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Touch-screen remote control for multimedia equipmentTouch-screen remote control for multimedia equipment description/claimsThe Patent Description & Claims data below is from USPTO Patent Application 20090184926, Touch-screen remote control for multimedia equipment. Brief Patent Description - Full Patent Description - Patent Application Claims The present application is a continuation application of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/983,419 titled “TOUCH-SCREEN REMOTE CONTROL FOR MULTIMEDIA EQUIPMENT”, which was filed on Nov. 8, 2004, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,461,343, the entire contents of which is hereby incorporated by reference. 1. Field of the Invention The present invention relates to systems selection of television and/or radio programming. 2. Description of the Related Art Multimedia devices such as VCRs, DVD players, MP3 players, cassette players, CD players, SetTop Boxes (STBs) for cable and satellite television, and the new class of Personal Video Recorders (PVRs) such as TIVO, are extremely popular with consumers. Almost every household in the United States has at least one of these devices. The most common user complaint is that these devices are difficult to use and understand. Menus used to guide users through options delivered by the multimedia devices are also confusing and cryptic. The menus are simplistic and text based. Cursor appearance and movement are rudimentary and the user is easily confused by the non-intuitive uses of menu choices. Multimedia program schedule information provided by cable and satellite providers has been physically tied to an archaic display method. Service providers are under the false belief that viewers are conditioned to interpret and understand the television schedule presentation methods that originated from print media such as newspapers. Television program schedule information has traditionally been displayed either in a columnar or tabular form. The tabular method displays program schedule information as a two dimensional table. The vertical axis displays the television channel numbers and the horizontal axis displays the time periods. The names of the television programs for each channel are listed horizontally across the table. Each show is listed under the time period during which it is shown. The columnar method displays the channels and program names under a time heading. TV Guide is an example of the columnar method. This works well for printed matter because the reader looks through the columns for the desired time period and finds all of the channels and program names starting at that time. A dominant television schedule format is the grid format. This format is popular for displaying television schedule information on the TV screen. The television schedule information is displayed in much the same form as the tabular approach. A two-dimensional table format is laid out. The vertical axis displays the channel numbers or IDs with the horizontal axis displaying half hour time increments. Programs are blocked out within the table. A show is represented by a rectangular colored block. This block extends horizontally from the program start time to the program end time. The viewer either scrolls through the channel list or it is rotated automatically. Information beyond the time period is not displayed and only shifts to the right as time advances. The problem with the grid format is that it is limited by the television resolution, screen size, and viewing distance. This limits the information displayed an hour or two, and the channel list to around seven channels. Additionally, some applications attempt to place advertising information within the grid format. This leads to a visual overload of information to the viewer and a cluttered appearance. STBs and PVRs use the television screen to display programming information. The user is forced to use a remote control or other device to manipulate a cursor on the screen to select programming. This is a cumbersome and frustrating process and the user cannot watch a program or movie while scrolling through the programming list These and other problems are solved by a multimedia control system. The control system presents program schedule information to the user in a visually and intellectually-intuitive manner. The multimedia control system can be used to display programming information, control multimedia devices, control home automation devices, etc. In one embodiment, a control screen used to display programming information is configured as a touch screen to allow the user to select programming, control multimedia devices, or perform other functions by touching the screen. In one embodiment, the system uses a consistent, user-selectable, intuitive user interface. In one embodiment, programming information is dynamically updated to provide the user with current programming information, such as, for example, sports scores, commercial breaks, news stories, documentary contents, etc. In one embodiment, a program guide screen provides a list of the programs that are currently airing, were aired, or are scheduled. In one embodiment, the program guide screen is separate from the television screen, so that the user can watch a program while browsing the program guide schedules. In one embodiment, the programming information is provided in a matrix format such that the programming content of a relatively large number of channels can be displayed on a single control screen. In one embodiment, the program guide information in a multi-column mode. A two column mode displays the available channels in a rotating endless list fashion in the left hand column and the programs for the highlighted channel in the right hand column. The user scrolls or pages up or down through the channel list. The interface is consistent throughout all columns with respect to scrolling and paging. Whispering arrows are also consistent in this interface, showing that more information exists in the indicated direction. Information is also more detailed as the highlight bar is moved to the right (successive disclosure) as described above. The current time period is shown on the screen. As the user changes the time period, the program titles change according to the names of the program that were, are, or will be shown at that time period. Continue reading about Touch-screen remote control for multimedia equipment... Full patent description for Touch-screen remote control for multimedia equipment Brief Patent Description - Full Patent Description - Patent Application Claims Click on the above for other options relating to this Touch-screen remote control for multimedia equipment patent application. Patent Applications in related categories: 20090284470 - Computer system with mouse - An exemplary computer system includes a host computer and a mouse. The host computer comprises vertical and horizontal scrolling drivers. The mouse includes a scroll wheel, a sensor and a switch connected in series. The scroll wheel generates signals corresponding to navigation commands. The sensor senses the signals, and converts ... ### 1. Sign up (takes 30 seconds). 2. Fill in the keywords to be monitored. 3. Each week you receive an email with patent applications related to your keywords. Start now! - Receive info on patent apps like Touch-screen remote control for multimedia equipment or other areas of interest. ### Previous Patent Application: Solar powered mouse Next Patent Application: Data input device Industry Class: Computer graphics processing, operator interface processing, and selective visual display systems ### FreshPatents.com Support Thank you for viewing the Touch-screen remote control for multimedia equipment patent info. IP-related news and info Results in 2.33175 seconds Other interesting Feshpatents.com categories: Qualcomm , Schering-Plough , Schlumberger , Seagate , Siemens , Texas Instruments , paws |
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