US20090109185A1 - Electronic Document Reader - Google Patents

Electronic Document Reader Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20090109185A1
US20090109185A1 US12/138,748 US13874808A US2009109185A1 US 20090109185 A1 US20090109185 A1 US 20090109185A1 US 13874808 A US13874808 A US 13874808A US 2009109185 A1 US2009109185 A1 US 2009109185A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
display
display device
border
page
document page
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US12/138,748
Inventor
Duncan Barclay
Steven Farmer
Carl Hayton
Simon Jones
Anusha Nirmalananthan
Paul A. Cain
Barry Merrick
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Plastic Logic Ltd
Original Assignee
Plastic Logic Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GB0720764A external-priority patent/GB0720764D0/en
Priority claimed from GB0720843A external-priority patent/GB0720843D0/en
Application filed by Plastic Logic Ltd filed Critical Plastic Logic Ltd
Assigned to PLASTIC LOGIC LIMITED reassignment PLASTIC LOGIC LIMITED ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: MERRICK, BARRY, FARMER, STEVEN, CAIN, PAUL A., JONES, SIMON, BARCLAY, DUNCAN, HAYTON, CARL, NIRMALANANTHAN, ANUSHA
Publication of US20090109185A1 publication Critical patent/US20090109185A1/en
Assigned to STATE CORPORATION "RUSSIAN CORPORATION OF NANOTECHNOLOGIES" reassignment STATE CORPORATION "RUSSIAN CORPORATION OF NANOTECHNOLOGIES" SECURITY AGREEMENT Assignors: PLASTIC LOGIC LIMITED
Assigned to PLASTIC LOGIC LIMITED reassignment PLASTIC LOGIC LIMITED RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: STATE CORPORATION "RUSSIAN CORPORATION OF NANOTECHNOLOGIES"
Priority to US13/214,952 priority Critical patent/US8709413B2/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F3/00Input arrangements for transferring data to be processed into a form capable of being handled by the computer; Output arrangements for transferring data from processing unit to output unit, e.g. interface arrangements
    • G06F3/01Input arrangements or combined input and output arrangements for interaction between user and computer
    • G06F3/03Arrangements for converting the position or the displacement of a member into a coded form
    • G06F3/041Digitisers, e.g. for touch screens or touch pads, characterised by the transducing means
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F3/00Input arrangements for transferring data to be processed into a form capable of being handled by the computer; Output arrangements for transferring data from processing unit to output unit, e.g. interface arrangements
    • G06F3/01Input arrangements or combined input and output arrangements for interaction between user and computer
    • G06F3/03Arrangements for converting the position or the displacement of a member into a coded form
    • G06F3/033Pointing devices displaced or positioned by the user, e.g. mice, trackballs, pens or joysticks; Accessories therefor
    • G06F3/0354Pointing devices displaced or positioned by the user, e.g. mice, trackballs, pens or joysticks; Accessories therefor with detection of 2D relative movements between the device, or an operating part thereof, and a plane or surface, e.g. 2D mice, trackballs, pens or pucks
    • G06F3/03547Touch pads, in which fingers can move on a surface
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F15/00Digital computers in general; Data processing equipment in general
    • G06F15/02Digital computers in general; Data processing equipment in general manually operated with input through keyboard and computation using a built-in program, e.g. pocket calculators
    • G06F15/025Digital computers in general; Data processing equipment in general manually operated with input through keyboard and computation using a built-in program, e.g. pocket calculators adapted to a specific application
    • G06F15/0266Digital computers in general; Data processing equipment in general manually operated with input through keyboard and computation using a built-in program, e.g. pocket calculators adapted to a specific application for time management, e.g. calendars, diaries
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F3/00Input arrangements for transferring data to be processed into a form capable of being handled by the computer; Output arrangements for transferring data from processing unit to output unit, e.g. interface arrangements
    • G06F3/14Digital output to display device ; Cooperation and interconnection of the display device with other functional units
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06FELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
    • G06F3/00Input arrangements for transferring data to be processed into a form capable of being handled by the computer; Output arrangements for transferring data from processing unit to output unit, e.g. interface arrangements
    • G06F3/14Digital output to display device ; Cooperation and interconnection of the display device with other functional units
    • G06F3/147Digital output to display device ; Cooperation and interconnection of the display device with other functional units using display panels
    • GPHYSICS
    • G02OPTICS
    • G02FOPTICAL DEVICES OR ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE CONTROL OF LIGHT BY MODIFICATION OF THE OPTICAL PROPERTIES OF THE MEDIA OF THE ELEMENTS INVOLVED THEREIN; NON-LINEAR OPTICS; FREQUENCY-CHANGING OF LIGHT; OPTICAL LOGIC ELEMENTS; OPTICAL ANALOGUE/DIGITAL CONVERTERS
    • G02F1/00Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics
    • G02F1/01Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour 
    • G02F1/13Devices or arrangements for the control of the intensity, colour, phase, polarisation or direction of light arriving from an independent light source, e.g. switching, gating or modulating; Non-linear optics for the control of the intensity, phase, polarisation or colour  based on liquid crystals, e.g. single liquid crystal display cells
    • G02F1/133Constructional arrangements; Operation of liquid crystal cells; Circuit arrangements
    • G02F1/1333Constructional arrangements; Manufacturing methods
    • G02F1/133388Constructional arrangements; Manufacturing methods with constructional differences between the display region and the peripheral region
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2310/00Command of the display device
    • G09G2310/02Addressing, scanning or driving the display screen or processing steps related thereto
    • G09G2310/0232Special driving of display border areas
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2340/00Aspects of display data processing
    • G09G2340/04Changes in size, position or resolution of an image
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2340/00Aspects of display data processing
    • G09G2340/04Changes in size, position or resolution of an image
    • G09G2340/0407Resolution change, inclusive of the use of different resolutions for different screen areas
    • GPHYSICS
    • G09EDUCATION; CRYPTOGRAPHY; DISPLAY; ADVERTISING; SEALS
    • G09GARRANGEMENTS OR CIRCUITS FOR CONTROL OF INDICATING DEVICES USING STATIC MEANS TO PRESENT VARIABLE INFORMATION
    • G09G2380/00Specific applications
    • G09G2380/14Electronic books and readers
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N1/00Scanning, transmission or reproduction of documents or the like, e.g. facsimile transmission; Details thereof
    • H04N1/387Composing, repositioning or otherwise geometrically modifying originals
    • H04N1/393Enlarging or reducing

Definitions

  • This invention generally relates to an electronic document reading device, that is to a device such as an electronic book which presents a document to a user on a display to enable the user to read the document.
  • the present invention provides a display device for displaying an electronic document page comprising a central rewritable portion, a non-rewritable border with external lateral physical dimensions defined by the display edges, wherein said border is coloured to substantially match a background colour of said central rewritable portion such that when a foreground part of said document page is displayed on said central rewritable portion the appearance of margins of said document page is provided by said background coloured border whereby in use said displayed electronic document page appears to extend up to said display edges, and wherein the surface of the display is substantially flat over the lateral physical dimensions from the central rewritable portion across the border to the display edges.
  • Embodiments of the above described device address this problem by enabling connection(s) to be made to the re-writable portion of the display more than 2 mm, 5 mm or 10 mm inside a lateral boundary of the device whilst still giving the impression to a user that the displayed material or page extends right to the edge of the display device.
  • Embodiments of the display device are not completely rigid, having at least a degree of flexibility to impart robustness to the device.
  • the display device advantageously provides a display that enables a user to view documents in an easy to read format that emulates a printed sheet of paper.
  • the border emulates the appearance of a border of a printed sheet of paper.
  • the lateral physical dimensions of the display device are within 10 mm, 5 mm, 2 mm or 1 mm of that of an international paper size standard, in particular ISO 216 or ANSI/ASME Y14.1.
  • the electronic document page has one of a set of predetermined sizes, preferably in accordance with one or more of the above standards.
  • the information is located in a central (foreground) portion of the page bordered by the margins.
  • a size (height and/or width) of the central portion of the page preferably substantially fits a size (height and/or width) of the central re-writable portion of the display. That is, in embodiments, the central, information-bearing part of the page when displayed is sized to just fits within the central re-writable portion of the display in at least one dimension.
  • the central, information-bearing part of the page and the central re-writable portion of the display have substantially matching aspect ratios.
  • the information-bearing part of the page may include header and/or footer information such as a page number the aspect ratios may match to better than 30%, 20% 10% or 5% of a 1:1 ratio).
  • the aspect ratio of the display device as a whole substantially matches the aspect ratio of one or a set of said predetermined page sizes, for example a set of standard US or European page sizes. In this way, when a page is displayed the appearance of the size of the margins provided by the borders is in proportion to the appearance the page would have were it printed.
  • one or more margins may be provided by the re-writable display portion, for example where two A5 pages are displayed side-by-side on an A4 size display device).
  • the predetermined page size may be a standard size such as an international standard ISO216 size (for example an A-series size such as A4 or A5, a B-series size such as B4 or B5 or a C-series size) or a substantially equivalent DIN, SIS of JIS size; or a North American standard size such as AWS1 Y14.1 (for example, letter, legal and the like).
  • ISO216 size for example an A-series size such as A4 or A5, a B-series size such as B4 or B5 or a C-series size
  • SIS of JIS size SIS of JIS size
  • AWS1 Y14.1 North American standard size
  • the display device includes non-volatile memory, for example Flash memory, for storing one or more pages of information for display.
  • this information is stored as images of the pages, preferably at the same resolution as the re-writable portion of the display, to facilitate rapid page update, in embodiments without scaling (or with only integer factor scaling) within the document display device itself.
  • this data may also include data identifying the size of the document page displayed.
  • a margin may be considered as that portion of a page which, amongst the pages of a document for display, has information which does not substantially change from one page to the next. Typically this is a “white space” part of a page. Changing information such as a page number is preferably not included in the margins since this information is preferably displayed on the re-writable portion of the display because it changes from one page to the next.
  • the margin comprises a blank space on a page, that is a region of the page where there is substantially no information content (theoretically, in embodiments, information which does not change from one page to the next, such as a logo, could be defined permanently in the non-rewriteable border).
  • the foreground, information bearing part of the document page displayed on said central rewritable portion extends close to the border, for example to a distance less than 10 mm, preferably less than 5 mm away from the non-rewritable border.
  • no portion of said display extends in front of said display surface.
  • the central re-writable portion of said display comprises an electrophoretic display element.
  • the display has a front surface (or surface element) and the border of the front surface (or surface element) is coloured with said background colour on a rear face of the front surface (or surface element).
  • the border of front surface element is coloured by embedding coloured particles into the rear surface, and the electrophoretic display element extends beyond said re-writable portion of said display behind said coloured border, substantially flush against said rear surface at an edge of said coloured border around said central re-writable portion of said display.
  • the optical density of said coloured border reduces gradually towards the central rewritable portion whereby the boundary between said border and said central-rewritable portion is rendered less visible.
  • said background colour is substantially white so that the display surface has substantially the appearance of a piece of paper.
  • the device may be part of a system which further comprises processor control code to input data defining said electronic document page, crop the margins of the electronic document page, and write the data for the cropped document page to the central re-writeable portion of said display such that an appearance of said margin of said document page is provided by the background coloured border of said display device.
  • the cropping may comprise removing edge portions of an image of a page and then, preferably, rescaling the page to compensate for the cropping.
  • This procedure may be performed on the display device itself but in some preferred embodiments it is performed by a pre-rendering process implemented on another computer system from which the display device receives electronic document pages for display. This is described in more detail in the applicant's co-pending patent application no. filed by the applicants on the same day as this application (our ref GBP291004, incorporated by reference).
  • the display device further comprises one or more touch sensitive elements for controlling said display device, wherein at least one of said touch sensitive elements is disposed in one or more portions of said border region and said touch sensitive elements being arranged to generate a signal in response to a user touching said display surface in a region of said border to control said display device.
  • said touch sensitive elements are disposed beneath said display surface and said border.
  • further touch sensitive elements are disposed in a region of said central rewriteable portion.
  • at least one of said touch-sensitive elements disposed in said border region is operable by the touch of a finger.
  • said touch sensor is a capacitive touch sensor and at least one of its electrodes is deposited onto a rear face of said front surface element.
  • said display device is bendable, conformable to adopt a non-planar shape and/or rollable.
  • the present invention also provides a method of displaying an electronic document page with a predetermined size using a display device having edges defining lateral dimensions not substantially larger than said predetermined size, said document page comprising a central, foreground portion bearing one or both of text and graphics, a background having a background colour and at least one margin having said background colour, the method comprising providing said display device with a display surface comprising a central re-writeable display portion and a non-re-writeable border; colouring said border to match said background colour; and displaying said foreground portion of said document page on said re-writeable display portion such that said non-re-writeable border gives the appearance of said margin, and wherein said document page appears to extend up to said edges of said display.
  • said display surface is flat to said edges.
  • at least one margin comprises four margins framing said central, foreground portion of said document page and wherein said border frames said central re-writeable display portion of said display.
  • said colouring comprises dye sublimation.
  • the method further comprises inputting page data defining said document page, processing said page data to crop said document page to provide cropped page data, and outputting said cropped page data to said display device for display.
  • the cropping may comprise removing edge portions of an image of a page and then, preferably, resending the page to compensate for the cropping.
  • said background colour is white.
  • said central re-writeable display portion comprises an electrophoretic display element.
  • said display device is bendable, conformable to adopt a non-planar shape and/or rollable.
  • the present invention also provides a display device for displaying a document page of a predetermined size at 1:1 scale, said display device having substantially the same lateral physical dimensions as said 1:1 scale document page, said lateral physical dimensions of said display device being defined by display edges, said display device having a display surface flat to said edges, said display surface having a central rewritable portion surrounded by a border, and wherein said border is coloured to substantially match a background colour of said display surface such that when a foreground part of said document page is displayed on said central rewritable portion of said display surface at 1:1 scale the appearance of margins of said displayed page is provided by said background coloured border whereby in use said displayed document page appears to extend up to said display edges.
  • the present invention also provides a method of displaying an electronic document page with a predetermined size at substantially 1:1 scale using a display device having edges defining lateral dimensions not substantially larger than said predetermined size, said document page comprising a central, foreground portion bearing one or both of text and graphics, a background having a background colour and at least one margin having said background colour, the method comprising providing said display device with a display surface comprising a central re-writeable display portion and a non-re-writeable border; colouring said border to match said background colour; and displaying said foreground portion of said document page on said re-writeable display portion such that said non-re-writeable border gives the appearance of said margin, and wherein said document page appears to extend up to said edges of said display.
  • the predetermined page size may be a standard size such as an international standard ISO216 size (for example an A-series size such as A4 or A5, a B-series size such as B4 or B5 or a C-series size) or a substantially equivalent DIN, SIS of JIS size; or a North American standard size such as AWS1 Y14.1 (for example, letter, legal and the like).
  • the substantially 1:1 scale may include a scale in one or two dimensions down to 0.9:1, 0.8:1 or 0.7:1 (orupto 1.1:1,1.2:1 or 1.3:1).
  • this enables a device of, say, A4 size to display a page at substantially 1:1 scale on a device not substantially larger than the page size, in this example, A4 size.
  • the display can be smaller than (say) A4, the borders of the display giving substantially the same impression as the (background) of the display screen.
  • This enables a viewer to have the impression that the displayed page extends right to the edges of the display device.
  • references to a (background) colour include, black, grey and white).
  • the invention provides a display device for displaying an electronic document page comprising a central rewritable portion, a non-rewritable border with external lateral physical dimensions defined by the display edges, further comprising touch sensitive elements for controlling said display device disposed in said border to generate a signal in response to a user touching said display surface in a region of said border to control said display device and arranged such that location agnostic gestures are enabled, wherein a user may perform the same gesture at a variety of prints around the border to produce substantially the same result independent of orientation of the display device.
  • FIGS. 1 a to 1 c show, respectively, a front, display face view, a rear view, and a vertical cross-section view of an electronic document reading device according to an embodiment of the invention
  • FIG. 2 shows a detailed vertical cross-section through a display portion of the device of FIG. 1 ;
  • FIGS. 3 a and 3 b illustrate display edging for the device of FIG. 1 ;
  • FIG. 4 a shows a device having a border comprising touch sensitive elements
  • FIG. 4 b shows a cross section through the edge of the device for FIG. 4 a
  • FIG. 5 shows a block diagram of control electronics for an electronic document reader according to an embodiment of the invention
  • FIGS. 6 a to 6 c show examples of fitting document pages to a re-writable display portion of an electronic document reader
  • FIG. 7 shows margins of an example document page
  • FIG. 8 shows a flow diagram of a procedure for establishing and applying a common scaling to pages of a document with multiple pages to fit the pages within a re-writeable display portion of an electronic document reader
  • FIG. 9 shows a block diagram of a system for implementing a paperless electronic document printing procedure.
  • FIGS. 1 a to 1 c these schematically illustrate an electronic document reading device 10 having a front display face 12 and a rear face 14 .
  • the display surface 12 is substantially flat to the edges of the device and, in particular, lacks a display bezel.
  • the electronic (electrophoretic) display does not extend right to the edges of the display surface 12 , and rigid control electronics are incorporated around the edges of the electronic display, this approach reducing the overall thickness of the device and thus facilitating flex-tolerance, at the expense of making the overall area of the device slightly larger.
  • FIG. 2 this illustrates a vertical cross-section through a display region of the device between the frame members 16 .
  • the drawing is not to scale.
  • the device has a substantially transparent front panel 100 , for example made of Perspex (RTM), which acts as a structural member.
  • the active matrix pixel driver circuitry layer 106 may comprise an array of organic or inorganic thin film transistors as disclosed, for example, in WO01/47045.
  • Such a front panel is not necessary and sufficient physical stiffness could be provided, for example, by the substrate 108 optionally in combination with one or both of the moisture barriers 102 , 110 .
  • the illustrated example of the structure comprises a substrate 108 , typically of plastic such as PET (polyethylene terephthalate) on which is fabricated a thin layer 106 of organic active matrix pixel driver circuitry. Attached over this, for example by adhesive, is an electrophoretic display 104 , although alternative display media such as an organic LED display medium or liquid-crystal display medium may also be used.
  • a moisture barrier 102 is provided over the electronic display 104 , for example of polyethylene and/or AclarTM, a fluoropolymer(polychlorotrifluoroethylene-PCTFE).
  • a moisture barrier 110 is also preferably provided under substrate 108 ; since this moisture barrier does not need to be transparent preferably moisture barrier 110 incorporates a metallic moisture barrier such as a layer of aluminium foil. This allows the moisture barrier to be thinner, hence enhancing overall flexibility.
  • Approximate example thicknesses for the layers are as follows: 100 ⁇ m for moisture barrier 110 , 200 ⁇ m for substrate 108 , 5-6 ⁇ m for active layer 106 , 190 ⁇ m for display 104 , and 200 ⁇ m for moisture barrier 102 .
  • the set of layers 102 - 110 form an encapsulated electronic display 112 ; preferably this is bonded, for example by adhesive, to a transparent display panel 100 .
  • the front panel 100 may have a thickness in the range 0.5-2 mm, for example approximately 1 mm.
  • the presence of the front panel 100 has little effect on the overall visual appearance of the display, in particular the contrast ratio. It is speculated that this is because although whites become slightly greyer, black becomes slightly blacker.
  • the active area of the display does not extend to the edge of the display surface, which enables the electronics to control the active display to be placed around the edge of the reading device.
  • FIG. 3 a this schematically illustrates a display edging arrangement (the illustration is simplified, and not to scale).
  • the display edging 122 is provided around the perimeter of the electrophoretic display 104 .
  • This display edging is coloured to substantially match the colour of the active display area 104 , which gives the appearance that the reader is a single display extending to the edges of the reader device.
  • a boundary between the active display area and a border of the active display area forming margins of a displayed page is at least partially concealed and may be substantially invisible.
  • the display edging may comprise a simple border which may be, for example, sprayed onto the front panel 100 .
  • the display edging 112 may comprise electrophoretic display material such as an additional, undriven sheet of electrophoretic display or an undriven lateral extension of electrophoretic display 104 .
  • FIG. 3 b shows an alternative embodiment of the display, which comprises a display edging 122 that forms part of the front panel 100 .
  • Techniques such as dye sublimation are used to embed the transparent front panel with coloured particles.
  • Other techniques for embedding coloured particles into the material of the transparent front panel 100 may be used.
  • a tapered portion 124 of the embedded particles where the depth of penetration of the particles into the front panel decreases as the distance from the edge (towards the centre of the device) increases, provides a gradual fade from the display edge to the active display.
  • Such a taper provides a softer edge between the display edge and the active display, which further helps to create the illusion that the active display extends to the edge of the reading device.
  • the device comprises a visual continuation between the border of the device and the display, such that the display is flush to the border of the device.
  • the visual continuation of the two components is such that the appearance of a material continuation between the two components is also provided.
  • the electronic document reader comprises connectors located along an edge of the device to enable the device to be connected to other electronic devices, such as a laptop or desktop computer, a PDA (Personal Digital Assistant), a mobile phone or ‘smart’ phone, or other such devices.
  • a USB (universal serial bus) or similar connector is, for example, provided.
  • the electronic document reader may also be provided with wireless interfaces (for example a infrared or BluetoothTM or other such interfaces). Such connections enable documents to be transferred to and from the electronic document reader.
  • the device may also include a number of user controls for selecting documents and/or pages, turning pages forward and back and the like.
  • the border around the active display comprises touch sensitive elements.
  • the display may be touch sensitive, for example as described in our co-pending international patent application PCT/GB2006/050220 hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
  • Such sensors may include capacitive sensors or resistive touch sensors.
  • the aforementioned patent application describes an arrangement in which a touch-screen component is positioned below the display, but which is nonetheless operable from the front, display surface, in particular by laminating the display medium and display backplane over a resistive touch-screen (using a pressure sensitive adhesive).
  • documents may be electronically “marked-up”, with mark-up data being written to or being associated with the electronic document being displayed.
  • embodiments may have a border comprising touch sensitive elements 400 , as shown for example in FIG. 4 a.
  • touch sensitive elements 400 may provide a number of user controls for selecting documents and/or pages, turning pages forward and back and the like.
  • the touch sensitive elements may be arranged around one or more of the borders of the device.
  • the touch sensors may be arranged such that location agnostic gestures are enabled, wherein a user may perform the same gesture at any point around the border to produce the same result, in particular, independent of orientation (portrait or landscape) of the device.
  • FIG. 4 b shows a cross section through the edge of a device.
  • a conductive layer 400 of the touch sensor is patterned on the underside of the border 122 .
  • the upper conductive layer is patterned to produce a sensor array, which is formed of a design so as to enable touch sensitive gestures to be provided, both in a horizontal and vertical direction.
  • the upper conductive layer may be a conductive polymer or preferably a metallic layer, such as, but not limited to copper, nickel, gold or silver or alternatively a printable metal.
  • the conductive layer maybe deposited using techniques such as vacuum deposition, electroplating and printing techniques, such as screen printing.
  • An insulator material layer is then deposited over the upper conductive layer, by techniques such as but not limited to, spray or blade coating or printing techniques.
  • a lower conductive layer is then deposited over the dielectric layer and patterned, as above.
  • the lower conductive layer forms the ground plane and may also form the tracking plane.
  • a separate conductive layer may be deposited and patterned as above to form the tracking plane, separated from the adjacent conductive layer by a further layer of dielectric material.
  • Via hole interconnects are formed between the sensor array and the tracking plane, in order to connect these two layers electrically.
  • the tracking plane is then in turn connected to the electronics of the device.
  • connection may be formed between the upper conductive layer and the electronics of the device.
  • Such connections may be formed mechanically, with the aid of an adhesive or through a welding process.
  • the display medium is a reflective display medium, in particular an electrophoretic display medium and the backplane comprises a flexible substrate such as PET or PEN (polyethylene naphthalene).
  • the backplane is fabricated using solution-based transistors preferably patterned by techniques such as direct-write printing, laser ablation or photolithography. Further details can be found in the applicant's earlier patent applications, including, in particular, WO 01/47045, WO 2004/070466, WO 01/47043, WO 2006/059162, WO 2006/056808, WO 2006/061658, WO 2006/106365 and PCT/GB2006/050265, all hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
  • control circuitry 1000 suitable for the above-described electronic document reader 10 .
  • the control circuitry comprises a controller 1002 including a processor, working memory and programme memory, coupled to a user interface 1004 for example for controls 130 .
  • the controller is also coupled to the active matrix driver circuitry 106 and electrophoretic display 104 by a display interface 1006 for example provided by integrated circuits 120 .
  • controller 1002 is able to send electronic document data to the display 104 and, optionally, to receive touch-sense data from the display.
  • the control electronics also includes non-volatile memory 1008 , for example Flash memory for storing data for one or more documents for display and, optionally, other data such as user bookmark locations and the like.
  • An external interface 1010 is provided for interfacing with a computer such as laptop, PDA, or mobile or ‘smart’ phone 1014 to receive document data and, optionally, to provide data such as user bookmark data.
  • the interface 1010 may comprise a wired, for example USB, and/or wireless, for example BluetoothTM interface and, optionally, an inductive connection to receive power.
  • the latter feature enables embodiments of the device to entirely dispense with physical electrical connections and hence facilitates inter alia a simpler physical construction and improved device aesthetics as well as greater resistance to moisture.
  • a rechargeable battery 1012 or other rechargeable power source is connected to interface 1010 for recharging, and provides a power supply to the control electronics and display.
  • processor control code for a wide range of functions may be stored in the programme memory.
  • a simple document display procedure may comprise, in operation, sensing a user control 1050 , determining which document to update 1052 , reading a portion of the relevant document from the non-volatile memory 1054 , and writing the read portion of the document to the page display 1056 .
  • electronic documents to be displayed on the reader may come from a variety of sources, for example a laptop or desktop computer, a PDA (Personal Digital Assistant), a mobile phone (e.g. Smart Phones such as the BlackberryTM), or other such devices.
  • a PDA Personal Digital Assistant
  • a mobile phone e.g. Smart Phones such as the BlackberryTM
  • the user can transfer such electronic documents to the document reader in a variety of ways.
  • Electronic documents may comprise any number of formats including, but not limited to, PDF, Microsoft WordTM, Bitmaps, JPG, TIFF and other known formats.
  • a first is the act of transferring the file from a device, such as a mobile phone or a smart phone to the reader. Once transferred, the file is then displayed on the reader.
  • a second method of transfer is the synchronisation of documents between the reader and a device, as long as the reader is connected to a device such as a laptop. The same document is therefore available on both devices.
  • a third method of transfer is the act of printing the document from a device such as a laptop or PC onto the reader. The image of the document is therefore transferred to the reader.
  • electronic documents are stored in a separate laptop or desktop computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone.
  • the user then connects the electronic document reader to any of the above devices using the wired or wireless interfaces to synchronise the reader to the devices.
  • electronic documents that are stored in any number of user-defined folders defined on the computer, PDA device or ‘smart’ phone, and that are not present in the memory of the reader are transferred to the reader.
  • any documents not present on the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone that are present on the reader may also be transferred back to the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone.
  • the Personal Computer takes control of the device and transfers data to and from the device.
  • the PC may require several software components to be installed, for example, a printer driver; a device driver (to manage the details of the communications protocol with the device) and a controlling management application.
  • a second method of transferring the documents is similar to the first, in that documents between a computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone are synchronised with the documents present in the memory of the reader.
  • the user may select which documents are synchronised. This may be achieved, for example, using a document management programme running on the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone. The user indicates a selection on the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone and only those files are synchronised. Alternatively, a live synchronisation may be performed, where the reader could store all documents that have been recently viewed on the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone.
  • a third method of transferring electronic documents to the reader from a computer, PDA-type device or ‘smart’ phone involves the use of an intermediary module to convert the electronic document into a suitable format for displaying on the display.
  • the user “prints” the document to the reader so that the “printed” document is displayed on the active display of the reader.
  • the intermediary module may include, amongst others, a printer driver module.
  • an aspect the invention also provides a method uses an intermediary module to generate an image file of each page within a document being printed (although it is not essential, in embodiments of the invention, to employ such a technique).
  • These images may be compressed and stored in a native device format used by the electronic reader. These files are then transferred to the electronic reader device as part of a file synchronisation process.
  • One of the advantages of this technique is that it allows support for any document/file for which the operating system has a suitable intermediary application, such as a printer driver, installed.
  • a suitable intermediary application such as a printer driver
  • the control program looks at each document and determine whether the operating system associates an application with that file, for example, a spreadsheet application will be associated with a spreadsheet document.
  • the control application invokes the associated application and asks it to ‘print’ the document to the device printer.
  • the result will be a series of images in the device format corresponding to pages of the original document and will appear on the electronic reader, as if the document had been printed.
  • the intermediary module may reside in the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone printing the document, or reside in the document reader. Once a document has been selected for printing to the reader, the intermediate module processes the electronic document to enable the document to be displayed on the reader or on a remote server connected to the PC, PDA or ‘smart’ phone. Processing may include adjusting or cropping margins, reformatting or repaginating text, converting picture elements within a document into a suitable displayable content, and other such processes. In embodiments, the intermediate module may, for example, be a device programme such as a printer driver.
  • a fourth method of transferring electronic documents to a reader involves the use of Smart or mobile telephones that are capable of receiving and reading documents (whether attached to or embedded in a message), for example the BlackberryTM.
  • the act of “opening” a document within the telephone processes and transfers the electronic document to the reader for displaying.
  • this method of opening a document may utilise an intermediary module to process the document, as described above.
  • the device may receive the documents via a wireless link such as BluetoothTM.
  • a Bluetooth equipped ‘smart’ phone transfers files stored in its internal memory to the device.
  • the device On receipt of such a file, if the file consists of a file format supported natively by the device, the device renders the pages from the document to store in the device memory. As soon as the first page is available, the file will be displayed on screen of the device. Alternatively, the pages of the file may be rendered before transmission to the device.
  • a remote server may be accessed by a intermediary device, such as a PDA or a mobile or smart phone. The information received by the intermediary device may be stored on such a device, before sending the document on to the reader device.
  • the reader may be used as a storage device, for example, in the form of a USB memory stick. Documents of interest may be transferred to the reader for the user to access at a later date.
  • the active display area and (inactive) display edging are arranged to provide the user with the appearance of a screen with a border or margin.
  • the document reader is dimensioned such that a page of an A4 document (ISO 216), or a document in a US letter (ANSI/ASME Y14.1) format, or any standard paper size, may be displayed at a 1:1 scale.
  • A4 document ISO 216
  • US letter ANSI/ASME Y14.1
  • Such an arrangement provides the user with a document reader that therefore mimics the appearance of a printed sheet of A4 or US letter (or other like document formats).
  • electronic documents for displaying on the document reader generally comprise an unused border or margin around the edge of the text. If such a document were to be presented on the display of the reader, there would be an unwanted and unnecessary border or margin around the document being displayed. There is therefore a need to remove this unwanted margin from the electronic document. Such a removal of unwanted border or margin from the electronic document would advantageously maximise the use of the active display area. The display edging therefore becomes the border or margin that be present.
  • a cropping module that is configured to process the electronic document to remove the unwanted border around the text present in the document.
  • the cropping module may reside in the reader or the device from which the document is being transferred.
  • a device may be made such that the overall layout resembles standard paper sizes, such as A4 or US letter.
  • the active display part of such a device cannot extend to the border of the device due to the electronics required to drive that display.
  • any scaling factor applied to a page of the document is retained throughout the whole document. This inhibits the text from growing or shrinking as the user changes page.
  • the process knows nothing about the structure or content of a document.
  • the first pass will “print” the document to a series of images; each image representing a single page.
  • the largest margin on each of the four sides is determined.
  • the smallest of the set of pages is retained. So for example, if on page 1, the top margin is 10 mm and on page 2 the top margin is 20 mm, we retain 10 mm as the smallest of the largest margin available.
  • FIG. 6 shows an electronic document reading device (paperless printer) 600 with a re-writeable electrophoretic display portion 602 and a border region 604 (in FIG. 6 the border is shaded for clarity; in reality it is matched to the re-writeable display area so as to appear like a continuation of the display area).
  • a typical printed document has one or more pages 606 , each page of which will have a margin on each of the top, bottom, left and right side which contains no content.
  • the size of the margins would be at least the same size as the display edging of the reader. If such a page is displayed on the reader at the same size as it would be printed on a conventional printer (a preferred default setting of the device), then the reader will not lose any content (the margins correspond to the non re-writeable display area). However, in general not all the pages will meet this requirement: Their margins are likely to be smaller than the device edging, and in this case part of the content will be obscured as shown in FIG. 6 b. Therefore, it is desirable to reduce the physical page size, to display all of the content, as shown in FIG. 6 c.
  • the process for analysing a document knows nothing about the structure of the document and determines, the margin information it uses from images of the pages.
  • these images are created using a program which is configured to appear to an application like a (printer driver) program for regular printer page generation.
  • a printer command set to a printer it creates a bitmap image on disc.
  • a management application program then loads this image and examines the image and determine what the margins 702 a - d are, as shown in FIG. 7 .
  • the skilled person will appreciate that the determination these margins for a page is relatively straightforward.
  • the page image can be then recreated to a size that allows the actual content to be optimally fitted to the resolution of the active display area.
  • first image generation pass could be created with the “correct” scaling factor, this would remove the need to run the computationally expensive process again for the second pass. It is possible to make a reasonable guess based upon previous knowledge of document types. This can take advantage of the fact that many users set their margins once in their word processor and use those settings for all documents. Embodiments of the process may then “learn” that setting, optimally separately for each user of a device.
  • FIG. 8 shows a flow diagram of a procedure to enable use of the processing power of a “host” consumer electronics device to render, re-scale and crop page data, providing images of pages for direct display on an electronic document reading device (paperless printer), thus substantially reducing the processing burden on the display device. This in turn facilitates achieving extremely long battery life times in the “printer”.
  • a document 800 is used to invoke a “print” function on the paperless printer (this is described further below).
  • the procedure locates an application associated with the document ( 802 ) and checks ( 804 ) that a print function is supported for this type of document (if it is not an error message can be displayed).
  • the procedure then optionally checks if previous scaling data is available, for example determined from another document previously printed by the same user. If this information is available the procedure reads the information from non-volatile memory ( 808 ); otherwise the procedure continues, and determines a scaling to employ.
  • the procedure invokes the relevant application for the document to print the document using a printer driver to a set of image pages, preferably at a resolution of the paperless printer (electronic document reading device), for example in one embodiment 1280 ⁇ 1220.
  • the procedure then initialises a set of margin sizes for left, right, top and bottom margins to a set of maximum values (for 100% scaling), at step 812 .
  • the procedure measures the margins on the page ( 816 ) as shown in FIG. 7 and, for each margin ( 818 ) determines whether or not the margin is less than the relevant stored value, updating the stored value ( 820 ) if the measured margin is smaller, and continuing ( 822 ) until the last page is reached.
  • the procedure then uses the smallest margin values to determine a scaling which is to be applied to all of the pages so that one or more pages with a smallest margin size fit within the re-writeable portion of the display ( 824 ).
  • this scaling data is stored, optionally together with a user identification ( 826 ) for later use in printing a second document without repeating the scaling procedure.
  • the procedure then invokes the application for the document a second time to “print” to image pages at the determined scaling using the printer driver, providing the desired scale as an input to the print-to-image driver.
  • the management program then crops the images using the smallest determined margins ( 830 ), the result of this again being images of pages at substantially the same resolution as that of the electronic document display device (paperless printer), for example 1280 ⁇ 920.
  • These images are then sent to the electronic document reader for a “printing” (display) at 1:1 resolution, thus substantially reducing the processing burden within the electronic document reading device.
  • the scaled “printing” at step 828 can straightforwardly implement advanced functions such as anti-aliasing and font hinting (for grey scale fonts) since these functions are performed by a printer driver for the application.
  • a result of the procedure is to strip off margins, the same size for each page, in which no information content is present and then to stretch the resulting page, automatically scaling fonts and performing functions such as hinting, to match a target resolution for the paperless printer.
  • the paperless printer stores actual images of pages rather than data defined in the content of a page at some higher level.
  • an image of a page comprises a map with a pixel value defining the pixel colour, grey scale, or black/white level, for substantially each pixel of the re-writeable display portion of the paperless printer.
  • This image data may be compressed, for example according to a lossless technique.
  • non-volatile memory in the paperless printer may store tens of thousands of pages.
  • FIG. 9 shows more details of how elements of the procedure of FIG. 8 are distributed between different software modules and implemented.
  • the procedure of FIG. 8 in the example of FIG. 9 is implemented on a laptop computer 900 , although it will be understood that other types of computerised electronic device may also be employed including, but not limited to, a PDA (personal digital assistant) and a mobile phone.
  • Page image data 902 at a resolution substantially equal to that of a resolution of the paperless printer is sent to the paperless printer 904 for display.
  • information such as annotation data representing user annotations on a paperless printer document may be transferred back from paperless printer 904 to consumer electronic device at 900 , for example as part of a synchronisation procedure.
  • the management program 906 runs as a background service on the device 900 , hidden from a general user.
  • a graphical user interface 908 is provided, for example on a desktop of device 900 , to allow a user to setup parameters of the paperless printing mechanism, although in preferred embodiments the “printing” itself happens automatically. That is, in some preferred embodiments a system 910 , for example provided by an operating system of device 900 , monitors one or more directories for changes in documents 800 and on detection of a change informs the management program 906 . This then automatically invokes a synchronisation procedure to provide an update document image, using the technique described above.
  • the management program automatically “prints” documents (or at least a changed part of a document), in a visual, image format, to the electronic reader when a document changes.
  • the image information is stored on the electronic reader although it need not be displayed immediately.
  • This sync update can be quick, in part because the processing is performed on the host.
  • a drag-and-drop interface may also be provided for a user so that when a user drags and drops a document onto an appropriate icon the management program provides a (transparent) paperless print function for the user.
  • the management program opens a hidden desktop (a Windows function) and then opens the relevant application for the document in the hidden desktop.
  • the application is run to process the document and print the document using a printer driver to print to an image file.
  • This image file is then parsed by the management program 906 which determines a scaling, and then the document is reprinted at the determined scaling (if a scaling is known the initial parsing procedure may be omitted).
  • the management program then crops the scaled image data and outputs image data at a pixel resolution suitable for the paperless printer 904 , for printing without further rendering. Thus when the documents is wanted for display on the paperless printer, minimal further processing is necessary.
  • This technique may be used for a range of programs including, for example, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Outlook, Internet Explorer (all Registered Trademarks) and the like.
  • programs for example XL2007 (Registered Trademark) rather than opening a hidden desktop the application may be invoked by the management program 906 by running a script.
  • Similar approaches may be adopted in other operating systems, for example Apple Mac computers based on a Unix-type operating system.

Abstract

We describe a display device for displaying an electronic document page comprising a central rewritable portion, a non-rewritable border with external lateral physical dimensions defined by the display edges, wherein said border is coloured to substantially match a background colour of said central rewritable portion such that when a foreground part of said document page is displayed on said central rewritable portion the appearance of margins of said document page is provided by said background coloured border whereby in use said displayed electronic document page appears to extend up to said display edges, and wherein the surface of the display is substantially flat over the lateral physical dimensions from the central rewritable portion across the border to the display edges.

Description

    FIELD OF THE INVENTION
  • This invention generally relates to an electronic document reading device, that is to a device such as an electronic book which presents a document to a user on a display to enable the user to read the document.
  • This application is one of a group of co-pending US applications filed on the same day as this application, and with the same assignee, all hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
  • BACKGROUND TO THE INVENTION
  • We have previously described a form of electronic book in our earlier applications PCT/GB2006/050235 and GB 0702347.6, hereby incorporated by reference.
  • Background prior art relating to electronic document reading devices can be found in U.S. Pat. No. 6,124,851, US2004/0201633, US2006/0133664, US2006/0125802, US2006/0139308, US2006/0077190, US2005/0260551, U.S. Pat. No. 6,124,851, U.S. Pat. No. 6,021,306, US2005/0151742, and US2006/0119615. Prior art relating to displays can be found in EP0283235A, GB2214342A, and U.S. Pat. No. 6,831,662.
  • There is, however, a desire for improved electronic reading devices.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention provides a display device for displaying an electronic document page comprising a central rewritable portion, a non-rewritable border with external lateral physical dimensions defined by the display edges, wherein said border is coloured to substantially match a background colour of said central rewritable portion such that when a foreground part of said document page is displayed on said central rewritable portion the appearance of margins of said document page is provided by said background coloured border whereby in use said displayed electronic document page appears to extend up to said display edges, and wherein the surface of the display is substantially flat over the lateral physical dimensions from the central rewritable portion across the border to the display edges.
  • It is desirable to be able to provide a display device in which a displayed page appears to extend right to the edge of the device. In particular with an electrophoretic display, this helps give the impression that the document is a paper document, which in turn has substantial practical usability benefits because of the improved user experience. However one difficulty with achieving this is the need to electrically connect to the display along two edges without very sharp bends in the connecting flexible circuit board or wiring. This is a particular problem in a bendable or flexible device, even when the amount of flexure is relatively small, for example of order one, two or a few degrees. Embodiments of the above described device address this problem by enabling connection(s) to be made to the re-writable portion of the display more than 2 mm, 5 mm or 10 mm inside a lateral boundary of the device whilst still giving the impression to a user that the displayed material or page extends right to the edge of the display device. Embodiments of the display device are not completely rigid, having at least a degree of flexibility to impart robustness to the device.
  • Thus the display device advantageously provides a display that enables a user to view documents in an easy to read format that emulates a printed sheet of paper. The border emulates the appearance of a border of a printed sheet of paper. Preferably, the lateral physical dimensions of the display device are within 10 mm, 5 mm, 2 mm or 1 mm of that of an international paper size standard, in particular ISO 216 or ANSI/ASME Y14.1.
  • Thus in some preferred embodiments the electronic document page has one of a set of predetermined sizes, preferably in accordance with one or more of the above standards. On the document page the information is located in a central (foreground) portion of the page bordered by the margins. When the page is displayed a size (height and/or width) of the central portion of the page preferably substantially fits a size (height and/or width) of the central re-writable portion of the display. That is, in embodiments, the central, information-bearing part of the page when displayed is sized to just fits within the central re-writable portion of the display in at least one dimension. Preferably the central, information-bearing part of the page and the central re-writable portion of the display have substantially matching aspect ratios. (In practice because the information-bearing part of the page may include header and/or footer information such as a page number the aspect ratios may match to better than 30%, 20% 10% or 5% of a 1:1 ratio). Likewise preferably the aspect ratio of the display device as a whole substantially matches the aspect ratio of one or a set of said predetermined page sizes, for example a set of standard US or European page sizes. In this way, when a page is displayed the appearance of the size of the margins provided by the borders is in proportion to the appearance the page would have were it printed. (Optionally, depending on the configuration, one or more margins may be provided by the re-writable display portion, for example where two A5 pages are displayed side-by-side on an A4 size display device).
  • The predetermined page size may be a standard size such as an international standard ISO216 size (for example an A-series size such as A4 or A5, a B-series size such as B4 or B5 or a C-series size) or a substantially equivalent DIN, SIS of JIS size; or a North American standard size such as AWS1 Y14.1 (for example, letter, legal and the like).
  • In embodiments the display device includes non-volatile memory, for example Flash memory, for storing one or more pages of information for display. In preferred embodiments this information is stored as images of the pages, preferably at the same resolution as the re-writable portion of the display, to facilitate rapid page update, in embodiments without scaling (or with only integer factor scaling) within the document display device itself. Optionally this data may also include data identifying the size of the document page displayed.
  • A margin may be considered as that portion of a page which, amongst the pages of a document for display, has information which does not substantially change from one page to the next. Typically this is a “white space” part of a page. Changing information such as a page number is preferably not included in the margins since this information is preferably displayed on the re-writable portion of the display because it changes from one page to the next. Preferably the margin comprises a blank space on a page, that is a region of the page where there is substantially no information content (theoretically, in embodiments, information which does not change from one page to the next, such as a logo, could be defined permanently in the non-rewriteable border).
  • In embodiments, the foreground, information bearing part of the document page displayed on said central rewritable portion extends close to the border, for example to a distance less than 10 mm, preferably less than 5 mm away from the non-rewritable border. Preferably, no portion of said display extends in front of said display surface.
  • Preferably, the central re-writable portion of said display comprises an electrophoretic display element.
  • In embodiments, the display has a front surface (or surface element) and the border of the front surface (or surface element) is coloured with said background colour on a rear face of the front surface (or surface element). Preferably, the border of front surface element is coloured by embedding coloured particles into the rear surface, and the electrophoretic display element extends beyond said re-writable portion of said display behind said coloured border, substantially flush against said rear surface at an edge of said coloured border around said central re-writable portion of said display. Preferably, the optical density of said coloured border reduces gradually towards the central rewritable portion whereby the boundary between said border and said central-rewritable portion is rendered less visible.
  • Preferably, said background colour is substantially white so that the display surface has substantially the appearance of a piece of paper.
  • In embodiments, the device may be part of a system which further comprises processor control code to input data defining said electronic document page, crop the margins of the electronic document page, and write the data for the cropped document page to the central re-writeable portion of said display such that an appearance of said margin of said document page is provided by the background coloured border of said display device. The cropping may comprise removing edge portions of an image of a page and then, preferably, rescaling the page to compensate for the cropping.
  • This procedure may be performed on the display device itself but in some preferred embodiments it is performed by a pre-rendering process implemented on another computer system from which the display device receives electronic document pages for display. This is described in more detail in the applicant's co-pending patent application no. filed by the applicants on the same day as this application (our ref GBP291004, incorporated by reference).
  • Thus we also describe a method of displaying a document page with a predetermined size using a display device having edges defining lateral dimensions not substantially larger than said predetermined size and having a central re-writable display portion and a non-re-writable border, said document page comprising a central, foreground portion bearing one or both of text and graphics, a background having a background colour and at least one margin having said background colour, the method comprising: inputting page data defining a page for display; processing said page data to crop margins of said page such that, when displayed on said re-writable display portion, said non-re-writable border gives the appearance of said cropped margins, said processing generating cropped page data; and outputting said cropped page data for display on said re-writable display portion of said display.
  • Preferably, the display device further comprises one or more touch sensitive elements for controlling said display device, wherein at least one of said touch sensitive elements is disposed in one or more portions of said border region and said touch sensitive elements being arranged to generate a signal in response to a user touching said display surface in a region of said border to control said display device. Preferably, said touch sensitive elements are disposed beneath said display surface and said border. Preferably, further touch sensitive elements are disposed in a region of said central rewriteable portion. Preferably, at least one of said touch-sensitive elements disposed in said border region is operable by the touch of a finger. Preferably, said touch sensor is a capacitive touch sensor and at least one of its electrodes is deposited onto a rear face of said front surface element.
  • Preferably, said display device is bendable, conformable to adopt a non-planar shape and/or rollable.
  • The present invention also provides a method of displaying an electronic document page with a predetermined size using a display device having edges defining lateral dimensions not substantially larger than said predetermined size, said document page comprising a central, foreground portion bearing one or both of text and graphics, a background having a background colour and at least one margin having said background colour, the method comprising providing said display device with a display surface comprising a central re-writeable display portion and a non-re-writeable border; colouring said border to match said background colour; and displaying said foreground portion of said document page on said re-writeable display portion such that said non-re-writeable border gives the appearance of said margin, and wherein said document page appears to extend up to said edges of said display.
  • Preferably, said display surface is flat to said edges. Preferably, at least one margin comprises four margins framing said central, foreground portion of said document page and wherein said border frames said central re-writeable display portion of said display.
  • In embodiments, said colouring comprises dye sublimation.
  • Preferably, the method further comprises inputting page data defining said document page, processing said page data to crop said document page to provide cropped page data, and outputting said cropped page data to said display device for display. The cropping may comprise removing edge portions of an image of a page and then, preferably, resending the page to compensate for the cropping. Preferably, said background colour is white.
  • In embodiments, said central re-writeable display portion comprises an electrophoretic display element. Preferably, said display device is bendable, conformable to adopt a non-planar shape and/or rollable.
  • The present invention also provides a display device for displaying a document page of a predetermined size at 1:1 scale, said display device having substantially the same lateral physical dimensions as said 1:1 scale document page, said lateral physical dimensions of said display device being defined by display edges, said display device having a display surface flat to said edges, said display surface having a central rewritable portion surrounded by a border, and wherein said border is coloured to substantially match a background colour of said display surface such that when a foreground part of said document page is displayed on said central rewritable portion of said display surface at 1:1 scale the appearance of margins of said displayed page is provided by said background coloured border whereby in use said displayed document page appears to extend up to said display edges.
  • The present invention also provides a method of displaying an electronic document page with a predetermined size at substantially 1:1 scale using a display device having edges defining lateral dimensions not substantially larger than said predetermined size, said document page comprising a central, foreground portion bearing one or both of text and graphics, a background having a background colour and at least one margin having said background colour, the method comprising providing said display device with a display surface comprising a central re-writeable display portion and a non-re-writeable border; colouring said border to match said background colour; and displaying said foreground portion of said document page on said re-writeable display portion such that said non-re-writeable border gives the appearance of said margin, and wherein said document page appears to extend up to said edges of said display.
  • The predetermined page size may be a standard size such as an international standard ISO216 size (for example an A-series size such as A4 or A5, a B-series size such as B4 or B5 or a C-series size) or a substantially equivalent DIN, SIS of JIS size; or a North American standard size such as AWS1 Y14.1 (for example, letter, legal and the like). The substantially 1:1 scale may include a scale in one or two dimensions down to 0.9:1, 0.8:1 or 0.7:1 (orupto 1.1:1,1.2:1 or 1.3:1).
  • In embodiments this enables a device of, say, A4 size to display a page at substantially 1:1 scale on a device not substantially larger than the page size, in this example, A4 size. This is because the display can be smaller than (say) A4, the borders of the display giving substantially the same impression as the (background) of the display screen. This in turn, enables a viewer to have the impression that the displayed page extends right to the edges of the display device. (It will be understood that in this specification references to a (background) colour include, black, grey and white).
  • In a further aspect the invention provides a display device for displaying an electronic document page comprising a central rewritable portion, a non-rewritable border with external lateral physical dimensions defined by the display edges, further comprising touch sensitive elements for controlling said display device disposed in said border to generate a signal in response to a user touching said display surface in a region of said border to control said display device and arranged such that location agnostic gestures are enabled, wherein a user may perform the same gesture at a variety of prints around the border to produce substantially the same result independent of orientation of the display device.
  • Features of the above described aspects and embodiments of the invention may be combined in any combination.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • These and other aspects of the invention will now be further described by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying figures in which:
  • FIGS. 1 a to 1 c show, respectively, a front, display face view, a rear view, and a vertical cross-section view of an electronic document reading device according to an embodiment of the invention;
  • FIG. 2 shows a detailed vertical cross-section through a display portion of the device of FIG. 1;
  • FIGS. 3 a and 3 b illustrate display edging for the device of FIG. 1;
  • FIG. 4 a shows a device having a border comprising touch sensitive elements;
  • FIG. 4 b shows a cross section through the edge of the device for FIG. 4 a;
  • FIG. 5 shows a block diagram of control electronics for an electronic document reader according to an embodiment of the invention;
  • FIGS. 6 a to 6 c show examples of fitting document pages to a re-writable display portion of an electronic document reader;
  • FIG. 7 shows margins of an example document page;
  • FIG. 8 shows a flow diagram of a procedure for establishing and applying a common scaling to pages of a document with multiple pages to fit the pages within a re-writeable display portion of an electronic document reader; and
  • FIG. 9 shows a block diagram of a system for implementing a paperless electronic document printing procedure.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • Referring to FIGS. 1 a to 1 c, these schematically illustrate an electronic document reading device 10 having a front display face 12 and a rear face 14. As can be seen from FIG. 1 c, in preferred embodiments the display surface 12 is substantially flat to the edges of the device and, in particular, lacks a display bezel. However in embodiments described later it will be seen that the electronic (electrophoretic) display does not extend right to the edges of the display surface 12, and rigid control electronics are incorporated around the edges of the electronic display, this approach reducing the overall thickness of the device and thus facilitating flex-tolerance, at the expense of making the overall area of the device slightly larger.
  • Referring now to FIG. 2, this illustrates a vertical cross-section through a display region of the device between the frame members 16. The drawing is not to scale.
  • As can be seen, in preferred embodiments the device has a substantially transparent front panel 100, for example made of Perspex (RTM), which acts as a structural member. The active matrix pixel driver circuitry layer 106 may comprise an array of organic or inorganic thin film transistors as disclosed, for example, in WO01/47045. Such a front panel is not necessary and sufficient physical stiffness could be provided, for example, by the substrate 108 optionally in combination with one or both of the moisture barriers 102, 110.
  • The illustrated example of the structure comprises a substrate 108, typically of plastic such as PET (polyethylene terephthalate) on which is fabricated a thin layer 106 of organic active matrix pixel driver circuitry. Attached over this, for example by adhesive, is an electrophoretic display 104, although alternative display media such as an organic LED display medium or liquid-crystal display medium may also be used. A moisture barrier 102 is provided over the electronic display 104, for example of polyethylene and/or Aclar™, a fluoropolymer(polychlorotrifluoroethylene-PCTFE). A moisture barrier 110 is also preferably provided under substrate 108; since this moisture barrier does not need to be transparent preferably moisture barrier 110 incorporates a metallic moisture barrier such as a layer of aluminium foil. This allows the moisture barrier to be thinner, hence enhancing overall flexibility.
  • Approximate example thicknesses for the layers are as follows: 100 μm for moisture barrier 110, 200 μm for substrate 108, 5-6 μm for active layer 106, 190 μm for display 104, and 200 μm for moisture barrier 102. The set of layers 102-110 form an encapsulated electronic display 112; preferably this is bonded, for example by adhesive, to a transparent display panel 100. The front panel 100 may have a thickness in the range 0.5-2 mm, for example approximately 1 mm.
  • Surprisingly it has been found that the presence of the front panel 100 has little effect on the overall visual appearance of the display, in particular the contrast ratio. It is speculated that this is because although whites become slightly greyer, black becomes slightly blacker.
  • As mentioned above, the active area of the display does not extend to the edge of the display surface, which enables the electronics to control the active display to be placed around the edge of the reading device.
  • Referring to FIG. 3 a, this schematically illustrates a display edging arrangement (the illustration is simplified, and not to scale). As shown the display edging 122 is provided around the perimeter of the electrophoretic display 104. This display edging is coloured to substantially match the colour of the active display area 104, which gives the appearance that the reader is a single display extending to the edges of the reader device. Thus in embodiments a boundary between the active display area and a border of the active display area forming margins of a displayed page is at least partially concealed and may be substantially invisible.
  • In an embodiment, the display edging may comprise a simple border which may be, for example, sprayed onto the front panel 100. However in other embodiments to provide a uniform appearance to a user display edging 112 may comprise electrophoretic display material such as an additional, undriven sheet of electrophoretic display or an undriven lateral extension of electrophoretic display 104.
  • FIG. 3 b shows an alternative embodiment of the display, which comprises a display edging 122 that forms part of the front panel 100. Techniques such as dye sublimation are used to embed the transparent front panel with coloured particles. Other techniques for embedding coloured particles into the material of the transparent front panel 100 may be used.
  • A tapered portion 124 of the embedded particles, where the depth of penetration of the particles into the front panel decreases as the distance from the edge (towards the centre of the device) increases, provides a gradual fade from the display edge to the active display. Such a taper provides a softer edge between the display edge and the active display, which further helps to create the illusion that the active display extends to the edge of the reading device.
  • Further, the device comprises a visual continuation between the border of the device and the display, such that the display is flush to the border of the device. The visual continuation of the two components (the border and the display) is such that the appearance of a material continuation between the two components is also provided.
  • In embodiments, the electronic document reader comprises connectors located along an edge of the device to enable the device to be connected to other electronic devices, such as a laptop or desktop computer, a PDA (Personal Digital Assistant), a mobile phone or ‘smart’ phone, or other such devices. A USB (universal serial bus) or similar connector is, for example, provided. However, in embodiments, the electronic document reader may also be provided with wireless interfaces (for example a infrared or Bluetooth™ or other such interfaces). Such connections enable documents to be transferred to and from the electronic document reader.
  • The device may also include a number of user controls for selecting documents and/or pages, turning pages forward and back and the like. In embodiments, the border around the active display comprises touch sensitive elements. However in other embodiments the display may be touch sensitive, for example as described in our co-pending international patent application PCT/GB2006/050220 hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety. Such sensors may include capacitive sensors or resistive touch sensors. The aforementioned patent application describes an arrangement in which a touch-screen component is positioned below the display, but which is nonetheless operable from the front, display surface, in particular by laminating the display medium and display backplane over a resistive touch-screen (using a pressure sensitive adhesive). However the skilled person will appreciate that other forms of touch-screen technology may additionally or alternatively be employed. In such embodiments, documents may be electronically “marked-up”, with mark-up data being written to or being associated with the electronic document being displayed.
  • As mentioned above, embodiments may have a border comprising touch sensitive elements 400, as shown for example in FIG. 4 a. Such elements may provide a number of user controls for selecting documents and/or pages, turning pages forward and back and the like. The touch sensitive elements may be arranged around one or more of the borders of the device. The touch sensors may be arranged such that location agnostic gestures are enabled, wherein a user may perform the same gesture at any point around the border to produce the same result, in particular, independent of orientation (portrait or landscape) of the device.
  • FIG. 4 b shows a cross section through the edge of a device. To form such touch sensors, a conductive layer 400 of the touch sensor is patterned on the underside of the border 122. The upper conductive layer is patterned to produce a sensor array, which is formed of a design so as to enable touch sensitive gestures to be provided, both in a horizontal and vertical direction. The upper conductive layer may be a conductive polymer or preferably a metallic layer, such as, but not limited to copper, nickel, gold or silver or alternatively a printable metal. The conductive layer maybe deposited using techniques such as vacuum deposition, electroplating and printing techniques, such as screen printing.
  • An insulator material layer is then deposited over the upper conductive layer, by techniques such as but not limited to, spray or blade coating or printing techniques. A lower conductive layer is then deposited over the dielectric layer and patterned, as above. The lower conductive layer forms the ground plane and may also form the tracking plane. Alternatively, a separate conductive layer may be deposited and patterned as above to form the tracking plane, separated from the adjacent conductive layer by a further layer of dielectric material.
  • Via hole interconnects are formed between the sensor array and the tracking plane, in order to connect these two layers electrically. The tracking plane is then in turn connected to the electronics of the device.
  • There are several ways that the connection may be formed between the upper conductive layer and the electronics of the device. Such connections may be formed mechanically, with the aid of an adhesive or through a welding process.
  • As mentioned above, in preferred embodiments the display medium is a reflective display medium, in particular an electrophoretic display medium and the backplane comprises a flexible substrate such as PET or PEN (polyethylene naphthalene). Preferably the backplane is fabricated using solution-based transistors preferably patterned by techniques such as direct-write printing, laser ablation or photolithography. Further details can be found in the applicant's earlier patent applications, including, in particular, WO 01/47045, WO 2004/070466, WO 01/47043, WO 2006/059162, WO 2006/056808, WO 2006/061658, WO 2006/106365 and PCT/GB2006/050265, all hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety.
  • Referring now to FIG. 5, this shows example control circuitry 1000 suitable for the above-described electronic document reader 10. The control circuitry comprises a controller 1002 including a processor, working memory and programme memory, coupled to a user interface 1004 for example for controls 130. The controller is also coupled to the active matrix driver circuitry 106 and electrophoretic display 104 by a display interface 1006 for example provided by integrated circuits 120. In this way controller 1002 is able to send electronic document data to the display 104 and, optionally, to receive touch-sense data from the display. The control electronics also includes non-volatile memory 1008, for example Flash memory for storing data for one or more documents for display and, optionally, other data such as user bookmark locations and the like. An external interface 1010 is provided for interfacing with a computer such as laptop, PDA, or mobile or ‘smart’ phone 1014 to receive document data and, optionally, to provide data such as user bookmark data. The interface 1010 may comprise a wired, for example USB, and/or wireless, for example Bluetooth™ interface and, optionally, an inductive connection to receive power. The latter feature enables embodiments of the device to entirely dispense with physical electrical connections and hence facilitates inter alia a simpler physical construction and improved device aesthetics as well as greater resistance to moisture. A rechargeable battery 1012 or other rechargeable power source is connected to interface 1010 for recharging, and provides a power supply to the control electronics and display.
  • The skilled person will appreciate that processor control code for a wide range of functions may be stored in the programme memory. By way of example a simple document display procedure may comprise, in operation, sensing a user control 1050, determining which document to update 1052, reading a portion of the relevant document from the non-volatile memory 1054, and writing the read portion of the document to the page display 1056.
  • As discussed above, electronic documents to be displayed on the reader may come from a variety of sources, for example a laptop or desktop computer, a PDA (Personal Digital Assistant), a mobile phone (e.g. Smart Phones such as the Blackberry™), or other such devices. Using the wired (e.g. USB etc) or wireless (e.g. Bluetooth™) interfaces, the user can transfer such electronic documents to the document reader in a variety of ways. Electronic documents may comprise any number of formats including, but not limited to, PDF, Microsoft Word™, Bitmaps, JPG, TIFF and other known formats.
  • There are three main ways in which the transfer of files may occur.
  • A first is the act of transferring the file from a device, such as a mobile phone or a smart phone to the reader. Once transferred, the file is then displayed on the reader. A second method of transfer is the synchronisation of documents between the reader and a device, as long as the reader is connected to a device such as a laptop. The same document is therefore available on both devices. A third method of transfer is the act of printing the document from a device such as a laptop or PC onto the reader. The image of the document is therefore transferred to the reader. These methods will now be described in more detail.
  • In a first method, electronic documents are stored in a separate laptop or desktop computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone. The user then connects the electronic document reader to any of the above devices using the wired or wireless interfaces to synchronise the reader to the devices. During this synchronisation, electronic documents that are stored in any number of user-defined folders defined on the computer, PDA device or ‘smart’ phone, and that are not present in the memory of the reader are transferred to the reader. Similarly, any documents not present on the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone that are present on the reader (for example, documents that have been modified or written to whilst displayed on the reader) may also be transferred back to the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone.
  • In such a method, the Personal Computer (PC) takes control of the device and transfers data to and from the device. To understand the capabilities of the device, the PC may require several software components to be installed, for example, a printer driver; a device driver (to manage the details of the communications protocol with the device) and a controlling management application.
  • A second method of transferring the documents is similar to the first, in that documents between a computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone are synchronised with the documents present in the memory of the reader. However, before the transfer begins (using the wired or wireless interfaces), the user may select which documents are synchronised. This may be achieved, for example, using a document management programme running on the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone. The user indicates a selection on the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone and only those files are synchronised. Alternatively, a live synchronisation may be performed, where the reader could store all documents that have been recently viewed on the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone.
  • A third method of transferring electronic documents to the reader from a computer, PDA-type device or ‘smart’ phone involves the use of an intermediary module to convert the electronic document into a suitable format for displaying on the display. In such a method, the user “prints” the document to the reader so that the “printed” document is displayed on the active display of the reader. The intermediary module may include, amongst others, a printer driver module.
  • Thus an aspect the invention also provides a method uses an intermediary module to generate an image file of each page within a document being printed (although it is not essential, in embodiments of the invention, to employ such a technique).
  • These images may be compressed and stored in a native device format used by the electronic reader. These files are then transferred to the electronic reader device as part of a file synchronisation process.
  • One of the advantages of this technique is that it allows support for any document/file for which the operating system has a suitable intermediary application, such as a printer driver, installed. During the file synchronisation sequence the control program looks at each document and determine whether the operating system associates an application with that file, for example, a spreadsheet application will be associated with a spreadsheet document. The control application invokes the associated application and asks it to ‘print’ the document to the device printer. The result will be a series of images in the device format corresponding to pages of the original document and will appear on the electronic reader, as if the document had been printed.
  • The intermediary module may reside in the computer, PDA or ‘smart’ phone printing the document, or reside in the document reader. Once a document has been selected for printing to the reader, the intermediate module processes the electronic document to enable the document to be displayed on the reader or on a remote server connected to the PC, PDA or ‘smart’ phone. Processing may include adjusting or cropping margins, reformatting or repaginating text, converting picture elements within a document into a suitable displayable content, and other such processes. In embodiments, the intermediate module may, for example, be a device programme such as a printer driver.
  • A fourth method of transferring electronic documents to a reader involves the use of Smart or mobile telephones that are capable of receiving and reading documents (whether attached to or embedded in a message), for example the Blackberry™. In such a method, the act of “opening” a document within the telephone processes and transfers the electronic document to the reader for displaying. Again, this method of opening a document may utilise an intermediary module to process the document, as described above.
  • In such a method, the device may receive the documents via a wireless link such as Bluetooth™. A Bluetooth equipped ‘smart’ phone transfers files stored in its internal memory to the device. On receipt of such a file, if the file consists of a file format supported natively by the device, the device renders the pages from the document to store in the device memory. As soon as the first page is available, the file will be displayed on screen of the device. Alternatively, the pages of the file may be rendered before transmission to the device. Further, a remote server may be accessed by a intermediary device, such as a PDA or a mobile or smart phone. The information received by the intermediary device may be stored on such a device, before sending the document on to the reader device.
  • Alternatively, the reader may be used as a storage device, for example, in the form of a USB memory stick. Documents of interest may be transferred to the reader for the user to access at a later date.
  • The active display area and (inactive) display edging are arranged to provide the user with the appearance of a screen with a border or margin. Furthermore, in embodiments, the document reader is dimensioned such that a page of an A4 document (ISO 216), or a document in a US letter (ANSI/ASME Y14.1) format, or any standard paper size, may be displayed at a 1:1 scale. Such an arrangement provides the user with a document reader that therefore mimics the appearance of a printed sheet of A4 or US letter (or other like document formats).
  • However, electronic documents for displaying on the document reader generally comprise an unused border or margin around the edge of the text. If such a document were to be presented on the display of the reader, there would be an unwanted and unnecessary border or margin around the document being displayed. There is therefore a need to remove this unwanted margin from the electronic document. Such a removal of unwanted border or margin from the electronic document would advantageously maximise the use of the active display area. The display edging therefore becomes the border or margin that be present.
  • In addition to the reader, there is therefore also provided a cropping module that is configured to process the electronic document to remove the unwanted border around the text present in the document. The cropping module may reside in the reader or the device from which the document is being transferred.
  • A device may be made such that the overall layout resembles standard paper sizes, such as A4 or US letter. However, the active display part of such a device cannot extend to the border of the device due to the electronics required to drive that display.
  • When showing a document on such a display there are several possibilities:
      • Show the document at actual size. In this case, the edge of the document will be lost to view as it will correspond to the area of the device that hides the electronics. However, this is unlikely to be satisfactory as the lost area may include text or images that form part of the document.
      • Scale the document to the active display area. In this case, the whole document is shown, but will be reduced in size significantly.
      • Process the document to analyse how much margin area there is on a document and scale the document such that only this margin area is lost behind the electronics. In this case, no information is lost and the maximum size of content is retained.
  • In order to generate the images for this latter choice, it is preferable to process the whole document. It is important when viewing the document on the device that any scaling factor applied to a page of the document is retained throughout the whole document. This inhibits the text from growing or shrinking as the user changes page.
  • In the general case, the process knows nothing about the structure or content of a document. In order to generate the information, it is necessary to process the document in two passes. The first pass will “print” the document to a series of images; each image representing a single page. On each page, the largest margin on each of the four sides is determined. For each side, the smallest of the set of pages is retained. So for example, if on page 1, the top margin is 10 mm and on page 2 the top margin is 20 mm, we retain 10 mm as the smallest of the largest margin available.
  • At the end of the first pass, sizes are available for each of the margins. A simple calculation will work out a (proportionally correct) scale factor that will allow content on any page in the document to be shown in the active display area of the device. The scale should be adjusted to ensure that it never makes the text larger than life-size (1:1 scale). This value is used to run the document through a second pass of printing, to optimise the print for the display.
  • Referring now to FIG. 6 this shows an electronic document reading device (paperless printer) 600 with a re-writeable electrophoretic display portion 602 and a border region 604 (in FIG. 6 the border is shaded for clarity; in reality it is matched to the re-writeable display area so as to appear like a continuation of the display area). A typical printed document has one or more pages 606, each page of which will have a margin on each of the top, bottom, left and right side which contains no content.
  • In an ideal situation (FIG. 6 a), the size of the margins would be at least the same size as the display edging of the reader. If such a page is displayed on the reader at the same size as it would be printed on a conventional printer (a preferred default setting of the device), then the reader will not lose any content (the margins correspond to the non re-writeable display area). However, in general not all the pages will meet this requirement: Their margins are likely to be smaller than the device edging, and in this case part of the content will be obscured as shown in FIG. 6 b. Therefore, it is desirable to reduce the physical page size, to display all of the content, as shown in FIG. 6 c.
  • In a general case the process for analysing a document knows nothing about the structure of the document and determines, the margin information it uses from images of the pages. In an embodiment these images are created using a program which is configured to appear to an application like a (printer driver) program for regular printer page generation. However, at the end instead of sending a printer command set to a printer, it creates a bitmap image on disc.
  • A management application program then loads this image and examines the image and determine what the margins 702 a-d are, as shown in FIG. 7. The skilled person will appreciate that the determination these margins for a page is relatively straightforward. The page image can be then recreated to a size that allows the actual content to be optimally fitted to the resolution of the active display area.
  • If first image generation pass could be created with the “correct” scaling factor, this would remove the need to run the computationally expensive process again for the second pass. It is possible to make a reasonable guess based upon previous knowledge of document types. This can take advantage of the fact that many users set their margins once in their word processor and use those settings for all documents. Embodiments of the process may then “learn” that setting, optimally separately for each user of a device.
  • However it is possible, often likely, that many pages within a document have different margins. This would provide a poor reading experience if each page were scaled individually. For example, as the reader changed pages the same 12 pt font could be rendered at any size from 100% of the print equivalent down to 70% of the original. It is thus desirable to apply the same scaling to the whole document. To achieve this, rather than look at the margins of a single page preferably substantially every page is examined. For each of the left, right, top and bottom margins the process finds the smallest measured value found throughout the whole document. These values can then be used to re-parse the whole document to an optimal scaling to suit the display, that is a scaling in which the largest actual content size just fits on the re-writable portion of the display.
  • Referring now to FIG. 8, this shows a flow diagram of a procedure to enable use of the processing power of a “host” consumer electronics device to render, re-scale and crop page data, providing images of pages for direct display on an electronic document reading device (paperless printer), thus substantially reducing the processing burden on the display device. This in turn facilitates achieving extremely long battery life times in the “printer”.
  • In the procedure of FIG. 8, a document 800, either stored locally or received from a remote source, is used to invoke a “print” function on the paperless printer (this is described further below). The procedure then locates an application associated with the document (802) and checks (804) that a print function is supported for this type of document (if it is not an error message can be displayed). The procedure then optionally checks if previous scaling data is available, for example determined from another document previously printed by the same user. If this information is available the procedure reads the information from non-volatile memory (808); otherwise the procedure continues, and determines a scaling to employ.
  • Thus at step 810 the procedure invokes the relevant application for the document to print the document using a printer driver to a set of image pages, preferably at a resolution of the paperless printer (electronic document reading device), for example in one embodiment 1280×1220. The procedure then initialises a set of margin sizes for left, right, top and bottom margins to a set of maximum values (for 100% scaling), at step 812. Then, for each page (814) the procedure measures the margins on the page (816) as shown in FIG. 7 and, for each margin (818) determines whether or not the margin is less than the relevant stored value, updating the stored value (820) if the measured margin is smaller, and continuing (822) until the last page is reached. The procedure then uses the smallest margin values to determine a scaling which is to be applied to all of the pages so that one or more pages with a smallest margin size fit within the re-writeable portion of the display (824). Optionally this scaling data is stored, optionally together with a user identification (826) for later use in printing a second document without repeating the scaling procedure.
  • The procedure then invokes the application for the document a second time to “print” to image pages at the determined scaling using the printer driver, providing the desired scale as an input to the print-to-image driver. The management program then crops the images using the smallest determined margins (830), the result of this again being images of pages at substantially the same resolution as that of the electronic document display device (paperless printer), for example 1280×920. These images are then sent to the electronic document reader for a “printing” (display) at 1:1 resolution, thus substantially reducing the processing burden within the electronic document reading device. The scaled “printing” at step 828 can straightforwardly implement advanced functions such as anti-aliasing and font hinting (for grey scale fonts) since these functions are performed by a printer driver for the application. Thus, broadly speaking, a result of the procedure is to strip off margins, the same size for each page, in which no information content is present and then to stretch the resulting page, automatically scaling fonts and performing functions such as hinting, to match a target resolution for the paperless printer.
  • The skilled person will appreciate that there are many ways in which to transfer the image data to the paperless printer, for example providing the information directly to the device or as part of a synchronisation routine to synchronise content in one or both directions between the consumer electronic device and the paperless printer. The paperless printer, in embodiments, stores actual images of pages rather than data defined in the content of a page at some higher level. In this context an image of a page comprises a map with a pixel value defining the pixel colour, grey scale, or black/white level, for substantially each pixel of the re-writeable display portion of the paperless printer. This image data may be compressed, for example according to a lossless technique. Surprisingly an image of a page typically occupies only 10-20 KB and is thus not significantly less efficient then page data represented in a higher level format such as ASCII once additional formatting data is taken into account. Thus non-volatile memory in the paperless printer may store tens of thousands of pages.
  • Referring next to FIG. 9, this shows more details of how elements of the procedure of FIG. 8 are distributed between different software modules and implemented. Thus the procedure of FIG. 8 in the example of FIG. 9 is implemented on a laptop computer 900, although it will be understood that other types of computerised electronic device may also be employed including, but not limited to, a PDA (personal digital assistant) and a mobile phone. Page image data 902 at a resolution substantially equal to that of a resolution of the paperless printer is sent to the paperless printer 904 for display. Optionally (not shown in FIG. 9) information such as annotation data representing user annotations on a paperless printer document may be transferred back from paperless printer 904 to consumer electronic device at 900, for example as part of a synchronisation procedure.
  • In preferred embodiments, the management program 906 runs as a background service on the device 900, hidden from a general user. A graphical user interface 908 is provided, for example on a desktop of device 900, to allow a user to setup parameters of the paperless printing mechanism, although in preferred embodiments the “printing” itself happens automatically. That is, in some preferred embodiments a system 910, for example provided by an operating system of device 900, monitors one or more directories for changes in documents 800 and on detection of a change informs the management program 906. This then automatically invokes a synchronisation procedure to provide an update document image, using the technique described above. In this way the management program automatically “prints” documents (or at least a changed part of a document), in a visual, image format, to the electronic reader when a document changes. The image information is stored on the electronic reader although it need not be displayed immediately. This sync update can be quick, in part because the processing is performed on the host. Optionally a drag-and-drop interface may also be provided for a user so that when a user drags and drops a document onto an appropriate icon the management program provides a (transparent) paperless print function for the user.
  • Thus in one embodiment in a Windows (registered Trademark) environment the management program opens a hidden desktop (a Windows function) and then opens the relevant application for the document in the hidden desktop. The application is run to process the document and print the document using a printer driver to print to an image file. This image file is then parsed by the management program 906 which determines a scaling, and then the document is reprinted at the determined scaling (if a scaling is known the initial parsing procedure may be omitted). The management program then crops the scaled image data and outputs image data at a pixel resolution suitable for the paperless printer 904, for printing without further rendering. Thus when the documents is wanted for display on the paperless printer, minimal further processing is necessary.
  • This technique may be used for a range of programs including, for example, Microsoft Word, Microsoft Outlook, Internet Explorer (all Registered Trademarks) and the like. For other programs, for example XL2007 (Registered Trademark) rather than opening a hidden desktop the application may be invoked by the management program 906 by running a script. Similar approaches may be adopted in other operating systems, for example Apple Mac computers based on a Unix-type operating system.
  • The skilled person will understand that, in this specification, “document” is used broadly since the techniques we describe are applicable to any information on a page, not just words, including for example, pictures, music and in general any material which may be printed to a page. Thus references to pages of a document are to be interpreted broadly and may include, for example, web pages, e-mails, image pages and many other types of document, for example music scores. It will also be understood that embodiments of the device we describe may be used for writing as well as reading, for example to annotate a page which is being read.
  • No doubt many other effective alternatives will occur to the skilled person. It will be understood that the invention is not limited to the described embodiments and encompasses modifications apparent to those skilled in the art lying within the spirit and scope of the claims appended hereto.

Claims (30)

1. A display device for displaying an electronic document page, the display device comprising a central rewritable portion, a non-rewritable border with external lateral physical dimensions defined by the display edges, wherein said border is coloured to substantially match a background colour of said central rewritable portion such that when a foreground part of said document page is displayed on said central rewritable portion the appearance of margins of said document page is provided by said background coloured border whereby in use said displayed electronic document page appears to extend up to said display edges, and wherein the surface of the display is substantially flat over the lateral physical dimensions from the central rewritable portion across the border to the display edges.
2. A display device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said electronic document page has one of a set of predetermined sizes, wherein the information on said page is located in a central portion of the page bordered by said margins, and wherein when said page is displayed on said display device a size of said central portion of said page substantially fits a size of said central rewritable portion of said display device, and wherein a width of said non-rewritable border of said display device substantially matches a width of a said margin of said document page such that, when said document page is displayed, the appearance of said width of said margin of said document page provided by said background coloured border is substantially in proportion to said size of said central portion of said page.
3. A display device as claimed in claim 1 wherein said display device includes non-volatile memory storing data defining said information on said central portion of said page and data identifying a said size of said document page, wherein an aspect ratio of said display device substantially matches an aspect ratio of a said predetermined electronic document page size, and wherein a size of a said border is substantially in proportion to a size of a corresponding said margin.
4. A display device as claimed in claim 1 wherein said lateral physical dimensions of the display device are within 1 cm to that of an international paper size standard, in particular ISO 216 or ANSI/ASME Y14.1.
5. A display device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said foreground part of the document page displayed on said central rewritable portion extends to a distance less than 5 mm away from the non-rewritable border.
6. A display device as claimed in claim 1, wherein no portion of said display extends in front of said display surface.
7. A display device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said central re-writable portion of said display comprises an electrophoretic display element.
8. A display device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said display has a front surface element and wherein said border of front surface element is coloured with said background colour on a rear face of said front surface element.
9. A display device as claimed in claim 8 wherein said border of front surface element is coloured by embedding coloured particles into said rear surface, wherein said electrophoretic display element extends beyond said re-writable portion of said display behind said coloured border, and wherein said electrophoretic display element is substantially flush against said rear surface at an edge of said coloured border around said central re-writable portion of said display.
10. A display device as claimed in claim 9, wherein the optical density of said coloured border reduces gradually towards the central rewritable portion whereby the boundary between said border and said central-rewritable portion is rendered less visible.
11. A display device as claimed in claim 1 wherein said border comprises electrophoretic display material.
12. A display device as claimed in claim 1 wherein said background colour is substantially white, and wherein said display surface has substantially the appearance of a piece of paper.
13. A display device system including a display device as claimed in claim 1, the system further comprising processor control code to input data defining said electronic document page, said processor control code cropping the margins of said electronic document page, and writing data for said cropped document page to said central re-writeable portion of said display such that an appearance of said margin of said document page is provided by the background coloured border of said display device.
14. A display device as claimed in claim 1, further comprising one or more touch sensitive elements for controlling said display device, wherein at least one of said touch sensitive elements is disposed in one or more portions of said border region and said touch sensitive elements being arranged to generate a signal in response to a user touching said display surface in a region of said border to control said display device.
15. A display device as claimed in claim 14, wherein said touch sensitive elements are disposed beneath said display surface and said border.
16. A display device as claimed in claim 14, wherein further touch sensitive elements are disposed in a region of said central rewriteable portion.
17. A display device as claimed in claim 14, wherein at least one of said touch-sensitive elements disposed in said border region is operable by the touch of a finger.
18. A display device as claimed in claim 15 wherein no portion of said display extends in front of said display surface, and wherein said touch sensor is a capacitive touch sensor and at least one of its electrodes is deposited onto a rear face of said front surface element.
19. A display device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said display device is bendable, conformable to adopt a non-planar shape and/or rollable.
20. A method of displaying an electronic document page with a predetermined size using a display device having edges defining lateral dimensions not substantially larger than said predetermined size, said document page comprising a central, foreground portion bearing one or both of text and graphics, a background having a background colour and at least one margin having said background colour, the method comprising providing said display device with a display surface comprising a central re-writeable display portion and a non-re-writeable border; colouring said border to match said background colour; and displaying said foreground portion of said document page on said re-writeable display portion such that said non-re-writeable border gives the appearance of said margin, and wherein said document page appears to extend up to said edges of said display.
21. A method as claimed in claim 20 wherein said display surface is flat to said edges.
22. A method as claimed in claim 20 wherein said at least one margin comprises four margins framing said central, foreground portion of said document page and wherein said border frames said central re-writeable display portion of said display.
23. A method as claimed in claim 20 wherein said colouring comprises dye sublimation.
24. A method as claimed in claim 20 further comprising inputting page data defining said document page, processing said page data to crop said document page to provide cropped page data, and outputting said cropped page data to said display device for display.
25. A method as claimed in claim 20, wherein said background colour is white.
26. A method as claimed in claim 20, wherein said central re-writeable display portion comprises an electrophoretic display element.
27. A method as claimed in claim 20, wherein said display device is bendable, conformable to adopt a non-planar shape and/or rollable.
28. A display device for displaying a document page of a predetermined size at 1:1 scale, said display device having substantially the same lateral physical dimensions as said 1:1 scale document page, said lateral physical dimensions of said display device being defined by display edges, said display device having a display surface flat to said edges, said display surface having a central rewritable portion surrounded by a border, and wherein said border is coloured to substantially match a background colour of said display surface such that when a foreground part of said document page is displayed on said central rewritable portion of said display surface at 1:1 scale the appearance of margins of said displayed page is provided by said background coloured border whereby in use said displayed document page appears to extend up to said display edges.
29. A method of displaying an electronic document page with a predetermined size at substantially 1:1 scale using a display device having edges defining lateral dimensions not substantially larger than said predetermined size, said document page comprising a central, foreground portion bearing one or both of text and graphics, a background having a background colour and at least one margin having said background colour, the method comprising providing said display device with a display surface comprising a central re-writeable display portion and a non-re-writeable border; colouring said border to match said background colour; and displaying said foreground portion of said document page on said re-writeable display portion such that said non-re-writeable border gives the appearance of said margin, and wherein said document page appears to extend up to said edges of said display.
30. A display device for displaying an electronic document page comprising a central rewritable portion, a non-rewritable border with external lateral physical dimensions defined by the display edges, further comprising touch sensitive elements for controlling said display device disposed in said border to generate a signal in response to a user touching said display surface in a region of said border to control said display device and arranged such that location agnostic gestures are enabled, wherein a user may perform the same gesture at a variety of prints around the border to produce substantially the same result independent of orientation of the display device.
US12/138,748 2006-12-13 2008-06-13 Electronic Document Reader Abandoned US20090109185A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US13/214,952 US8709413B2 (en) 2006-12-13 2011-08-22 Treatment of celiac disease with IgA

Applications Claiming Priority (6)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB0720764A GB0720764D0 (en) 2007-10-24 2007-10-24 Electronic document reader
GB0720843.2 2007-10-24
GB0720843A GB0720843D0 (en) 2007-10-24 2007-10-24 Electronic document reader
GB0720764.0 2007-10-24
GB0802805A GB2454030A (en) 2007-10-24 2008-02-15 Edgeless display device
GB0802805.2 2008-02-15

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US11/851,606 Continuation-In-Part US7794721B2 (en) 2006-12-13 2007-09-07 Synthesis of human secretory IgM and the treatment of clostridium difficile associated diseases herewith

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US13/214,952 Continuation-In-Part US8709413B2 (en) 2006-12-13 2011-08-22 Treatment of celiac disease with IgA

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20090109185A1 true US20090109185A1 (en) 2009-04-30

Family

ID=39271766

Family Applications (4)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/138,835 Expired - Fee Related US8539341B2 (en) 2007-10-24 2008-06-13 Electronic document reader
US12/138,967 Expired - Fee Related US8836970B2 (en) 2007-10-24 2008-06-13 Document printing techniques
US12/138,748 Abandoned US20090109185A1 (en) 2006-12-13 2008-06-13 Electronic Document Reader
US12/138,810 Expired - Fee Related US8711395B2 (en) 2007-10-24 2008-06-13 Electronic document reading devices

Family Applications Before (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/138,835 Expired - Fee Related US8539341B2 (en) 2007-10-24 2008-06-13 Electronic document reader
US12/138,967 Expired - Fee Related US8836970B2 (en) 2007-10-24 2008-06-13 Document printing techniques

Family Applications After (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/138,810 Expired - Fee Related US8711395B2 (en) 2007-10-24 2008-06-13 Electronic document reading devices

Country Status (5)

Country Link
US (4) US8539341B2 (en)
EP (4) EP2212770B1 (en)
CN (4) CN101911005A (en)
GB (4) GB2454031A (en)
WO (4) WO2009053740A1 (en)

Cited By (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20080297470A1 (en) * 2007-02-07 2008-12-04 Matthew Marsh Electronic document readers and reading devices
US20080297496A1 (en) * 2007-02-07 2008-12-04 Ben Watson Electronic document reading devices
US20090113291A1 (en) * 2007-10-24 2009-04-30 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic Document Reader
US7920320B2 (en) 2007-02-07 2011-04-05 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic reading devices
US20110207408A1 (en) * 2008-11-07 2011-08-25 Nxp B.V. Peer to peer communication using device class based transmission rules
US20110294426A1 (en) * 2010-05-28 2011-12-01 Sony Corporation Information processing apparatus, information processing system, and program
CN102402335A (en) * 2010-11-03 2012-04-04 微软公司 Computing Device With Flat Touch Surface
US8228323B2 (en) 2008-03-03 2012-07-24 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic document reader system
US20130145252A1 (en) * 2011-12-02 2013-06-06 Opera Software Asa Page based navigation and presentation of web content
US8913087B1 (en) * 2009-07-22 2014-12-16 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Digital image cropping
US20190056832A1 (en) * 2013-02-06 2019-02-21 Apple Inc. Input/output device with a dynamically adjustable appearance and function
US10488692B2 (en) 2016-06-13 2019-11-26 E Ink Holdings Inc. Touch display device

Families Citing this family (53)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9098437B2 (en) 2010-10-01 2015-08-04 Z124 Cross-environment communication framework
US9047102B2 (en) 2010-10-01 2015-06-02 Z124 Instant remote rendering
US8966379B2 (en) 2010-10-01 2015-02-24 Z124 Dynamic cross-environment application configuration/orientation in an active user environment
US8726294B2 (en) 2010-10-01 2014-05-13 Z124 Cross-environment communication using application space API
US8819705B2 (en) 2010-10-01 2014-08-26 Z124 User interaction support across cross-environment applications
US8933949B2 (en) 2010-10-01 2015-01-13 Z124 User interaction across cross-environment applications through an extended graphics context
JP4804277B2 (en) * 2006-08-30 2011-11-02 キヤノン株式会社 Image processing device, portable terminal device, and image processing system
JP5119888B2 (en) * 2007-11-26 2013-01-16 ブラザー工業株式会社 Raster data creation device, raster data creation program and display device
US8806331B2 (en) * 2009-07-20 2014-08-12 Interactive Memories, Inc. System and methods for creating and editing photo-based projects on a digital network
JP4826664B2 (en) * 2009-08-25 2011-11-30 コニカミノルタビジネステクノロジーズ株式会社 Image forming apparatus
WO2011042396A1 (en) 2009-10-05 2011-04-14 Irex Technologies B.V. Display device having improved operation speed
GB2524419B (en) * 2009-10-23 2015-10-28 Flexenable Ltd Electronic document reading devices
US8817052B2 (en) * 2009-11-02 2014-08-26 Sony Corporation Information processing apparatus, image enlargement processing method, and computer program product with visible data area enlargement features
WO2011058128A1 (en) 2009-11-12 2011-05-19 Irex Technologies B.V. Sar limit compliant consumer device
TWI410809B (en) * 2009-12-31 2013-10-01 Acer Inc Data downloading method of e-book reading apparatus, data transferring method of e-book reading apparatus and system thereof
US8810829B2 (en) 2010-03-10 2014-08-19 Ricoh Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for a print driver to control document and workflow transfer
US8547576B2 (en) 2010-03-10 2013-10-01 Ricoh Co., Ltd. Method and apparatus for a print spooler to control document and workflow transfer
EP2375398A1 (en) 2010-04-12 2011-10-12 Dialog Semiconductor GmbH User programmable graphics in non-volatile memory for EPD driver IC
US20110285290A1 (en) * 2010-05-21 2011-11-24 Research In Motion Limited Electronic device
US20120060000A1 (en) * 2010-09-06 2012-03-08 Guozhong Zhu System and method for flexibly storing, distributing, reading, and sharing electronic books
US9258434B1 (en) * 2010-09-13 2016-02-09 Sprint Communications Company L.P. Using a mobile device as an external monitor
WO2012044546A2 (en) 2010-10-01 2012-04-05 Imerj, Llc Auto-waking of a suspended os in a dockable system
US9405444B2 (en) 2010-10-01 2016-08-02 Z124 User interface with independent drawer control
US8761831B2 (en) * 2010-10-15 2014-06-24 Z124 Mirrored remote peripheral interface
DE102010056093A1 (en) * 2010-10-22 2012-04-26 Txtr Gmbh System and method for displaying digital readable content on a mobile display
US8416243B2 (en) * 2011-03-10 2013-04-09 Konica Minolta Laboratory U.S.A., Inc. Approximating font metrics for a missing font when substituting an available replacement
US8881058B2 (en) 2011-04-01 2014-11-04 Arthur Austin Ollivierre System and method for displaying objects in a user interface based on a visual acuity of a viewer
US20120250039A1 (en) * 2011-04-01 2012-10-04 Arthur Austin Ollivierre System and method for presenting information to a user
CN102222059A (en) * 2011-06-14 2011-10-19 汉王科技股份有限公司 Method, device and system for realizing multi-format information display of electronic reader
CN102214162A (en) * 2011-06-14 2011-10-12 汉王科技股份有限公司 Document displaying method, electric reader and system
CN102855224B (en) * 2011-06-30 2014-11-19 北大方正集团有限公司 Display method and display device of electronic documents
US9007297B2 (en) * 2011-08-31 2015-04-14 Lenovo (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. Information handling devices with touch-based reflective display
US8842057B2 (en) 2011-09-27 2014-09-23 Z124 Detail on triggers: transitional states
US20130086467A1 (en) * 2011-10-03 2013-04-04 Google Inc. System for sending a file for viewing on a mobile device
US8635529B2 (en) * 2012-02-29 2014-01-21 Anusha Shanmugarajah Page turning in electronic document readers
CN103324329B (en) * 2012-03-23 2016-07-06 联想(北京)有限公司 A kind of method of toch control and device
GB2502305B (en) * 2012-05-22 2015-07-29 Plastic Logic Ltd Electronic reading devices
GB2504328A (en) * 2012-07-26 2014-01-29 Plastic Logic Ltd Testing of an Electronic Display Device
GB2505440B (en) 2012-08-30 2018-05-30 Flexenable Ltd Electronic device with a flexible display
US20140096037A1 (en) * 2012-09-28 2014-04-03 Interactive Memories, Inc. Methods for Dynamic Prioritization of Graphical Digital Assets for Presentation in an Electronic Interface
CN103150291B (en) * 2013-01-31 2015-09-09 小米科技有限责任公司 File method for cutting edge, terminal and server
US9135539B1 (en) 2013-04-23 2015-09-15 Black Ice Software, LLC Barcode printing based on printing data content
US20150058710A1 (en) * 2013-08-21 2015-02-26 Microsoft Corporation Navigating fixed format document in e-reader application
US20150186758A1 (en) * 2013-12-31 2015-07-02 Konica Minolta Laboratory U.S.A., Inc. Image processing device
CN105677267B (en) * 2014-11-19 2018-11-16 珠海金山办公软件有限公司 A kind of page display method and device
CN105093600B (en) * 2015-08-17 2018-11-06 京东方科技集团股份有限公司 A kind of display panel and display device
CN105389165B (en) * 2015-10-21 2019-04-30 广州视睿电子科技有限公司 A kind of document image display method, device and terminal
CN105528333B (en) * 2015-12-15 2019-06-07 网易(杭州)网络有限公司 A kind of method and apparatus of document optimization display
US20180316803A1 (en) * 2017-04-28 2018-11-01 Christine Reina Epaper display printer
CN108804400A (en) * 2018-06-13 2018-11-13 深圳市轱辘汽车维修技术有限公司 A kind of electronic document processing method, device and relevant device
CN111414111A (en) * 2019-01-04 2020-07-14 珠海金山办公软件有限公司 Page cutting method and device
US11289050B2 (en) * 2019-08-16 2022-03-29 Silicon Works Co., Ltd. Controller and display device including the same
KR20210106128A (en) * 2020-02-20 2021-08-30 휴렛-팩커드 디벨롭먼트 컴퍼니, 엘.피. reusable E-ink paper

Citations (69)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4453200A (en) * 1981-07-20 1984-06-05 Rockwell International Corporation Apparatus for lighting a passive display
US4856088A (en) * 1988-01-14 1989-08-08 Motorola, Inc. Radio with removable display
US5063600A (en) * 1990-05-14 1991-11-05 Norwood Donald D Hybrid information management system for handwriting and text
US5347630A (en) * 1991-04-23 1994-09-13 Seiko Epson Corporation Computer system having a detachable display
US5454066A (en) * 1989-11-16 1995-09-26 Tsai; Irving Method and apparatus for converting a conventional copier into an electronic printer
US5754873A (en) * 1995-06-01 1998-05-19 Adobe Systems, Inc. Method and apparatus for scaling a selected block of text to a preferred absolute text height and scaling the remainder of the text proportionately
US5760323A (en) * 1996-06-20 1998-06-02 Music Net Incorporated Networked electronic music display stands
US5784487A (en) * 1996-05-23 1998-07-21 Xerox Corporation System for document layout analysis
US5857157A (en) * 1995-06-06 1999-01-05 Sony Corporation Portable communication terminal apparatus
US5943679A (en) * 1996-10-30 1999-08-24 Xerox Corporation Multi-page document viewer having a focus image and recursively nested images of varying resolutions less than the resolution of the focus image
US5956034A (en) * 1996-08-13 1999-09-21 Softbook Press, Inc. Method and apparatus for viewing electronic reading materials
US6248483B1 (en) * 2000-04-19 2001-06-19 Eastman Kodak Company Paper base transmission display material
US6297945B1 (en) * 1999-03-29 2001-10-02 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Portable electronic terminal apparatus having a plurality of displays
US20020018027A1 (en) * 2000-06-22 2002-02-14 Koichio Sugimoto Information processing apparatus and information output controlling method
US6388877B1 (en) * 1999-02-04 2002-05-14 Palm, Inc. Handheld computer with open accessory slot
US20020102866A1 (en) * 2000-12-28 2002-08-01 Jean-Pierre Lubowicki Electronic apparatus comprising two mutually movable parts
US6456732B1 (en) * 1998-09-11 2002-09-24 Hewlett-Packard Company Automatic rotation, cropping and scaling of images for printing
US20020149572A1 (en) * 2001-04-17 2002-10-17 Schulz Stephen C. Flexible capacitive touch sensor
US20030067427A1 (en) * 1998-05-12 2003-04-10 E Ink Corporation Microencapsulated electrophoretic electrostatically addressed media for drawing device applications
US6661920B1 (en) * 2000-01-19 2003-12-09 Palm Inc. Method and apparatus for multiple simultaneously active data entry mechanisms on a computer system
US20030227441A1 (en) * 2002-03-29 2003-12-11 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Display input device and display input system
US20040008398A1 (en) * 2002-06-27 2004-01-15 E Ink Corporation Illumination system for nonemissive electronic displays
US20040212588A1 (en) * 2003-03-31 2004-10-28 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Information device
US6831662B1 (en) * 2000-11-08 2004-12-14 Palmone, Inc. Apparatus and methods to achieve a variable color pixel border on a negative mode screen with a passive matrix drive
US20040255244A1 (en) * 2003-04-07 2004-12-16 Aaron Filner Single column layout for content pages
US20040268004A1 (en) * 2003-06-27 2004-12-30 Oakley Nicholas W Always-on removable communicator display
US20050025387A1 (en) * 2003-07-31 2005-02-03 Eastman Kodak Company Method and computer program product for producing an image of a desired aspect ratio
US20050071364A1 (en) * 2003-09-30 2005-03-31 Xing Xie Document representation for scalable structure
US6888643B1 (en) * 2000-06-16 2005-05-03 International Business Machines Corporation Method and system for printing documents to a reusable medium
US6919879B2 (en) * 1998-06-26 2005-07-19 Research In Motion Limited Hand-held electronic device with a keyboard optimized for use with the thumbs
US6919678B2 (en) * 2002-09-03 2005-07-19 Bloomberg Lp Bezel-less electric display
US20050206580A1 (en) * 2003-12-16 2005-09-22 Fumio Koyama Information display
US6954213B1 (en) * 1995-10-02 2005-10-11 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Objective automated color matching between input and output devices
US20050237444A1 (en) * 2004-04-23 2005-10-27 Lg.Philips Lcd Co., Ltd. Liquid crystal display device
US6961029B1 (en) * 2000-11-08 2005-11-01 Palm, Inc. Pixel border for improved viewability of a display device
US6965375B1 (en) * 2001-04-27 2005-11-15 Palm, Inc. Compact integrated touch panel display for a handheld device
US20050257143A1 (en) * 2002-05-22 2005-11-17 The Appliance Studio Limited Printing to displays
US20060026536A1 (en) * 2004-07-30 2006-02-02 Apple Computer, Inc. Gestures for touch sensitive input devices
US20060029250A1 (en) * 2004-08-04 2006-02-09 Seiko Epson Corporation Electronic display system, electronic paper writing device, electronic paper and method for manufacturing the same
US7058829B2 (en) * 2002-08-14 2006-06-06 Intel Corporation Method and apparatus for a computing system having an active sleep mode CPU that uses the cache of a normal active mode CPU
US7079111B2 (en) * 1997-12-18 2006-07-18 E-Book Systems Pte Ltd Computer based browsing computer program product, system and method
US7103848B2 (en) * 2001-09-13 2006-09-05 International Business Machines Corporation Handheld electronic book reader with annotation and usage tracking capabilities
US20060274549A1 (en) * 2005-06-07 2006-12-07 Nec Lcd Technologies, Ltd. Multi-panel display apparatus
US20070028086A1 (en) * 1990-03-23 2007-02-01 Mitsuaki Oshima Data processing apparatus
US20070024603A1 (en) * 2005-07-28 2007-02-01 Li Xiao-Chang C Integrated digital picture viewing device
US20070058178A1 (en) * 2005-09-13 2007-03-15 Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. Electronic paper system, image processing apparatus for electronic paper system storage medium storing image processing program, and image writing method using image processing apparatus
US20070115258A1 (en) * 2001-03-16 2007-05-24 Dualcor Technologies, Inc. Personal electronic device with display switching
US20070195009A1 (en) * 2006-01-31 2007-08-23 Sadao Yamamoto Information processing device and related method
US7283142B2 (en) * 2000-07-28 2007-10-16 Clairvoyante, Inc. Color display having horizontal sub-pixel arrangements and layouts
US7289084B2 (en) * 2005-02-22 2007-10-30 John Michael Lesniak Computer display apparatus
US7412647B2 (en) * 2005-03-04 2008-08-12 Microsoft Corporation Method and system for laying out paginated content for viewing
US20080235224A1 (en) * 2000-03-28 2008-09-25 Allan Blase Joseph Rodrigues Digital display of color and appearance and the use thereof
US20080238871A1 (en) * 2007-03-30 2008-10-02 Seiko Epson Corporation Display apparatus and method for operating a display apparatus
US20080297496A1 (en) * 2007-02-07 2008-12-04 Ben Watson Electronic document reading devices
US20080297470A1 (en) * 2007-02-07 2008-12-04 Matthew Marsh Electronic document readers and reading devices
US20080298083A1 (en) * 2007-02-07 2008-12-04 Ben Watson Electronic reading devices
US20090109468A1 (en) * 2007-10-24 2009-04-30 Duncan Barclay Document printing techniques
US20090113307A1 (en) * 2007-10-30 2009-04-30 Microsoft Sorporation Slideshow method for displaying images on a display
US20090157847A1 (en) * 2005-12-19 2009-06-18 Softbank Mobile Corp. Picture display method and picture display apparatus
US20090219271A1 (en) * 2008-03-03 2009-09-03 Carano Bandel Electronic document reader system
US7656393B2 (en) * 2005-03-04 2010-02-02 Apple Inc. Electronic device having display and surrounding touch sensitive bezel for user interface and control
US7748634B1 (en) * 2006-03-29 2010-07-06 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Handheld electronic book reader device having dual displays
US7760956B2 (en) * 2005-05-12 2010-07-20 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. System and method for producing a page using frames of a video stream
US20100295812A1 (en) * 2005-07-25 2010-11-25 Plastic Logic Limited Flexible touch screen display
US7912829B1 (en) * 2006-10-04 2011-03-22 Google Inc. Content reference page
US20110113150A1 (en) * 2009-11-10 2011-05-12 Abundance Studios Llc Method of tracking and reporting user behavior utilizing a computerized system
US7966557B2 (en) * 2006-03-29 2011-06-21 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Generating image-based reflowable files for rendering on various sized displays
US8116788B2 (en) * 2008-06-10 2012-02-14 Plantronics, Inc. Mobile telephony presence
US8126845B2 (en) * 2007-01-07 2012-02-28 Apple Inc. Synchronization methods and systems

Family Cites Families (53)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US18027A (en) * 1857-08-18 Island
GB702347A (en) 1951-06-25 1954-01-13 Mellor Bromley & Co Ltd A new or improved knot-tying device
JPS63225295A (en) * 1987-03-14 1988-09-20 シャープ株式会社 Liquid crystal display device
US4855725A (en) * 1987-11-24 1989-08-08 Fernandez Emilio A Microprocessor based simulated book
KR890012184A (en) * 1988-01-19 1989-08-24 시키 모리야 LCD Display
US5484292A (en) 1989-08-21 1996-01-16 Mctaggart; Stephen I. Apparatus for combining audio and visual indicia
JP2747171B2 (en) 1992-07-06 1998-05-06 株式会社 政治広報センター Election terminal device and voting confirmation method
JPH06337896A (en) 1993-03-31 1994-12-06 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Device and method for retrieving electronic book display
US5875432A (en) 1994-08-05 1999-02-23 Sehr; Richard Peter Computerized voting information system having predefined content and voting templates
US5585612A (en) * 1995-03-20 1996-12-17 Harp Enterprises, Inc. Method and apparatus for voting
US6092051A (en) * 1995-05-19 2000-07-18 Nec Research Institute, Inc. Secure receipt-free electronic voting
US8139050B2 (en) 1995-07-20 2012-03-20 E Ink Corporation Addressing schemes for electronic displays
US6124851A (en) 1995-07-20 2000-09-26 E Ink Corporation Electronic book with multiple page displays
US5697793A (en) * 1995-12-14 1997-12-16 Motorola, Inc. Electronic book and method of displaying at least one reading metric therefor
JPH1027162A (en) 1996-07-11 1998-01-27 Oki Electric Ind Co Ltd Portable electronic equipment
JP2000090020A (en) * 1998-09-14 2000-03-31 Sharp Corp Information processor and record medium which records answer mail generation program and which computer can read
JP3594228B2 (en) * 1999-07-01 2004-11-24 シャープ株式会社 Frame erasing device, frame erasing method, and authoring device
US6675216B1 (en) * 1999-07-06 2004-01-06 Cisco Technolgy, Inc. Copy server for collaboration and electronic commerce
US6493734B1 (en) * 1999-10-15 2002-12-10 Softbook Press, Inc. System and method to efficiently generate and switch page display views on a portable electronic book
EP1243033B1 (en) 1999-12-21 2019-12-04 Flexenable Limited Solution processing
CN100483774C (en) 1999-12-21 2009-04-29 造型逻辑有限公司 Solution processed devices
US20020154120A1 (en) * 2001-04-23 2002-10-24 Cullimore Ian H.S. Annotation and application control of general purpose computer documents using annotation peripheral
US20020169893A1 (en) * 2001-05-09 2002-11-14 Li-Han Chen System and method for computer data synchronization
US7065658B1 (en) 2001-05-18 2006-06-20 Palm, Incorporated Method and apparatus for synchronizing and recharging a connector-less portable computer system
US20030034987A1 (en) 2001-08-17 2003-02-20 William Webb Handheld computer having moveable segments that can be adjusted to affect a size of the handheld computer
US6995745B2 (en) 2001-09-13 2006-02-07 E-Book Systems Pte Ltd. Electromechanical information browsing device
US20030090480A1 (en) 2001-11-01 2003-05-15 Eastman Kodak Company Disaggregated flat panel display
EP1446791B1 (en) 2001-11-20 2015-09-09 E Ink Corporation Methods for driving electrophoretic displays
JP4021707B2 (en) * 2002-05-27 2007-12-12 東芝テック株式会社 Fixing device
US20040117735A1 (en) 2002-07-15 2004-06-17 Elnar Breen Method and system for preparing and adapting text, images and video for delivery over a network
US20040041785A1 (en) * 2002-08-29 2004-03-04 Chad Stevens Electronic paper methods and systems
WO2004066257A1 (en) 2003-01-23 2004-08-05 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Driving an electrophoretic display
GB0302485D0 (en) 2003-02-04 2003-03-05 Plastic Logic Ltd Pixel capacitors
EP1460557A3 (en) * 2003-03-12 2006-04-05 Eastman Kodak Company Manual and automatic alignement of pages
US20050260551A1 (en) 2003-03-27 2005-11-24 Rubin Aaron C Reading book including partially electronic page display
TW200511200A (en) 2003-06-17 2005-03-16 Koninkl Philips Electronics Nv A usage mode for an electronic book
GB2420905B (en) 2003-06-23 2006-12-27 Simon Richard Daniel Display device having an extendible screen
JP2005051570A (en) * 2003-07-30 2005-02-24 Nec Access Technica Ltd Mobile terminal device and display/speech control method used therefor, and program thereof
US7667703B2 (en) 2003-12-19 2010-02-23 Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated Systems and method for turning pages in a three-dimensional electronic document
JP2005266968A (en) 2004-03-16 2005-09-29 Toshiba Corp Electronic equipment
JP2005274832A (en) 2004-03-24 2005-10-06 Matsushita Electric Ind Co Ltd Reflection type liquid crystal display device with auxiliary light source
JP4672727B2 (en) 2004-08-13 2011-04-20 イー インク コーポレイション Method and apparatus for driving an electro-optic display
JP2006065240A (en) 2004-08-30 2006-03-09 Fuji Xerox Co Ltd Fixing apparatus and image forming apparatus
WO2006056808A1 (en) 2004-11-29 2006-06-01 Plastic Logic Limited Distortion compensation for printing
WO2006059162A1 (en) 2004-12-03 2006-06-08 Plastic Logic Limited Alignment tolerant patterning on flexible substrates
WO2006061658A1 (en) 2004-12-06 2006-06-15 Plastic Logic Limited Electrode patterning
US7898541B2 (en) 2004-12-17 2011-03-01 Palo Alto Research Center Incorporated Systems and methods for turning pages in a three-dimensional electronic document
FI117656B (en) * 2005-02-15 2006-12-29 Lumi Interactive Ltd Content optimization for receiving terminals
JP4142024B2 (en) * 2005-03-07 2008-08-27 セイコーエプソン株式会社 Program for causing computer to execute display system and data transfer method
WO2006106365A2 (en) 2005-04-05 2006-10-12 Plastic Logic Limited Multiple conductive layer tft
EP1969870B1 (en) 2005-12-29 2017-08-30 Ozmiz Pty. Ltd. Method and system for displaying data on a mobile terminal
US7698647B2 (en) 2006-01-30 2010-04-13 Fast-Cat, Llc Portable dataport device and method for retrieving, inter-relating, annotating and managing electronic documents at a point of need
US20090053747A1 (en) * 2007-08-21 2009-02-26 Mattingly Phillip G Measurement of Haloperoxidase Activity With Chemiluminescent Detection

Patent Citations (71)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4453200A (en) * 1981-07-20 1984-06-05 Rockwell International Corporation Apparatus for lighting a passive display
US4856088A (en) * 1988-01-14 1989-08-08 Motorola, Inc. Radio with removable display
US5454066A (en) * 1989-11-16 1995-09-26 Tsai; Irving Method and apparatus for converting a conventional copier into an electronic printer
US20070028086A1 (en) * 1990-03-23 2007-02-01 Mitsuaki Oshima Data processing apparatus
US5063600A (en) * 1990-05-14 1991-11-05 Norwood Donald D Hybrid information management system for handwriting and text
US5347630A (en) * 1991-04-23 1994-09-13 Seiko Epson Corporation Computer system having a detachable display
US5754873A (en) * 1995-06-01 1998-05-19 Adobe Systems, Inc. Method and apparatus for scaling a selected block of text to a preferred absolute text height and scaling the remainder of the text proportionately
US5857157A (en) * 1995-06-06 1999-01-05 Sony Corporation Portable communication terminal apparatus
US6954213B1 (en) * 1995-10-02 2005-10-11 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Objective automated color matching between input and output devices
US5784487A (en) * 1996-05-23 1998-07-21 Xerox Corporation System for document layout analysis
US5760323A (en) * 1996-06-20 1998-06-02 Music Net Incorporated Networked electronic music display stands
US5956034A (en) * 1996-08-13 1999-09-21 Softbook Press, Inc. Method and apparatus for viewing electronic reading materials
US5943679A (en) * 1996-10-30 1999-08-24 Xerox Corporation Multi-page document viewer having a focus image and recursively nested images of varying resolutions less than the resolution of the focus image
US7079111B2 (en) * 1997-12-18 2006-07-18 E-Book Systems Pte Ltd Computer based browsing computer program product, system and method
US20030067427A1 (en) * 1998-05-12 2003-04-10 E Ink Corporation Microencapsulated electrophoretic electrostatically addressed media for drawing device applications
US6919879B2 (en) * 1998-06-26 2005-07-19 Research In Motion Limited Hand-held electronic device with a keyboard optimized for use with the thumbs
US6456732B1 (en) * 1998-09-11 2002-09-24 Hewlett-Packard Company Automatic rotation, cropping and scaling of images for printing
US6388877B1 (en) * 1999-02-04 2002-05-14 Palm, Inc. Handheld computer with open accessory slot
US6297945B1 (en) * 1999-03-29 2001-10-02 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Portable electronic terminal apparatus having a plurality of displays
US6661920B1 (en) * 2000-01-19 2003-12-09 Palm Inc. Method and apparatus for multiple simultaneously active data entry mechanisms on a computer system
US20080235224A1 (en) * 2000-03-28 2008-09-25 Allan Blase Joseph Rodrigues Digital display of color and appearance and the use thereof
US6248483B1 (en) * 2000-04-19 2001-06-19 Eastman Kodak Company Paper base transmission display material
US6888643B1 (en) * 2000-06-16 2005-05-03 International Business Machines Corporation Method and system for printing documents to a reusable medium
US20020018027A1 (en) * 2000-06-22 2002-02-14 Koichio Sugimoto Information processing apparatus and information output controlling method
US7283142B2 (en) * 2000-07-28 2007-10-16 Clairvoyante, Inc. Color display having horizontal sub-pixel arrangements and layouts
US7425970B1 (en) * 2000-11-08 2008-09-16 Palm, Inc. Controllable pixel border for a negative mode passive matrix display device
US6831662B1 (en) * 2000-11-08 2004-12-14 Palmone, Inc. Apparatus and methods to achieve a variable color pixel border on a negative mode screen with a passive matrix drive
US6961029B1 (en) * 2000-11-08 2005-11-01 Palm, Inc. Pixel border for improved viewability of a display device
US20020102866A1 (en) * 2000-12-28 2002-08-01 Jean-Pierre Lubowicki Electronic apparatus comprising two mutually movable parts
US20070115258A1 (en) * 2001-03-16 2007-05-24 Dualcor Technologies, Inc. Personal electronic device with display switching
US20020149572A1 (en) * 2001-04-17 2002-10-17 Schulz Stephen C. Flexible capacitive touch sensor
US6965375B1 (en) * 2001-04-27 2005-11-15 Palm, Inc. Compact integrated touch panel display for a handheld device
US7103848B2 (en) * 2001-09-13 2006-09-05 International Business Machines Corporation Handheld electronic book reader with annotation and usage tracking capabilities
US20030227441A1 (en) * 2002-03-29 2003-12-11 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Display input device and display input system
US20050257143A1 (en) * 2002-05-22 2005-11-17 The Appliance Studio Limited Printing to displays
US20040008398A1 (en) * 2002-06-27 2004-01-15 E Ink Corporation Illumination system for nonemissive electronic displays
US7058829B2 (en) * 2002-08-14 2006-06-06 Intel Corporation Method and apparatus for a computing system having an active sleep mode CPU that uses the cache of a normal active mode CPU
US6919678B2 (en) * 2002-09-03 2005-07-19 Bloomberg Lp Bezel-less electric display
US20040212588A1 (en) * 2003-03-31 2004-10-28 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Information device
US20040255244A1 (en) * 2003-04-07 2004-12-16 Aaron Filner Single column layout for content pages
US20040268004A1 (en) * 2003-06-27 2004-12-30 Oakley Nicholas W Always-on removable communicator display
US20050025387A1 (en) * 2003-07-31 2005-02-03 Eastman Kodak Company Method and computer program product for producing an image of a desired aspect ratio
US20050071364A1 (en) * 2003-09-30 2005-03-31 Xing Xie Document representation for scalable structure
US20050206580A1 (en) * 2003-12-16 2005-09-22 Fumio Koyama Information display
US20050237444A1 (en) * 2004-04-23 2005-10-27 Lg.Philips Lcd Co., Ltd. Liquid crystal display device
US20060026536A1 (en) * 2004-07-30 2006-02-02 Apple Computer, Inc. Gestures for touch sensitive input devices
US20060029250A1 (en) * 2004-08-04 2006-02-09 Seiko Epson Corporation Electronic display system, electronic paper writing device, electronic paper and method for manufacturing the same
US7289084B2 (en) * 2005-02-22 2007-10-30 John Michael Lesniak Computer display apparatus
US7412647B2 (en) * 2005-03-04 2008-08-12 Microsoft Corporation Method and system for laying out paginated content for viewing
US7656393B2 (en) * 2005-03-04 2010-02-02 Apple Inc. Electronic device having display and surrounding touch sensitive bezel for user interface and control
US7760956B2 (en) * 2005-05-12 2010-07-20 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. System and method for producing a page using frames of a video stream
US20060274549A1 (en) * 2005-06-07 2006-12-07 Nec Lcd Technologies, Ltd. Multi-panel display apparatus
US20100295812A1 (en) * 2005-07-25 2010-11-25 Plastic Logic Limited Flexible touch screen display
US20070024603A1 (en) * 2005-07-28 2007-02-01 Li Xiao-Chang C Integrated digital picture viewing device
US20070058178A1 (en) * 2005-09-13 2007-03-15 Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. Electronic paper system, image processing apparatus for electronic paper system storage medium storing image processing program, and image writing method using image processing apparatus
US20090157847A1 (en) * 2005-12-19 2009-06-18 Softbank Mobile Corp. Picture display method and picture display apparatus
US20070195009A1 (en) * 2006-01-31 2007-08-23 Sadao Yamamoto Information processing device and related method
US7966557B2 (en) * 2006-03-29 2011-06-21 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Generating image-based reflowable files for rendering on various sized displays
US7748634B1 (en) * 2006-03-29 2010-07-06 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Handheld electronic book reader device having dual displays
US7912829B1 (en) * 2006-10-04 2011-03-22 Google Inc. Content reference page
US8126845B2 (en) * 2007-01-07 2012-02-28 Apple Inc. Synchronization methods and systems
US20080298083A1 (en) * 2007-02-07 2008-12-04 Ben Watson Electronic reading devices
US20080297470A1 (en) * 2007-02-07 2008-12-04 Matthew Marsh Electronic document readers and reading devices
US20080297496A1 (en) * 2007-02-07 2008-12-04 Ben Watson Electronic document reading devices
US20080238871A1 (en) * 2007-03-30 2008-10-02 Seiko Epson Corporation Display apparatus and method for operating a display apparatus
US20090113291A1 (en) * 2007-10-24 2009-04-30 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic Document Reader
US20090109468A1 (en) * 2007-10-24 2009-04-30 Duncan Barclay Document printing techniques
US20090113307A1 (en) * 2007-10-30 2009-04-30 Microsoft Sorporation Slideshow method for displaying images on a display
US20090219271A1 (en) * 2008-03-03 2009-09-03 Carano Bandel Electronic document reader system
US8116788B2 (en) * 2008-06-10 2012-02-14 Plantronics, Inc. Mobile telephony presence
US20110113150A1 (en) * 2009-11-10 2011-05-12 Abundance Studios Llc Method of tracking and reporting user behavior utilizing a computerized system

Cited By (22)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US8203546B2 (en) 2007-02-07 2012-06-19 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic document reading devices
US7920320B2 (en) 2007-02-07 2011-04-05 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic reading devices
US8207947B2 (en) 2007-02-07 2012-06-26 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic document readers and reading devices
US20080297470A1 (en) * 2007-02-07 2008-12-04 Matthew Marsh Electronic document readers and reading devices
US20080297496A1 (en) * 2007-02-07 2008-12-04 Ben Watson Electronic document reading devices
US8711395B2 (en) 2007-10-24 2014-04-29 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic document reading devices
US8539341B2 (en) 2007-10-24 2013-09-17 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic document reader
US20090109468A1 (en) * 2007-10-24 2009-04-30 Duncan Barclay Document printing techniques
US8836970B2 (en) * 2007-10-24 2014-09-16 Plastic Logic Limited Document printing techniques
US20090113291A1 (en) * 2007-10-24 2009-04-30 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic Document Reader
US20090109498A1 (en) * 2007-10-24 2009-04-30 Duncan Barclay Electronic document reading devices
US8228323B2 (en) 2008-03-03 2012-07-24 Plastic Logic Limited Electronic document reader system
US20110207408A1 (en) * 2008-11-07 2011-08-25 Nxp B.V. Peer to peer communication using device class based transmission rules
US8913087B1 (en) * 2009-07-22 2014-12-16 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Digital image cropping
US8543165B2 (en) * 2010-05-28 2013-09-24 Sony Corporation Information processing apparatus, information processing system, and program
US20110294426A1 (en) * 2010-05-28 2011-12-01 Sony Corporation Information processing apparatus, information processing system, and program
CN102402335A (en) * 2010-11-03 2012-04-04 微软公司 Computing Device With Flat Touch Surface
US20120105334A1 (en) * 2010-11-03 2012-05-03 Microsoft Corporation Computing device with flat touch surface
US20130145252A1 (en) * 2011-12-02 2013-06-06 Opera Software Asa Page based navigation and presentation of web content
US10705638B2 (en) * 2013-02-06 2020-07-07 Apple Inc. Input/output device with a dynamically adjustable appearance and function
US20190056832A1 (en) * 2013-02-06 2019-02-21 Apple Inc. Input/output device with a dynamically adjustable appearance and function
US10488692B2 (en) 2016-06-13 2019-11-26 E Ink Holdings Inc. Touch display device

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
WO2009053740A1 (en) 2009-04-30
EP2212769A1 (en) 2010-08-04
EP2212768A1 (en) 2010-08-04
US8539341B2 (en) 2013-09-17
CN101911006B (en) 2013-10-09
EP2212770B1 (en) 2016-08-24
GB2454031A (en) 2009-04-29
CN101911007A (en) 2010-12-08
CN101911006A (en) 2010-12-08
US8836970B2 (en) 2014-09-16
GB0802815D0 (en) 2008-03-26
CN101911005A (en) 2010-12-08
EP2212768B1 (en) 2016-08-31
CN101903861B (en) 2013-05-29
WO2009053747A1 (en) 2009-04-30
US20090113291A1 (en) 2009-04-30
WO2009053738A1 (en) 2009-04-30
GB2454032A (en) 2009-04-29
GB0802816D0 (en) 2008-03-26
CN101903861A (en) 2010-12-01
EP2212767A1 (en) 2010-08-04
EP2212770A1 (en) 2010-08-04
WO2009053743A1 (en) 2009-04-30
GB2454031A8 (en) 2012-01-25
US20090109468A1 (en) 2009-04-30
GB0802818D0 (en) 2008-03-26
GB2454030A (en) 2009-04-29
US8711395B2 (en) 2014-04-29
CN101911007B (en) 2012-11-28
US20090109498A1 (en) 2009-04-30
GB0802805D0 (en) 2008-03-26
GB2454033A (en) 2009-04-29

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US8836970B2 (en) Document printing techniques
US9001024B2 (en) Electronic document reader
US7577902B2 (en) Systems and methods for annotating pages of a 3D electronic document
US9256588B1 (en) Transferring content to a substantially similar location in a virtual notebook using a stylus enabled device
US20050134606A1 (en) Systems and method for annotating pages in a three-dimensional electronic document
US9305333B1 (en) Display with square root of two aspect ratio
US8898561B2 (en) Method and device for determining a display mode of electronic documents
GB2456512A (en) Apparatus for changing display content based on a detected change in curvature of the display surface
US20150109358A1 (en) Electronic display device
US20130188218A1 (en) Print Requests Including Event Data
CN1838104A (en) Electronic voice book
EP2354911A1 (en) Multi-screens electronic apparatus and image display method thereof
KR20140086473A (en) Display device and method for displaying information by using the display device

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: PLASTIC LOGIC LIMITED, UNITED KINGDOM

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:BARCLAY, DUNCAN;FARMER, STEVEN;HAYTON, CARL;AND OTHERS;REEL/FRAME:021594/0050;SIGNING DATES FROM 20080715 TO 20080903

AS Assignment

Owner name: STATE CORPORATION "RUSSIAN CORPORATION OF NANOTECH

Free format text: SECURITY AGREEMENT;ASSIGNOR:PLASTIC LOGIC LIMITED;REEL/FRAME:024776/0357

Effective date: 20100802

AS Assignment

Owner name: PLASTIC LOGIC LIMITED, UNITED KINGDOM

Free format text: RELEASE BY SECURED PARTY;ASSIGNOR:STATE CORPORATION "RUSSIAN CORPORATION OF NANOTECHNOLOGIES";REEL/FRAME:026271/0377

Effective date: 20110415

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION