may be selected at any time.
Color coded identifiers for each calendar event are shown on their
respective days. If there are more identifiers than may be shown in
the space provided, the identifiers shown may be filtered. For
example, a priority (such as importance, time of day, next
occurring, events requiring user action or providing updated
information or alerts) or the types of events shown (e.g., family,
friends, business, personal), or a combination thereof may be used
to filter the information presented. In addition, if sufficient
space is unavailable the events displayed may be periodically
rotated.
[0182] The system service provider 110 maintains calendar data for
each system user. As a result, the calendar may be used to show
data from other calendars which may be useful in planning events,
such as meetings. For example, selecting the identifier for a
system user "Frank" from a user's people lozenge causes the
calendar 1601 to change to the calendar shown in FIG. 18. As shown
in FIG. 18, the calendar 1801 now includes indications 1805 of
periods of occupied time for which Frank has events scheduled. This
is very useful for user's trying to schedule meeting. For example,
looking at the calendar 1801, the user may determine the morning of
May 17.sup.th, Frank is unavailable to have a meeting. Holding a
cursor/pointer over the indications 1705 causes a popup indication
of the exact time period when in the month view shown in FIG.
18.
[0183] In addition, event categories also may be used to
filter/display information. For example, FIG. 19 shows the user has
selected the input 1625 family to display calendar 1901. As shown,
the events walk the dog, management retreat, and bowling league
have been removed, family event "ski trip" is shown. In addition,
family members events for Jenifer 1910 and Carol 1920 are
shown.
[0184] A unique feature of the calendar that it dynamically adjusts
the space needed to display portions of the calendar while
maintaining presentation of every day in the month displayed, as
shown in FIG. 20, 21, and 22. FIG. 20 shows a calendar lozenge with
the calendar in the month view 1601. As shown, a week view input
1530 is provided for each week displayed in the month view
1601.
[0185] Selecting the week view input 1630 for the week of May
5.sup.th though the 11.sup.th expands the area used to display the
selected week on the screen while reducing the other weeks
presented by a corresponding amount, in the expanded week view as
shown in FIG. 21. In the expanded week view 2101, more event
identifiers may be displayed concurrently and other event details
and information in addition to the event identifier (e.g., a time
of event) may be presented. Additionally, segments for the hours
during each expanded day or a timeline may be presented. At the
same time, all other days outside the expanded week shrink to a
smaller size. In this mode, the small days use color codes in
combination with a number indicate events for that day. The color
indicates the type of event that day and the number indicated the
number of events of this type on that date.
[0186] Two additional inputs are also provided. An expand input
2110 is provided for each day in the expanded week and a month view
input 2120 is provided for the expended week. Selection of the
month view input 2120 causes the screen to return to the month view
1601 shown in FIG. 20.
[0187] Selection of the expand input 2110 for any day in the week
causes the area for the selected day to expand with a corresponding
reduction in the area of the remaining days in the expanded week as
shown in FIG. 22. The expanded day view 2201 may include a time
line, larger fonts, and addition information provided for each
event (such as identifier, time, location, attendees, and notes).
In addition, a today button 1620 is provided on all of the views
(2001, 2101, and 2201) to automatically expand the calendar to the
expanded day view 2201 open to the current date. The expanded day
view 2201 also may include a week view input 1630 to return the
week to the expanded week view 2101, and a month view input 2120
also is provided to cause the screen to return to the month view
1601 shown in FIG. 20.
Item Dragging
[0188] Because the service provider system 110 dynamically
maintains all system user data, any item from a lozenge may be
selected by a user input device and moved to another lozenge (e.g.,
dragging a selected item in one lozenge to the area of the user
interface defining or occupied by a second lozenge) to cause the
system to automatically perform an actions and services. This
allows a user to harness the information stored by and the
automation provided by the system to perform tasks for the user in
a straight forward and easy manner. For example, a user may select
and drag a person or a group from the people or groups lozenge to:
the calendar to create an appointment or to the send lozenge to
send a message to the person or group
[0189] FIGS. 23-25 shows an example of adding a user to a group.
FIG. 23 shows the user has selected "me" 2301 from the people
lozenge. The selection 2301 causes the groups lozenge to focus on
groups the user belongs to. FIG. 24 shows that Contact "Charles
Miller" 2401 is selected from the people lozenge and dragged 2402
to the group "Biker Club" 2410. In response, the service provider
system 110 automatically accesses the user database and adds an
indication for "Charles Miller" to group "Biker Club." FIG. 25
shows the "Biker Club" 2510 is selected causing the people,
activities, read, and locations lozenges to focus on the biker club
related items. For example, people is focused to contact in the
Bike Club (e.g., Me, Charles Miller, Jeff White, and Donald Lewis),
activities is focused to bike activities (e.g., biker night,
charity run, poker run), the read lozenge includes message sent by
Bike Club members (e.g., Next Ride, Good Mechanic, and My New
Bike), and locations to bike related locations (e.g., Route 66,
Piston Club, Harley Dealership, Bike world).
[0190] In another example, items directly dragged to a calendar
date may automatically create an event. If a lozenge item is
dragged to any date on the calendar in the month view, an event is
automatically created for noon on that date with whatever content
is associated with the lozenge. For example, if Bill is dragged to
June 1, an event nickname Bill is provided for a 1 hour meeting
with Bill at noon on June 1st. A message is sent to invite Bill.
The user may select the item on the calendar to access the event
and to edit or provide further details. If a lozenge item is
dragged to the expanded week view or day view, then the event is
scheduled for the hour time slot the item is dragged to on the
calendar as a default. The hour slot is also visual highlighted or
shaded to indicate the planed time of the meeting. The user may
then adjust the timing of the event using a pointing user input
device to select a border or portion of the highlighted region to
expand or contract the highlighted area to increase or decrease,
respectively, the time scheduled for the event.
[0191] Combinations of items also may be dragged and dropped as
shown in FIGS. 26-30. For example, FIG. 26 shows a contact "Sarah
Baker" 2601 is selected from the people lozenge causing the other
lozenges to focus based on Sarah Baker. FIG. 27 shows the user has
selected "dinner" 2701 from the activities lozenge causing the
locations lozenge to focus on dinner locations. FIG. 28 shows the
selection of a location "Venti Bar" 2801 from the locations
lozenge. FIG. 29 show the user drags 2901 the selected items to
Saturday May 10.sup.th on the calendar lozenge. The system then
automatically creates an event in the calendar for dinner at the
Venti Bar with Sarah on May 10.sup.th and displays a corresponding
indicator 3001 as shown in FIG. 30. Of course, many other
combinations are possible.
[0192] In another example shown in FIGS. 31-34 a user creates an
event using a location. As shown in FIG. 31, the user selects
themselves 3101 in the people lozenge to focus on the user. As
shown in FIG. 32 the user then selects a location "McDonalds" 3201
from the locations lozenge causing the people lozenge to focus on
people the user goes typically invites to McDonalds, groups which
go to McDonalds, activities that take place at McDonalds, a map to
a McDonalds. FIG. 33 shows the user drags 3301 the location to a
date on the calendar lozenge (e.g., May 22.sup.nd). FIG. 34 shows
the service provider system 110 then creates an event in the user's
database for the user at McDonalds on the Thursday May 22, 2008 and
displays an identifier 3401 for the event on the calendar.
[0193] Table 1 table gives some examples of other actions that may
be performed by selecting items displayed in the lozenges and
dragging them to other lozenges.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Action Lozenge Lozenge Action Help any any
item dragged to help? or ? dragged to any item opens context
sensitive help Combos (after click to highlight who + what when
creates cal event with those item fields populated who + where when
creates cal event with those item fields populated - prompts for
event name who + what + when creates cal event with those item
fields populated - where prompts for event name where + what when
creates cal event with those item fields populated Single Items
People Groups adds person to group People Blank Group adds person
to group, prompts for new group name People To Do creates empty to
do with text "with FN LN" People Shopping creates empty shopping
item with text "for FN LN" People Read Same as select/highlight -
shows all messages from the dragged/selected person's name People
Send - Share Open a "new share" box, user may drag files (using the
computer's OS) or select them with a BROWSE button, then click
SHARE People Send - Open a "new message" box, user may type a
message then Discuss click SEND People Calendar creates event that
includes that person (blank area) (prompts for event name, etc.)
People Calendar adds person to event attendee list Appointment
People User Picture adds contact image to slideshow People Family
changes relationship of contact to family People Business changes
relationship of contact to business People Friends changes
relationship of contact to friends People A Glad Sends that Glad to
that person via email People Groups People adds person to group
Groups To Do creates empty to do with text "with <group
name>" Groups Shopping creates empty shopping item with text
"for <group name>" Groups Read Same as select/highlight -
shows all messages from the dragged/selected group name Groups Send
- Share Open a "new share" box, user may drag files (using the
computer's OS) or select them with a BROWSE button, then click
SHARE to share them with that entire group Groups Send - Open a
"new message" box, user may type a message then Discuss click SEND
to send that message to that entire group Groups Calendar creates
event that includes that group (blank area) (prompts for event
name, etc.) Groups Calendar adds group to event attendee list
Groups A Glad Sends that Glad to that group via email Activities To
Do creates to do item with activity name Activities Read Same as
select/highlight - shows all messages associated with the dragged
activity Activities Send - Opens a requester "Who would you like to
discuss this activity Discuss with?" Activities Calendar creates
event (cal event name = activity) (blank area) Activities Calendar
changes name of event to new activity Appointment (cal event name =
activity) To Do People appends to do item with text "with <FN
LN>" To Do Groups appends to do item with text "with <group
name>" To Do Shopping To-Do list is moved to Shopping List To Do
Send - Opens a requester "Who would you like to discuss this To-Do
Discuss List item with?" To Do Calendar creates cal event (to do
item = cal event name) (blank area) To Do Calendar changes name of
event to new activity Appointment (cal event name = to do item) To
Do Locations Creates to do item "go to <location name>" To Do
Shopping People Opens an email to that person, subject is "Shopping
for <item>", then the user may continue to type a message and
click the SEND button. Shopping Groups Opens an email to that
group, subject is "Shopping for <item>", then the user may
continue to type a message and click the SEND button. Shopping To
Do creates to do "go shopping for <shopping list item>"
Shopping Send - Opens a requester "Who would you like to discuss
this Discuss Shopping List item with?" Shopping Calendar create cal
event "go shopping for <shopping list item>" (blank area)
Shopping Calendar Changes name of event to Appointment "go shopping
for <shopping list item>" Read People Open a "new message"
box, user may type a message then click SEND to send that message
to that person Read Groups Open a "new message" box, user may type
a message then click SEND to send that message to that entire group
Read To Do Adds message title to To-Do list Read Shopping Adds
message title to Shopping list Read Send - Share Open a "new share"
box, user may drag files (using the computer's OS) or select them
with a BROWSE button, then click SHARE to share them with that the
addressee list found in that message Read Calendar Opens an event
with the activity set to the message title, with (blank area) the
attendee list set to the addressee values. Missing will be a
location. Read Calendar Adds message title to "comments" section of
the existing Appointment appointment
Focusing
[0194] The user interface also provides a unique feature called
"focusing." Focusing intuitively connects all of the interface's
basic functionality and content to provide the features and the
content that are generally the most useful to a user at any
particular moment in time. For example, whenever a user selects an
item provided by one of the four strips WHO 731, WHAT 733, WHERE
735, and WHEN 737, the other strips and lozenges automatically
react by providing the user with the content and features within
the context of each strip that the user may most likely desire
based on the user's selection.
[0195] Whenever a user selects a contact name for a person or a
group the other strips automatically adjust the information
displayed based on the selection. For example, if the user selects
"John Merk" in the People lozenge of the WHO strip 73 1, then the
Read lozenge of the WHAT strip 733 also displays all current
message threads between the user and John Merk. Similarly, the
Calendar lozenge of the WHEN strip 737 displays all upcoming
appointments with John Merk and all events that the user is
coordinating with him; and the maps lozenge of the WHERE strip 735
displays an address and associated map for John Merk.
[0196] Focusing may be initiated by selection of content, inputs,
or features from any of the strips of the user interface. For
example, if the user selects a new message "John Erikson about
Fishing Trip," the People lozenge displays a list of the contacts
associated with the Fishing Trip, and the Calendar tab displays the
event on the calendar which is being referred to, and the locations
lozenge of the WHERE strip 735 displays the boat company chartered
for the trip and a map of the area surrounding the boat launch. In
another example, if the user selects an event "Weekend Away" from
the activities lozenge, the conversational thread regarding this
event opens automatically in the Read lozenge of the WHAT strip
733, and the People lozenge opens to show Sharon's contact
information.
[0197] FIG. 35 shows an example of a process 3500 for focusing of
the lozenges. The process starts 3501 when a user accesses the user
interface. The server initially populates the people lozenge with
"Me" which is automatically highlighted as default in the initial
startup of the user interface 3505.
[0198] The applications server determines up to ten contacts from
the user contact database for the highlighted name in the peoples
lozenge. The server selects the contacts based on the ten most
frequently used contact, the ten most recently used contacts, or a
combination of both. The server uses the determined contacts to
fill the contact list of the people lozenge 3510.
[0199] The applications server determines up to ten of the most
used groups which include the name of the contact highlighted in
the people lozenge (in the first instance it is the default "me").
The determined groups are then used to fill the group contact list
of groups lozenge 3515.
[0200] The applications server determines up to ten of the most
frequently used activities scheduled with name highlighted in the
people lozenge. During an initial period of use, or if there are
few activities the user has actually participated in, the system
may select activities from a default list of activities based on
the user profile in conjunction with the time of day, the weather,
any nearby holidays, the user's location, and the time of year. The
server uses the determined activities to populate the list of
activities display in the activities lozenge 3517.
[0201] The applications server determines up to ten of the most
used locations scheduled for the contact name highlighted in the
people lozenge. The server uses the determined locations to
populate the list of locations provided by the locations lozenge
3520.
[0202] The applications server determines message threads involving
the contact highlighted in the people lozenge. The server selects
up to ten message threads and populates the read lozenge with the
thread identifiers of the selected message threads 3522. The server
selects the newest threads over older or unanswered threads.
[0203] The applications server determines all events including the
contact highlighted in the people lozenge. The server populates the
calendar with the determined events including the highlighted
contact and the user 3525. If the highlighted contact is not the
user (i.e., "me" is not highlighted) and the contact is a user of
the service provider system 110, the calendar displays any "busy
time" from that person within the calendar lozenge (e.g., black
areas labeled with that person's name).
[0204] The system monitors the user interaction with the user
interface and determines whether any people are highlighted 3528.
If a user selects a new contact from the people lozenge, the
previously selected contact is un-highlighted and the processes
3510, 3515, 3517, 3520, and 3522 are repeated for the newly
highlighted contact. The system also monitors the user interaction
with the user interface to determine whether a group is selected
from the groups lozenge 3535.
[0205] If a group is selected, any contact previously selected in
the people lozenge is un-highlighted 3537. The applications server
determines up to ten contacts in the group. The determined contact
then use to populate the contact list of people lozenge 3539.
[0206] The applications server determines up to ten of the most
frequently used activities scheduled with group highlighted in the
group lozenge. The server uses the determined activities to
populate the list of activities display in the activities lozenge
3542.
[0207] The applications server determines message threads involving
the contact highlighted in the people lozenge. The server selects
up to ten message threads and populates the read lozenge with the
thread identifiers of the selected message threads 3543. The server
selects the newest threads over older or unanswered threads.
[0208] The applications server also determines up to ten of the
most used locations scheduled for the group name highlighted in the
groups lozenge. The server uses the determined locations to
populate the list of locations provided by the locations lozenge
3544.
[0209] The applications server determines all events including the
group highlighted in the groups lozenge. The server populates the
calendar with any of the determined group events. 3547
[0210] If no group is selected, the server monitors whether any
activity is selected 3550. If so, any previously selected
activities are un-highlighted 3552. The server also determines up
to ten of the most used locations previously scheduled with the
selected group or contact regarding the selected activity 3554. In
addition, the calendar is filled with all events featuring the
activity named 3596.
[0211] If no activity is selected, the server determines if a
location is selected by the user 3560. If so, any previous
locations are un-highlighted 3561. The server determines a map of
the selected location, and the server populates the maps lozenge
with the determined map 3565. The server also determines options
including driving directions and others appropriate for the
location and provides them on the maps lozenge 3565. In addition,
all events featuring the location are highlighted on the calendar
3570.
[0212] The server monitors to see if any people are selected 3528.
If a user selects a new contact from the people lozenge, the
processes 3530, 3510, 3515, 3517, 3520, and 3522 are repeated. If
not, the server determines if any group is selected 3535. If the
user selects a new group from the groups lozenge, the processes
3537, 3539, 3542, 3543, and 3544 are repeated for the newly
highlighted group. If not, the server determines if any activity is
selected 3550. If the user selects a new activity, the processes
3552, 3554, and 3556 are repeated for the newly highlighted
activity. If not, the server determines if a location is selected
3560. If so, the processes 3561, 3565, and 3570 are performed. The
server continuously monitors the user's interaction (e.g.,
processes 3528, 3535, 3550, and 3560) to focus the lozenges
accordingly.
Mobile User Interface
[0213] A modified user interface may be supplied for mobile
platforms, such as mobile phones, smart phones, and PDA that have
limited processing power and/or screens. For example, WAP cell
phones may be provided with an "Agenda" that allows them to see the
upcoming four hours of appointments as a default screen. The
interface may be provided with a number of inputs that are most
useful to a user in this environment. For example, for appointments
in the agenda the user may select an appointment and be provided
with user inputs for specific actions with regard to those
appointment. For example, the user may selection the options:
running late, can't make it, and cancel meeting (with
verification). Selection of any of these options causes an
automatic message to be sent all contacts associated with the
appointment indicating the user is running late, can't make it, or
needs to cancel. The automated message is created by the system
service provider and sent to the contacts associated with the
appointment. The message may be an instant message, email,
automated phone message, or an alert or popup window of a system
user's user interface. The user interface also may display the
user's shopping list listing the user's items. A check box or other
indicator may be provided to allow the user to check items off the
list. In addition, the To-Do list may be provided allowing a user
to see items on the list, add items to the list, and check items
off the list. Conflict resolution "alerts" and resolution System
wide--12 hr email and SMS notification on event change.
[0214] In addition to the features provided for WAP cell phones,
smart phones may provide the additional functionality. For example,
the user's agenda may also provide action notices. The smart phone
also may allow a user to reorder their To-Do List. The smart phone
PDA includes the dynamic calendar. The dynamic calendar also the
user to filter information via persona/family/business categories.
In addition, the user may be presented with day/week views. The
user may add an appointment, delete Appointment, and re-order
appointments in a list.
Search Tool
[0215] FIG. 36 shows an example of an improved search tool for use
with the system. The system service provider includes a lot of
information that may be harnessed to facilitate user searches. As
pointed out above, items within lozenges may be focused for users
depending on the actions with the user interface. Similarly, user
search of the web and system data may be focused. The user
interface may provide a search tool. The search tool includes a
word entry field 719 to enter key words. Two inputs are provided to
search the key words on the Internet 721 and within the system 722.
In addition, any item may be dragged to the entry field 719 to
create a search term.
[0216] The user enters a search term 3601 and selects the Internet
input 721 to start a filtered Internet search. The service provider
system accesses a common search term database 3605 to search 3610
for common search terms that may produce irrelevant or unwanted
search results. The common term database 3605 includes a database
of terms that may have common different meanings which may lead to
ambiguity. For example, the term apple may be related to a fruit, a
computer, a tree, bowling term, slang for drug, and a mollusk. The
system determines whether the search term appears in the database
3615. If the term does not appear, the system submits the term to a
search engine in its original form 3620. If the term is found in
the common term database, the system searches the user profile 3621
and other db items 3622 associated with the user (e.g., the to-do
list, shopping list, calendar) to see if user data provides
additional information that indicates what context of the search
the user actually intended 3630.
[0217] The system determines whether the user data indicates a
particular meaning from among the common terms determined 3640. If
the system determines a particular meaning, the system selects the
modified search term 3645 and submits the modify search to the
search engine 3650. For example, if user profile indicates a user
is 60 year woman, shopping list includes pie crust, and has visit
from arborist, terms computer company, mollusk, slang and bowling
may be eliminated and a refined search of apple fruit and apple
tree is provided to the search engine. Regardless of which search
is performed (i.e., 3620 or 3660), the search results are converted
to a system packet that appears in the appropriate lozenge which
may be dragged anywhere in the system 3660.
Glads
[0218] The system service provider is able to promote
marketing/advertising/sales of products and services through
electronic delivery of digital media, information, and content
including coupons, incentives, discounts, promotions, product
information, product descriptions, product comparisons, and new
product/service introductions. The marketing/advertising/sales of
products and services is promoted based on user data, including
user profile, history, and demographic information; timing,
location, and/or activity (or any combination of these among
others) about the user; and the association of the user with other
system users, to provide the marketing/advertising/sales
information to the user when the presentation of the digital media
has a higher chance or probability of impacting a user's behavior.
In addition, dynamic filters associated with the
marketing/advertising/sales information may be specifically tailor
by system partners to target a desired user with a degree of
granularity never before possible with any online marketing
system.
[0219] The digital media, information, and content used by the
system service provider to promote goods and services are graphical
"ads" or Glads. Glads are stored in a system Glad database and
include Glad art, for presentation in the graphics bar of the user
interface, and Glad filters for targeting specific users. The Glad
art may include one or more of a message, an advertisement, a
commercial, a description, a price, a discount, a coupon, a
voucher, a ticket, a rebate, a redemption, a promotion, an offer, a
slogan, a trademark, a service mark, a tag line, a company,
business, or organization logo, brand, or other identification.
Glad filters also include various parameters and conditions that
filter the who, what, when, where of how to trigger the serving of
the Glads for presentation in the products and services branding
area 726 of the user interface. As a result, Glads are provided to
the system users having the most likelihood of being interested in
the Glad. Glads may be created by the system service provider 110
and by system partners 125 and stored in a Glad database.
[0220] FIG. 37 illustrates an example of the information and data
3700 that may be stored in connection with a Glad in the Glad DB.
Typically, a Glad many include Glad art 3701, a file type 3710, a
system partner identifier 3720, an identifier 3730, a web address
3740, filter conditions 3760, display parameters 3770, and
historical data 3780.
[0221] A Glad includes digital content or Glad art 3701 that is
presented to users in the graphics bar 707 of the user interface.
The digital content may include one or more of a graphic, an image,
a picture, a video, and an audio component stored as a digital
file. Some examples of the file types of digital formats that may
be used include .gif, .jpeg, and .swf; however, any digital media
that may be presented by a web browser and/or plugin may be used.
The digital content also may include any number of characters,
colors, shapes, logos, images, animations, visual and sound effects
that covey a message to promote a product, a goods, and/or a
service. In addition, a trademark, a service mark, a tag line, a
company, business, or organization logo, and brand may be provided.
It should be noted that FIG. 37 is representational and shows
information associated with a Glad, but does not necessarily
correspond with the actual database structure. For example, the
same Glad art may be associated with multiple and different
campaigns and filter conditions. As a result, instead of storing a
separate copy of Glad art for each Glad, a reference or pointer to
the file location of the Glad art may stored and used to access the
Glad art associated with the Glad when serving the Glad art to the
user interface.
[0222] An indicator 3710 of the file type (e.g., .gif, .jpeg, and
.swf) may be stored in association with the Glad to direct the
system to use appropriate applications to serve the Glad to the
user interface. The system partner identification 3720 (e.g., a
code, a name, a number) allows the system to identify any Glads
with campaigns, monitor system partner operations, and to generate
reports. The Glad identifier 3730 may be used by the system to
identify a Glad. A web address 3730 may be used to provide a link
to a specific a website or webpage associated with the Glad. For
example, the web address may be used by the user's browser to
display the website based on a certain user interaction with the
Glad displayed in the user interface. For example, if a user
selects the Glad art displayed (e.g., double selecting, such as
double clicking on the Glad art 3701 on the user graphics bar), the
web address may be used to navigate a popup browser to display a
webpage or other online content associated with the Glad.
[0223] The description 3750 may include information about the Glad.
The description 3750 may include information about a product or a
service associated with the glad, such as a name, a category, a
type, a SKU, and a brand. The description also may include the type
of Glad, such as an advertisement, a commercial, a promotion, a
coupon, a voucher, a ticket, a rebate, or an offer. The description
3750 may include an amount, a discount, or a value associated with
the glad.
[0224] A number of filter conditions 3760 are associated with the
Glad for use by the system logic to identify and/or trigger Glads
that a user may interested in. The filters conditions include who,
what, where, and when conditions and criteria that are used for
comparison to user data stored in association with the WHO, the
WHAT, the WHERE, and the WHEN strips of user interface and the user
profile information in addition to other data associated with the
user (e.g., the weather at a user's location). The who conditions
filter for groups, family and friends, and the user. The most
general filter is the group filter. The group filter targets
contacts based on demographics of a user group. Family and friends
is more specific filter targeting individuals based on demographic
for individuals having a personal relation to the user, such as
family members, friends, and business associates. The most specific
filter is who which targets the individual user based on individual
demographics, such as information stored in the user's personal
profile. For example, user personal profile information that may be
used to target individuals includes age, gender, income,
hobbies/interests, previous shopping data, and other demographic
information about individuals stored in the user profile.
[0225] The what conditions filter for a secondary activity/event, a
primary activity/event, a category, a brand, a product name, and a
SKU. The most general of the filters is the secondary
activity/event in which a particular product/service type is
specified based on the activity associated with a calendar event to
which a user is invited to. The primary activity/event filter
specifies a particular product type based on the activity found in
a calendar event generated by the user. The category filter
specifies a particular product/service category or type of product
(e.g., food, grocery, meat, dairy, produce, office supply,
furniture, sporting equipment, clothing, electronics, books) much
like the areas in a department store that are found in association
with a user's to-do or shopping list. The brand filter specifies a
particular brand of product. The product name filter specifies a
particular product name. The most specific filter is a SKU number
or code that specifies a particular product Stock Keeping Unit
(SKU) (e.g., found on a user's shopping list).
[0226] The where conditions filter for location, such as weather, a
mobile location, a destination, and a home location. The most
general filter is the weather in which an advertiser specifies a
particular product/service type based on the weather conditions at
the location of a user. The mobile location filter is used to
specify a particular product/service type based on the GPS location
of a user's mobile phone or web-enabled mobile phone. The
destination filters are used to specify a particular
product/service type based on the user's scheduled destination
locations (e.g., a location of an event). The most specific where
filter is the user's home location which specifies a particular
product/service type based on the user's device's actual physical
location.
[0227] The when conditions filter for a current time and a
scheduled time. The current time filter allows a particular
product/service type to be specified based on the current (e.g.,
post Glad between June 1.sup.st and June 16.sup.th for a Father's
Day sale). In addition, the current time may filter for days of the
week (e.g., Mon-Sun) and time of day (e.g., morning, afternoon,
evening, late night). The scheduled time filter allows a particular
product/service type to be specified based on the time of a future
or past scheduled event in the user's calendar (e.g., post Glad
between x days before a calendar event and y days before a calendar
event or post Glad between x days after a calendar event and y days
after a calendar event), such as, a discount for an airplane ticket
provided two weeks before a user's scheduled trip indicated on
their calendar.
[0228] One or more of the conditions filters 3760 may be specified
for each Glad to tailor who the Glad is served to wherein the more
filters specified the more specific the individual user targeted
becomes.
[0229] Display parameters 3770 also may be provided for the Glad.
For example, if there are more Glads than may be displayed in the
products and services branding area 726 of the user interface, a
rotation of Glads may begin so Glads are not excluded from
presentation to the user. As a result, the a duration may be
provided such as "present Glad for minimum of minimum x seconds or
minutes per presentation.". A system partner also may customize the
presentation of Glads as part of an overall marketing campaign or
to prevent saturation of presentation of a particular Glad.
Therefore, the Glad may include additional criteria for Glad
presentation and display, such as "do not rotate this Glad" and
present this Glad for "x minutes/hours/days." In addition, an
parameter indicating the Glad may be automatically customize by
including message that inserts the customer name may be
provided.
Glad Placement Logic
[0230] The system service provider 110 uses a Glad placement
application to match the appropriate Glad content with a user based
on specific information stored about the user in the user database.
The service provider system provides powerful Glad placement
because of the detail of information that the system has available
at any given time for any system user. In order to match content,
the system searches the individual events, and the daily to-do and
shopping lists stored in association with a user account to
determine if any there are any Glads that match items a user may be
looking for at that moment. While searching the system also looks
at all user information and compares the information against the
triggers or conditions in the Glad database to select and deliver
specific advertising content/campaign to the user. At the very
minimum, the Glad placement application posts targeted Glads to the
user even if there are no daily events based on other conditions
for the day, such as weather, seasonality, holidays, and other
factors. In addition, the Glad placement application may verify
that the campaign is appropriate for the demographics, date,
day-of-week, and weather, of a user. If a Glad is determined to be
a good match, then the Glad is presented to the user.
[0231] FIG. 38 shows one example 3800 of the glad placement
application process. The user database 3801 includes information on
user events, shopping list, to-do list, groups, locations, and
profile including a purchase history. The system also includes a
database of advertisements 3810, such as, for example, Glads. The
Glad database 3810 includes Glad Filters 3811 and Glad Art 3812. In
addition, some of the Glads may be provided by a system partners
125 running Glad campaigns 3813, as explained in further detail
below. In addition, other information sources, such as a weather
database 3815 or information outlet (e.g., national weather
service) may provide information to the system about weather
conditions for a user. The service provider system Glad placement
application continuously monitors time sensitive items from the
user database 3820. In particular, the system may monitor those
items of the user database having time elements, such as user
calendar events, the to-do list, and the shopping list.
[0232] The Glad placement application constantly monitors the
dynamic and ever changing user data stored in association with the
user database to determine if any Glads are good candidates for
presentation to a user 3855. In order to determine if any Glads are
appropriate, the system monitors the user database 3801 and
compares items in the database for each user to the filters 3811
associated with the Glads to determine any user data items matching
those conditions 3855. The determination may include using a
natural language interpretation (NLI) application and a search
function (e.g., described above for focusing). In addition,
information stored by the user database (e.g., the user profile)
may be used to interpret what if any goods, products, or services
are associated with an item on a shopping, to-do list, or calendar
event. For example, since the system maintains a shopping/buy
history database to store items purchased by the user, and since
people often buy the same items over-and-over, the shopping history
may be useful in aiding the system to interpret items entered on
the shopping list. The determination also may include checking
current or predicted weather from a weather database or nation
weather service 3815. When determining a match, the system Glad
placement logic uses data in the condition filters to determine if
the Glad truly is a good candidate or match for a particular user.
For example, the system may determine if the Glad is for the right
user demographic, the right day/day-of-week, that the Glad is
active, the right temperature at a user location, and that the user
has not already placed an order or bought the item.
[0233] If a match is determined 3840, the Glad Art 3812 is served
to the user interface for presentation in the graphic bar of the
user interface 3841. The system Glad placement application also
determines if there is enough space in the graphic bar to present
the Glad 3843. If there is enough space, the Glad is presented
3845. If the graphics bar is already full of Glads, the system
rotates out the oldest glad after a predetermined minimum period
for display for the oldest Glad is met 3850, and then presents the
new Glad in the vacated slot 3845.
[0234] FIG. 39 shows another example 3900 of the Glad placement
logic for making a comparison between a user and the Glad logic
filters. The Glad placement application selects a Glad from the
Glad database 3901, and selects a user from user database 3910.
[0235] The application compares the who filter associated with the
Glad to determine if the demographics of the conditions specified
apply to the user 3915. For example, for each who filter condition
specified, the system determines if the condition is met for the
user. In this case all condition specified must be met. Any
unspecified condition is met. If no who conditions are specified,
the who filter is automatically satisfied. Examples of the
conditions include user demographics, family/friends demographics,
and group demographics. In order to check these conditions the
system checks the user profile 3807 and the user contacts/groups
3805. If any condition is not met, then the application determines
that filter is not satisfied, and the application determines if all
users have been checked 3920. If not, the application selects
another user for processing for the selected Glad 3910. If all
users are checked, the application selects another Glad for
processing 3901.
[0236] The application also compares the what filter associated
with the Glad to determine if the conditions specified apply to the
user 3925. For example, for each what filter condition specified,
the system determines if any condition is met for the user. Any
unspecified condition is met. If no What conditions are specified,
the What filter is automatically satisfied. Examples of the
conditions include a SKU, a Product Name, a Brand, a Category, an
primary activity (a user's activity), a Secondary activity (one a
user is invited to). In order to check these conditions the
application determines if items in the users shopping list, to-do
list, and calendar events meet the condition. To do this, a NLI may
be used to determine if an item on the list corresponds to an item
in the condition. In addition, the user profile and shopping
history may be consulted to aid in the identification and/or
provide disambiguation between multiple meanings for items. If any
condition is met, then the application determines that filter is
satisfied. If no what conditions are met, the application
determines if all users have been checked 3920. If not, the
application selects another user for processing for the selected
Glad 3910. If all users are checked, the application selects
another Glad for processing 3901.
[0237] The application also compares the where filter associated
with the Glad to determine if the conditions specified apply to
location of the user 3930. For example, for each filter condition
specified, the system determines if the condition is met for the
user. Any unspecified condition is met. If no where conditions are
specified, the what filter is automatically satisfied. Examples of
the conditions include a home location, a calendar event determined
destination, a mobile (GPS) location, or weather at a user's
location. If the where conditions are not met, then the application
determines that filter is not satisfied, and the application
determines if all users have been checked 3920. If not, the
application selects another user for processing for the selected
Glad 3910. If all users are checked, the application selects
another Glad for processing 3901.
[0238] The application compares the when filter associated with the
Glad to determine if the timing conditions specified apply to the
user 3935. For example, for each filter condition specified the
system determines if the condition of the timing of the Glad and
the timing of the user is met. The timing conditions include a
current time and a scheduled timing. The current time is a
post/pull calendar dates. Unlike the other items, the post/pull
dates filter condition may always be specified. In addition, day of
the week and time of day (e.g., morning, afternoon, evening, late
night) may be specified for the current time. A second condition is
between x days before/after a scheduled timed item and y days
before/after a scheduled timed item or calendar event. In this
case, if the condition satisfying that What condition was a timed
event (e.g., a calendar event or a shopping list/to-do item with a
time specified), then the second timed condition is applied. If any
condition is not met, then the application determines that filter
is not satisfied, and the application determines if all users have
been checked 3920. If not, the application selects another user for
processing for the selected Glad 3910. If all users are checked,
the application selects another Glad for processing 3901.
[0239] If all the Glad filter conditions are satisfied, the user is
considered a match; the Glad is served to the user interface
associated with the user 3940. The application determines if all
users have been checked 3920. If not, the application selects
another user for processing for the selected Glad 3910. If all
users are checked, the application selects another Glad for
processing 3901.
[0240] It should be noted that the matching of filters for who,
what, where, and when, may be performed in any order; however,
certain orders may provide faster processing speeds. Optimal orders
of filters may be determined over time from empirical data and
testing. In addition, parallel processing of the logic is possible.
For example, multiple applications and processors may focus on a
specific number, selection, or group of Glads and/or users from
within the whole system.
[0241] The following example illustrates the Glad placement
process.
[0242] A Glad #113 includes a .jpg file of a coupon for $5 off
"Spicy Good BBQ sauce" and includes a link to the website
www.spicygoodbbq.com. The Glad filter conditions are specified as
follows: WHO [user demographics=men and 18-50 years old,
family/friends demographics unspecified, group
demographics=unspecified]; WHAT [SKU=unspecified, product name
barbecue sauce, brand=unspecified, category=condiments,
activity=barbecue, picnic, BBQ secondary activity=unspecified];
WHERE [home=unspecified, calendar event determined
destination=unspecified, mobile (GPS)=unspecified,
weather=unspecified]; and WHEN [current time=between post/pull
calendar dates 06-21-08 to 09-21-08, Day of week=unspecified, and
Time of day=unspecified; and scheduled time=between "x days before
the scheduled calendar event" and "y days before the calendar
event" x,y=30, 0].
[0243] A system user Martha a 35 year old female living in Seattle
Wash. has an appointment on her calendar for Sunday, July 13th
titled "BBQ." Martha's husband Bill, also a system user, is a 39
year male with the same appointment on his calendar. The Glad
placement application selects Glad #113 for placement on Jun. 23,
2008. The placement application searches through system users' for
placement of the Glad. Selecting Martha the application applies the
Who filter. In this case, the application determines demographic
filter is for men between 18-50 and compares it Martha's personal
profile and determines she is female age 35. The condition is not
met.
[0244] The placement application selects the next user Bill. The
application applies the Who filter. In this case, the application
determines the demographic filter is for men between 18-50 and
compares it to Bill's personal profile and determines he is male
age 39. The condition is met. The remaining who conditions are
unspecified, and therefore are met.
[0245] The placement application applies the What filter. The
placement application determines the Glad #113 what conditions are
barbecue sauce on shopping list, any kind of condiments on shopping
list, or any upcoming events on their calendars with the words
barbecue, picnic, or BBQ. Comparing these to Bill the system finds
BBQ in an event for Bill and the what condition is met.
[0246] The application applies the where filter. In this case, all
where conditions are unspecified, so the where condition is
automatically met.
[0247] The application applies the when filter. The placement
application determines Glad #113 when conditions are that the Glad
will run between 06-21-08 and 08-21-08" (summer) and that if it was
a timed item or event that satisfied the What condition, the
triggering timed or calendar event must be within the next month
(30 days before to 0 days before). The current date at Bill's user
device is Jun. 23, 2008 so the first condition is met. Day of week
and time of Day are unspecified so they are met. In addition, the
item triggering the what condition was a calendar event so the
application determines the BBQ appointment is for July 13th and
therefore is within the next 30 days or month so the second
condition is met.
[0248] As all filters Who, What, Where, and When have been met, the
application places an image on Bill's user interface of BBQ Ribs
with the Text SPICY GOOD $5 dollars OFF a bottle with any purchase.
Bill sees the Glad and clicks on it, and a window opens to window
to the website www.spicygoodbbq.com with the offer and a
description of the product. Enticed Bill drags the Glad to his
shopping list. The coupon is then offered for printing when Bill
downloads or prints his shopping list.
[0249] FIG. 40 shows on example 4000 of a process for user
interactions with Glads once the Glad is served to the graphics bar
of the user interface. When user selects a glad 4001, the system
identifies the user input and performs the desired action 4010. For
example, if the user drags a glad to the calendar the system
creates and event with the Glad. The system also determines if the
user interaction is dragged the item to the buy lozenge to attempt
to purchase the related item 4020. If the user drags the Glad to
buy lozenge, the buy lozenge is activated and the system attempts
to purchase the related item 4025 using the instructions provided
via the buy lozenge, and apply, present, redeem any incentive or
discount provided by the Glad. The system informs the user of the
results the user 4030. If the system purchases the item and the
Glad was triggered by an item on the user's shopping or to-do list,
the system queries the user if it should tick of the item as
completed. In addition, the system stores a summary of the
interaction with the Glad for the campaign database 4035.
[0250] If the user has not engaged the system in an automatic
buying of a product, the system determines whether the user is
going shopping 4040. If user is not shopping, the system stores a
summary of the interaction with the glad for the campaign database
4035. If the user is going shopping, the system checks local store
inventors for the item and any other items on the user's shopping
list 4045. If the a relationship with a local business is
established to allow the system servers to access store specific
information and inventory data, the system searches this
information to determine if a store has existing inventory and
where the items are located. The system provides the results of the
inventory search to the user 4050. The system also plans the
shopping trip by selecting the best route or commute for the user
4055. The system finds the best route using a mapping database to
provide directions from store-to-store needed to purchase all items
on the shopping list. The map, route, and direction may be
presented on the Maps lozenge of the user interface. In addition,
the system also may provide point-to-point driving directions and
in-store maps to find the items on the list, an example of which is
shown in FIG. 41. If the user is at home, a pop-up a box offering
to print the Glad and or any incentives or coupons associated with
the Glad is provide and a shopping agenda is provided to the user
at the user's specified home device 4060. The system also offers to
download the information to the mobile device to store coupons,
directions, and a shopping agenda. The user also is given the
option to send an order to the store for any items on the shopping
list, to preprocess the order and have the user's selection waiting
for them for pickup and/or payment 4065. In addition, the system
stores a summary of the interaction with the Glad for the campaign
database 4035.
System Partners
[0251] A system partner 125 may be any type of individual, group,
or entity that provides products, goods, or services. The system
partner also may be a branding company that subsidizes or sponsors
a user account on the service provider system. The sponsored
accounts may be offered to a user as a branded gift, a customer
promotion, or incentive. The graphical user interface, described
above, providing access to the service provider system via one of
the sponsored accounts may be branded with logos, art, images, and
advertising, and other digital media and/or content to brand the
user interface and promote the system partner. In particular, a
branded user interface provides a year-round targeted marketing
vehicle for the system partner's products, goods, and services. The
service provider system also provides the system partner with a
powerful marketing/advertising tool that is able to target
individual users with increasing degrees of specificity to provide
the right information or incentive, at the right time and location
and therefore substantially increase the likelihood of the user
interacting with or using the advertisement. The service provider
system 110 allows system partners 125 to design ad campaigns that
market directly to users based on their interaction with the
service provider system 110 and the user information stored by the
system databases.
[0252] Each system partner 125 is granted access to the service
provider system 110 through a communication path 130 to create and
design a glad campaign, to view the results of previous and
existing campaigns, and to edit campaigns. In one example, a system
partner 125 may be provided with a username, a password, and an
address or a locator to provide a browser with access to a website
provided for system partner 125 by the service provider system 110.
The system partner website provides a portal for the system partner
125 to access a glad placement application to manage a glad
campaign. The glad creation application provides a system partner
user interface that includes a Glad creation screen and a report
screen. The Glad creation screen provides an interface to a system
partner to upload information to create and edit Glads and
determine how Glads are targeted to system users. The report screen
provides the system partner with a tool to monitor glad placement
and glad campaigns.
[0253] FIG. 42 shows one example 4200 of a Glad creation screen
used to create Glads. Creating a Glad includes uploading the
digital media and description that is served up to the user,
selecting filters used by the service provider system for Glad
placement, and submitting the Glad. The creation screen includes a
file entry field 4210 and browse button 4215. The file entry field
4210 is used to enter a file location for the digital media that
will be used to create the Glad. The browse button 4215 provides a
convenient way to search for the file location of a glad by
providing a drop down menu (not shown) of file locations and
navigation buttons to help location a desired glad file. Once the
file is located and/or selected the file path/location is displayed
in the file entry field 4215.
[0254] The creation screen also provides a visual representation of
glad filters depicted as a series of pyramids. The pyramids include
inputs to set filters for serving the Glads to system users. The
pyramids include a WHO pyramid 4221, a WHAT pyramid 4223, a WHERE
pyramid 4225, and a WHEN pyramid 4227. The filters are used for
comparison to user data stored in association with the WHO, the
WHAT, the WHERE, and the WHEN strips of user interface. The each
pyramid includes two or more filters that range from general
(bottom of the pyramid) to specific (top of the pyramid) that may
be used by a system partner to tailor a Glad campaign and how any
Glad is served to a system user.
[0255] The who pyramid includes filters for groups 4231, family and
friends 4233, and the user 4235. The most general filter is the
group filter. The group filter targets contacts from a user group.
Family and friends is more specific filter targeting individuals
having a personal relation to the user, such as family members,
business associates, and relationships (e.g., wife/husband,
parent/child). The most specific filter is who which targets the
individual user via information stored in the user's personal
profile. For example, user personal profile information that may be
used by the system partner to target individuals includes age,
gender, income, hobbies/interests, and other demographic
information about individuals stored in the user profile.
[0256] The what pyramid includes filters for a secondary
activity/event 4241, a primary activity/event 4242, a category
4243, a brand 4244, a product name 4245, and a SKU 4246. The most
general of the what filters is the secondary activity/event in
which a particular product/service type is specified based on the
activity associated with a calendar event to which a user is
invited to. The primary activity/event filter specifies a
particular product type based on the activity found in a calendar
event generated by the user. The category filter specifies a
particular product/service category or type of product (e.g., food,
grocery, meat, dairy, produce, office supply, furniture, sporting
equipment, clothing, electronics, books) much like the areas in a
department store that are found in association with a user's to-do
or shopping list. The brand filter specifies a particular brand of
product. The product name filter specifies a particular product
name. The most specific filter is a SKU number or code that
specifies a particular product SKU (e.g., found on a user's
shopping list).
[0257] The where pyramid includes filters based on location, such
as weather 4251, a mobile location 4253, a destination 4255, and a
home location 4257. The most general filter is the weather in which
an advertiser specifies a particular product/service type based on
the weather conditions at the location of a user. The mobile
location filter is used to specify a particular product/service
type based on the GPS location of a user's mobile device. The
destination filters are used to specify a particular
product/service type based on the user's scheduled destination
locations (e.g., a location of an event). The most specific where
filter is the user's home location which specifies a particular
product/service type based on the user's device's actual physical
location.
[0258] The when pyramid includes filters for a current time 4261
and a scheduled time 4263. The current time filter allows a
particular product/service type to be specified based on the
specific time at the user location (e.g., a current time, a day, a
day-of-week, a time-of-day). The scheduled time filter allows a
particular product/service type to be specified based on the time
of a future scheduled event in the user's calendar.
[0259] The system partner selects a particular step of the pyramid
to activate the particular filter. Multiple filters on each pyramid
may be selected and filters on one of more different pyramids may
be selected. A pop up window 4271 is presented to solicit
additional information about specific condition within the filter
if necessary. The popup window 4271 may include a list of items
4273 (e.g., hot, below zero, rain, snow), an input 4275 (e.g., a
check box) to select the item, and an indication 4277 (e.g., a
check mark) of selected items. Filters and conditions within
filters may be left unspecified. Examples of specific conditions
that may be solicited by who pyramid are as follows. For example,
the user filter a popup window may request "Provide information on
the type of user you wish to target?" Options may include age
range, income range, hobbies/interests, gender. For the
family/friends filter the system may indicate "the item or service
is not for the user, but for someone they know. What is their
relationship to the user?" Options provided may include husband,
wife, son, daughter, niece, nephew, grandson, granddaughter,
grandmother, grandfather, mother, father, friend, and business
associate. The group popup window may solicit information based on
the subjects derived from system data stored for groups allowing
the advertiser to specify a general subject area for groups that
the user might be involved in. Subjects may be determined or drawn
from actual user data broken into groups, such as recreation,
sports, scholastic, hobbies, activities, outdoor, nature,
etc.).
[0260] The SKU filter popup window may solicit a specific product
identifier, such as a UPC code(s) (e.g.: 792850110991 for Burt's
bees beeswax lip balm). The product name popup window solicits a
product name (e.g., lip balm). The brand popup solicits a brand
name (e.g., Chap Stick). A category popup window solicits a product
category which may be selected from a pre-made list or via a data
entry field (e.g., personal care products). The primary
activity/event window may solicit a particular product type based
on a user created activity found on calendar event generated by the
user (e.g., beach, skiing, boating) and activities drawn from
actual user data, such as recreation, sports, scholastic, hobbies,
activities, outdoor, etc. The secondary activity/event popup window
solicits the same information as primary event except that it
specifies activities that the user is invited to.
[0261] The weather popup window solicits information about weather
at the user's location, such as hot (over 90.degree.), warm (over
60.degree.), cold (below 40.degree.), freezing (below 0.degree.),
rain, and snow.
[0262] The scheduled time window solicits information about when to
deliver the glad based a date range and on a future or past date.
The window may provide a date entry field and/or mini calendar to
enter a date range for the glad. The current time popup window
provides inputs for specific times that may be provided specified
to deliver the glad based on a current time, such as days of the
week, time of day (e.g., morning, afternoon, evening, late
night).
[0263] Once the file location of the glad digital media has been
specified and the filters have been determined, the system partner
may select the submit button 4281 to upload the Glad digital medium
to the glad database and save the select filters in association
with the glad. The browser uploads the file using any of the
available automated file transfer protocols. The glad digital and
the proposed filter setting are stored in a database in a package
called a Glad Pack. The system service provider may review the Glad
Pack to assure that the content meets the minimum standards (e.g.,
file type, graphics, content, decency) and the filter settings
provided. Once approved the Glad Pack data is provided to the
customer incentive database, or they contact the system partner to
make changes or adjustments to the Glad Pack info.
[0264] In one example, a system partner Big Time Golf wants to
create a glad for upcoming father's day sale of 20% Supreme golf
clubs. Big Time golf uploads an image of a man receiving a card
from his son with his wife looking on and a big bow around a set of
new Supreme golf clubs including Big Time Golf logo and the
indication 20% off all Supreme Clubs. Setting the filters, Big time
golf specifies who (family and friends=father, son, daughter, wife,
grandfather), what (product name=golf clubs; brand=supreme;
category=sports primary activity=golf; secondary activity=golf),
and when (scheduled time=June 1.sup.st through June 16.sup.th).
[0265] The service provider system continuously checks the glad
database to determine if any glads are presented via the user
interface. The system searches through data stored for each user in
association with the who, what, where, and when strips and the user
profile. In particular, the system searches the items in the
lozenges associated with each strip to compare the data stored for
each user lozenge to the filters provided for the glad in the
system partner campaign database. For example, the system searches
items stored for the To-Do and Shopping lists, and interprets the
items for comparison against the contents of the conditions in the
glad database to trigger any specific glad for presentation to a
user. When the system determines the user data meets the conditions
stored in association with the glad, then the glad is presented via
the user interface.
[0266] FIG. 43 shows an example 4300 of the report screen. The
report screen displays a summary of a Glad campaigns, detailed
information, and reports for each Glad campaign that has been
created by a system partner. The screen includes a summary window
4310, a details window 4320, and a report window 4330. The summary
provides an indication of how many Glads campaigns are active and
inactive. In addition, the summary provides overall information of
how many Glads have been presented, how many Glads have been
selected or otherwise viewed, and how many Glads have been
associated with product purchases by time periods, such as month,
week, and day.
[0267] The detail window 4320 presents individual information for
each Glad campaign. The window 4320 includes a system identifier of
the Glad 4321, a thumbnail representation/preview of the Glad 4323,
associated filter information (e.g., under which conditions it is
shown) 4324 and specific information for how many times a Glad has
been displayed, interacted with by a user (e.g., viewed,
manipulated, selected, dragged, and/or clicked on), and how many
times a Glad has been associated with or influenced a purchase. A
navigation aid 820 is provided to navigate the list of Glads if
there insufficient area within the detail window 4320 to display
all Glads at any one time.
[0268] A reports window 4330 is provided to automatically compile
and generate reports from system data regarding the Glads. The
window 4330 provides various inputs 4331 that may be selected by
the system partner to generate a desired report. The inputs 4331
specify a time period and types of Glads. The time periods that may
be selected include: a daily report, a weekly report, a monthly
report, and a year to date report. The types of Glads for which
reports may be run include: by individual Glad, by all Glads, by
active Glads, and by Historic Glads. Examples of other information
an data which may be stored, tracked and presented include a
campaign number, a campaign name (not shown), a campaign preview
(e.g., a graphic), a number of views by users (not show), seconds
on screen (not shown), number of "clicks" or "hits" (not shown).
System partners also may review specific user's "clicks" in an
archive history of user matches. Partners also may use the data to
determine a level of interactivity, a level of user response to
promotion, and to analyze hits by user locations and geography and
other real time information to change or "fine tune" content or a
campaign.
Drag and Drop Glads
[0269] As mentioned above, when a glad is triggered or served it is
placed in the graphics bar of the user interface. As shown in FIG.
44 the graphics bar 426 includes four Glads for 20% off Expensive
Cheese 4410, Wine by the Bucket 4420, Rebate on All Sony products
4430, Try new coffee 4440. These Glads have been served to the user
interface using the Glad placement logic. Once a Glad is displayed,
a user may interact with the Glad. In particular, as described
above, various items presented in the user interface may be dragged
and dropped from one area to another (e.g., drag a contacts name
from the group lozenge to the calendar lozenge to create an
appointment with the contact). This is also true for Glads as shown
in FIGS. 44-47. In an example shown in FIG. 44 a user notices a
Glad for 20% off Expensive Cheese found in a Gourmet food chain
with a store located in the user's town. The user is interested
because they are attending a wine and cheese party this weekend
(e.g., as indicated by the event "wine and cheese" event 4443 on
their calendar). The user decides this coupon 4410 might be just
the thing to bring to the event but is not going shopping today.
Therefore, in order to save the coupon for her shopping trip
Thursday morning, she places a user selection device (e.g., a
pointer or a cursor) in position (e.g., over the glad) to select a
glad (e.g., clicking a mouse button) for the glad coupon for
cheese, as shown in FIG. 45. As shown in FIG. 46, the glad is
captured and dragged 4601 to the calendar lozenge and dropped on a
specific date or event. If no event on the calendar is present and
event is created. If an event does exist the coupon is added to the
event. In this case the service provider system automatically saves
the glad coupon by creating an event 4701 associated with the
user's calendar on May 15, 2008, as shown in FIG. 47. The user is
automatically reminded or presented with the coupon on that date.
The glad also may be accessed at any time by selecting the event.
Glads also may be dragged to the top-do list, for example, a glad
for lumber dragged to a to-do item build deck. Likewise, Glads may
be dragged to the shopping list of the shopping lozenge to be
associated with an item on the list. A glad may be dragged to an
event to be stored in association with the event. A Glad may be
dragged to a person on the people lozenge or group on the group
lozenge to be sent by the user to the person or group. Dragging a
Glad to the lozenge without direction to a particular item may be
used to automatically create and item. For example, drag a glad to
the shopping lozenge or to-do lozenge may be used to add the item
to the shopping list or to-do list.
Family Organizer
[0270] The family organizer may be implemented as a platform on a
home appliance 155, as separate user device 150 that is added to an
existing appliance, or as a standalone user device 150. The family
organizer presents a specialized version of the user interface,
described above, that provides a household or family with many
useful functions of the standard user interface in addition to
other features specifically tailored to the home environment. The
family organizer also includes additional hardware, as described
below.
[0271] As shown in FIG. 48, unlike the previous user interfaces
described above the family user interface may be designed to run on
a specific type of family user device 4800. The family user device
4800 includes the following features and functions. In one example,
the family user device 4800 may include a display 4801. In one
example the display may be sized to fit in a family environment,
such as a kitchen appliance or countertop. For example, the user
device display may be a seven to fourteen inch diagonal, although
other sizes may be used. Any type of display that may be used to
present digital content may be use, as described above for a user
device. In one example, the display may be a continuously on, and
backlit color LCD display or equivalent. In one example, screen of
the display 4701 may be a touch screen, such as full-screen stylus
or stylus-free touch-screens, or multi-touch touch screen
technologies that interface with a browser application of the
family device to provide its user primary input device. For
example, the screen may be touched to select and manipulate
content, such as items on lozenges and Glads from the graphics
bar.
[0272] The family user device 4800 includes a processing device
4810 and memory device 4815 with, at a minimum, sufficient
processing power and capacity to provide at least basic Internet
browser functionality, such that a specialized version of the user
interface (i.e., the family user interface) may be run on it. The
processing device 4810 and memory device 4815 may be used to run
applications and store data. The processing device, memory, and
applications may be the same as described above for a user device
101.
[0273] The family user device 4800 also may include a built-in
microphone, ADC, and support hardware 4820 to allow limited voice
recordings to be stored on the device's non-volatile memory.
However, voice messages and recording also may be recorded and
stored as sound files (e.g., .mp3 or .wav files) and provided to
the service provider system 110 via a communications interface 4825
that may exchange data and content with the service provider system
110 using various communications paths 130. The family user
interface may access the sound files or data for playback to the
user. A built-in speaker 4830 and amplifier connected to the
processing device 4810 which is large and powerful enough to play
voice records and sound effects at a volume that may be heard in a
noisy family kitchen environment is provided. One or more user
input devices 4835 (e.g., a keyboard, keypad, mouse, and/or
buttons) may be provided (in addition to the touch screen or in
place of the touch screen if only an LCD display is provided) to
operated and command the family device, its components, and to
manipulate and interact with the family user interface. One or more
generic or separate interfaces/drivers 4849 may be provided to
allow the processing device 4810 to communicate with and/or drive
the various peripheral components (4820, 4830, 4835, and 4840).
[0274] A Wi-Fi or other wireless access Internet technologies,
functions or interfaces may be provided for or as part of the
communications interface 4825 to allow the family user device 4800
to easily connect to the user's home wireless network or other
wireless RF networks. For example, the organizer also may include
RF mobile phone or cell technology components including an antenna
and software and/or a dedicated processing device (not shown) to
enable the sending and receiving a calls through a mobile network.
The built in microphone 4820 and speakers 4830 and its associated
D/A and A/D circuitry may be used in this application.
[0275] The family user device 4800 also may include a power source
(not shown) such that the device is always on, always backlit,
and/or ready to use at any time. The family user device 4800
provides the family user interface when turned on or powered on,
and there is no need for the user to launch any applications or
make any selections in order to get the device 4800 to operate.
[0276] In one example, the family user device 4800 may be
implemented as a standalone device similar in size and shape to
"digital picture frames." The stand-alone family organizer may
include a fastening device that attaches to an appliance, such as a
refrigerator, with rubberized non-slip magnets, or to other
prominent locations with adhesive strips, such as inside the back
door of the house, on the wall above a light-switch, or on a garage
wall next to an entry to the house. A built in family device 4800
is essentially identical to the stand-alone device, except that it
is built into an appliance, such as a refrigerator.
[0277] The family user device 4800 also includes a bar-code reader
4840. The family user device 4800 is provided with an activation
device (e.g., a user input via the screen or a user input device or
a mechanical switch or button on the housing of the organizer). A
user may activate the barcode reader 4840 to scan a barcode 4845 on
an item 4847. Once activated, the barcode reader 4840 may remain on
or active for a period of time (e.g., 15 seconds) allowing multiple
items 4847 to be scanned. The barcode reader 4840 may automatically
shut-down after expiration of the period. In one example, the
barcode 4845 may be a universal product code (UPC) barcode. The
family user device 4800 also may include sufficient non-volatile
memory to store a barcode database (e.g., about 90 meg) allowing
the processing device 4810 to quickly look up and/or determine the
UPC and a corresponding description of a barcode 4845 read from the
barcode reader 4840. The processing user device 4810 periodically
updates the UPC database by downloading data from the service
provider system 110. A hard button (not shown) also may be provided
on the family user device 4800 to manually operate the bar code
reader 4840. In this case, operation of the button automatically
causes the processing device 4810 to send the data for scanned
items to the service provider system 110 to be added to a shopping
list for the family. In another example, an external barcode reader
4870 that may be integrated with the communications interface
and/or plugged into a port of the user device 101 along with any
corresponding software and drivers, may allow a user device 101 to
operate as a fully functional family organizer.
[0278] FIG. 49 illustrates one example 4900 of a family user
interface screen for the family organizer. The family user
interface provides all of the functionality and inputs of the
system user interface described above. For example, the family user
interface includes an information bar 705 and a graphics bar 707.
The information bar may include a customized descriptor 4901
("Henderson Family Organizer). Two additional inputs are also
provided: yellow pages 4910 and food delivery 4915.
[0279] In addition, family user organizer 4817 also includes the
WHO 731, WHAT 733, WHERE 735, and WHEN 737 strips. Each of the
strips also is provided with their corresponding lozenges (e.g.,
people, groups, activities, maps, etc) and inputs. In addition, the
shopping lozenge includes an additional input 4920 "barcode."
Selecting this input causes the barcode reader to activate and read
barcodes off items.
[0280] The family user interface also may include an additional
voice reminder lozenge 4920. The voice minder lozenge 4920 may be
small or medium. The small voice lozenge only includes the title
"voice minder." The medium voice minder lozenge 4920 also includes
a voice recorder skin with inputs 4925 record a message, and inputs
4930 to play, pause, fast forward, rewind, and replay messages, and
an indicator dial 4937 of the amount of space left to record
messages. To record a message, a user drags the name from the
people lozenge to record a message for that person. The people
lozenge includes an indication 4940 of how many new messages a
person has, and an input 4945 that may be selected to play the
message.
[0281] The family organizer also may be customized by the user.
FIG. 50 illustrates a second display for the customized family
organizer. To customize the family use interface, the user connects
to the system service provider using any web-enabled user device
101, such as, for example, a user's desktop or laptop computer. A
webpage is provided to the user that includes a special menu option
for customization. In response, the user enters customizing choices
selected from the menu and is provided with the opportunity to
upload content for presentation by the family organizer.
Customizing parameters and/or content are sent to the family
organizer via the web and changes are seen after a short delay. The
user can customize the family organizer to decorate the screen with
family pictures, run a slide-show of family images continuously,
play videos, and add photo avatars for themselves and their
contacts. In the example shown, in FIG. 50 the user interface
background 5001 is set to a slide show of family photographs. In
addition, three inputs are provided: Food delivery 4910, Yellow
Pages 4915, and Home 5005. Selection of food delivery and yellow
pages causes separate windows to be presented as described below.
Selecting the home input 5005 returns the family interface screen
5000 to the display. Indicators for new voice minders 5010 and
messages 5015 may be provided.
[0282] FIG. 51 shows an example of the food delivery screen 5100
that is presented when the food delivery input 4915 is selected. A
user may select any name in the people lozenge to focus a food
choice search on that person's tastes (e.g., as stored in the user
database and/or based on the information provided in their personal
profile). Similarly, a user may select any name in the groups
lozenge to focus a food choice search on that favorites associated
with the group.
[0283] A "One Touch Ordering" area 5130 present photo boxes 5135
showing the six most recently ordered meals, regardless of
restaurant or person selected. The user may simply select a box
(e.g., clicking/touching the box) to cause the system service
provided to automatically order the corresponding meal that was
previously order for immediate delivery. In response, the system
logs onto the restaurant or food deliver facilities webpage,
provides the order and customer information including payment and
delivery address. The system also provides confirmation message of
the order in the users read lozenge.
[0284] The family favorites window 5140 (e.g., "Henderson's
Favorites") includes a list 5145 of all local restaurants in order
of last used. Selecting a restaurant from the list 5145 causes a
second window 5148 to list, in order of frequency, the groups'
favorite previous orders. A see full menu input 5150 provides a
menu of the selected restaurant in the second window 5148 to allow
new or custom orders to be selected a la cart from the list. After
the order is selected, the user may select order input 5151 to
purchase the order. This causes the system to log onto the
restaurant or food deliver facility web page, provide the order and
customer information including payment and delivery address. The
system also provides confirmation message of the order in the users
read lozenge. The system saves the order information and adds the
order to the one touch order area.
[0285] Items from the one touch area and family favorites window
5140 cannot be dragged to the Activities lozenge. However, when the
activities lozenge is highlighted, the family favorites foods and
restaurants are focused to that activity. Any item from the one
touch area and family favorites window 5140 may be dragged to the
To-Do list, causing a To-do item to be created. When items from the
To-Do list are highlighted, the family favorites foods and
restaurants are focused to that activity. Items from the one touch
area and family favorites window 5140 also may be dragged to the
Send lozenge to be shared or chatted about. Similarly, Items from
the one touch area and family favorites window 5140 also may be
dragged to the locations lozenge, causing an item to be created.
Location items, when highlighted cause windows to present the
restaurant or food associated with that location. The maps lozenge
always shows a map of any item or location that may be highlighted,
in addition to the directions and a customer finder feature.
[0286] The recycle bin is replaced with block input 5155, which
removes a search entry from ever appearing again in the search
boxes. As a result, a user may eliminate businesses from
re-appearing if they do not like or have no interest in those
businesses.
[0287] FIG. 52 shows an example of the Yellow Pages or listings
directory screen 5200 that is presented when the Yellow Pages input
4910 is selected. A user may select any name in the people lozenge
to focus a Yellow Pages or other listings directory search on that
person's interests (e.g., as stored in the user database and/or
based on the information provided in their personal profile).
Similarly, a user may select any name in the groups lozenge to
focus a Yellow Pages or other listings directory search on that
favorites associated with the group.
[0288] The custom search window 5230 default position is a search
for the special interest items to the user or "me" in the peoples
lozenge (e.g., "Bob Henderson"). The window 5230 includes two
sections 5235 and 5237. The first section 5235 shows custom yellow
pages categories. The second section 5237 shows information for
specific businesses. The sections 5235 and 5237 display pre-fetched
search items determined by the system based on data in their
personal profile, to-do list, shopping list, and calendar.
[0289] The Popular search window 5250 shows items based on the
user's local area (e.g., "Houston"). The window 5250 includes two
sections 5255 and 5257. The first section 5255 shows custom yellow
pages categories based on what is popular in that area. The second
section 5257 provides choices for a selected category that are
presented in order of distance to the user's home.
[0290] Certain items from the search window sections 5237 and 5257
may be dragged to the activities, such as items that may be
associated with an activity. The associations are stored in a
database. When activities are highlighted, the windows 5237 and
5257 focus to find businesses associated with that activity. Any
search item may be dragged to the To-Do list to cause an item to be
created. When highlighted To-Do items focus to find businesses
associated with that to-do list item. Search items may not be
dragged to the shopping list; however, shopping items, when
highlighted, cause the windows to focus to find businesses
associated with that shopping item. Search items may be dragged to
the Send lozenge to be shared or chatted about. Any search item can
be dragged to the Locations lozenge, causing an item to be created.
When highlighted, location items focus the search window to find
businesses associated with that location. The maps lozenge always
shows a map of any search item, or location that may be
highlighted, in addition to directions and a customer finder
feature.
[0291] The search bar 5210 features a yellow pages search in
addition to the system and Internet search to focus searches, as
described above.
[0292] The recycle bin is replaced with block input 5280, which
removes a search entry from ever appearing again in the search
boxes. As a result, a user may eliminate businesses from
re-appearing if they do not like or have no interest in those
businesses.
[0293] FIG. 53 illustrates one exemplary process 5300 for shopping
with the family organizer. In one example, the family organizer is
placed in the kitchen on or in proximity to an appliance where food
is stored and/or disposed of. When an item is used up or more of an
item is desired, for example, milk, the user activates the barcode
reader or via the button or the user input on the shopping lozenge
of the family organizer interface 5301. The processing device
instructs the barcode reader to scan a barcode on the item (e.g.,
the UPC code on the item) 5310. The barcode reader scans the bar
code and provides the results to the processing device 5320. The
item associated with the bar code is determined by looking up the
bar code in memory, by sending bar code data to the service
provider system for identification, or by accessing an online
database 5330.
[0294] Once the processing device system service provider
identifies the scanned item, for example, milk, the scanned item is
automatically added to the family shopping list the group family is
selected on the groups lozenge or the shopping list of a specific
family member if their name is selected on the people lozenge 5340.
Once activated, the barcode reader may remain active for a
predetermined period of time. The processing device determines if
the predetermined period of time has elapsed 5350. If not, the
processing device determines if there are additional barcodes to
scan 5350. If there are the barcode reader and processing device
may continue to scan items and add them to the shopping list until
there are not items left and/or the timeout occurs. If the bar code
data is provided to the system for identification, it may be sent
as each barcode is read or as a batch if there are more than a
single or a large number of items.
[0295] Once the items have been added to the shopping list, the
system monitors the shopping list to identify any relevant Glads
for the items on the shopping list 5360. In addition, when items
are scanned and added to the list, the system automatically knows
what the item is as the item was identified by its UPC. As a
result, the system does not need to interpret these items on the
list using the NLI and may directly identify potential Glads to
serve to the graphics bar 726 of the family organizer. Any
identified Glads or incentives are presented to the user 5370.
Identified Glads presented to the graphics bar may be dragged to
the shopping list or the calendar for saving.
[0296] As described herein, the shopping list may be printed and/or
provided to the mobile device interface (e.g., a mobile phone or
smart phone). Alternatively, if the user orders items from using an
online shopping service, the system may be automatically setup to
store specific scanned item by UPC numbers, name of item, and/or
types of items (e.g., groceries and drugstore items) in a special
shopping list associated with a specific online store or shopping
service. When these items are scanned they are automatically stored
on the store shopping list. The system may then be activated via
the shopping lozenge to periodically log on to the online shopping
site, provide the required user information including passwords and
payment information (e.g., credit/debit card information), orders
the items on the list, and schedule delivery. The personal profile
allows a user to specify specific items and types of items the
system service provider 110 may automatically buy for the user. The
user may specify what price ranges (e.g., a maximum, a minimum or
both) that are okay for the system service provider to user in
determining whether to make a purchase. The user profile buy
information may include payment information, such as credit card,
debit card, paypal, online banking information, a single purchase
spending limit, a monthly purchase spending limit, and a card
balance limit. The user also may delivery preferences, such as time
of day or day of week. This automated buy feature may be
activated/deactivated at any time by the user and a manual override
may be provided. Any item with a barcode and/or a UPC information
may be added to the shopping list and/or ordered this way.
[0297] Of course, the add/search field of the shopping lozenge may
be used by a user to manually entered a UPC number or product code
(e.g., by typing, dragging, or cut and pasting) to add the item to
the shopping list. In addition, the organizer may display pictures
of items that are not normally associated with or have bar code
items, for example, produce, such as vegetables, fruit, and bulk
items. The user may select these items using a user input device to
add these items to the shopping list.
[0298] In addition, food associated items may be scanned to
automatically look up recipes that user the food items or food
items from the shopping list may selected to look up recipes. The
recipes may be presented in a pop-window. The recipes may include
food items with hyperlinks or other indicia allowing selection
(e.g., check boxes, buttons, etc.) for each food item. The user may
add individual food items to the shopping list by selecting the
food item using a user input device. In addition a user selection
is provided to select and add all food items in the recipe to the
shopping list in amounts at least sufficient to make the recipe.
Additionally, the user may print out the recipe.
[0299] The shopping listibarcode feature is a powerful device for
family users. Using this feature a user no longer has to worry
about forgetting to put items on the shopping list. Furthermore,
because any item that is scanned is automatically added to the
shopping list in real time, even if an item is used up after
someone has left to go shopping, the scanned item may be displayed
on a user's mobile device shopping list of the mobile interface
almost instantly and therefore the item is purchased. For example,
a working parent plans to go shopping after work, and their kids at
home after school use up all the milk. When the kids scan the item
as the throw out the carton, the shopping list is instantly updated
and Dad is none the wiser when he checks his shopping list at the
store, thinking milk was on there all the time.
[0300] A number of exemplary implementations have been described.
Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may
be made. For example, suitable results may be achieved if the steps
of described techniques are performed in a different order and/or
if components in a described components, architecture, or devices
are combined in a different manner and/or replaced or supplemented
by other components. Accordingly, other implementations are within
the scope of the following claims.
* * * * *
References