Technical Field
[0001] This invention relates to paging systems operable with personal portable pocket-sized
paging instruments that afford two way communication, and more particularly it relates
to keyboard operated paging instruments processing alphanumeric characters for transmission
and display.
Background Art
[0002] Operation of pager systems with alphanumeric data from keyboards on the pager which
display and print out messages are known at this stage of the art as exemplified by
US-A-4,028,661.
[0003] In such prior art systems there are, however, several deficiencies. They are not
always compatible with the ability to store and display more than a minute amount
of information, such as a telephone number. Many systems are limited to transmission
of numeric characters. Some do not provide for two way communications and require
an auxiliary communication system such as calls via telephone lines to complete the
communication.
[0004] One serious deficiency is the inability to effectively produce in a pocket-sized
paging instrument the keyboard capacity to manually input alphanumeric messages. Systems
such as that shown in US-A-4,028,661 require over thirty keys to give alphabetic capability.
In the pocket-sized paging instruments, such keys are located so close together that
they cannot be easily fingered, and are not all conducive to touch typing methods.
[0005] Thus, suitable two-way miniaturized pocket-sized paging instruments have not heretofore
been available in the art in spite of the significant advantages to two-way digital
communication, including: the ability to code and keep messages private, the ability
to transmit digital data over transmission channels at very high transmission rates,
the ability to record communicated messages by storing and printing, the ability to
convey critical amounts of data, and the ability to communicate with deaf or mute
handicapped persons.
[0006] It is therefore a primary objective of this invention to provide improved two-way
digital communication paging instruments resolving the aforesaid problems and providing
a personal communication system with hand carried pocket-sized instruments with substantially
unlimited communication capacity and responsive to keyboard operation in an alphanumeric
mode with keys adapted for touch typing.
[0007] It is also an objective to provide a system having very comprehensive operational
characteristics with control from the keyboard, utilizing the current capacity of
the data processing art to miniaturize storage capacity and produce a large range
of data processing functions.
[0008] Other objects, features and advantages of the invention will be found throughout
the following description, drawings and claims.
Disclosure of the Invention
[0009] This invention provides a pocket-sized portable two-way digital radio communication
center with a twelve key keyboard permitting entry of both decimal and alphabetic
characters, as well as a large number of commands or instructions. The twelve keys
are arranged and spaced for touch typing with a single hand resting at a single home
key position. This corrects the prior art problems of requiring many keys in the very
small space available on a portable pocket-sized pager instrument, such as thirty,
for alphanumeric data input to pagers, where they are too close together for easy
input and are not adaptable to touch typing techniques.
[0010] The keyboard is compatible with a comprehensive pager system which includes a wide
range of data processing, printing, display, audio, recording, etc. capabilities now
available in the computer arts, all controllable by the twelve key keyboard. This
is achieved by providing a paging-data processing system responsive to keyboard input
signals from two successive keystrokes in time sequence, thereby giving the capability
for 144 combinations of coded signals from the twelve keys.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0011]
Figure 1 is a perspective view of a pocket-sized keyboard controlled two-way communication
center paging instrument with a video readout panel and printout capability;
Figure 2 is a schematic keyboard diagram illustrating the processing of a full range
of alphanumeric characters and control instructions from a set of twelve keys; and
Figure 3 is a block system diagram of the alphanumeric paging system organization
of the pocket sized paging instruments afforded by this invention.
Detailed Description of a Preferred Embodiment
[0012] As may be seen in the front view of Figure 1, a twelve key keyboard layout is afforded
that provides a comfortable and spacious arrangement for the fingers of one hand to
type in a touch typing mode. Those twelve keys are used in this invention to afford
about 144 coded selections, thereby providing for entry of numerical and alphabetic
characters and an additional range of about one hundred control codes that may be
used for data processing instructions, generally involving the use of the execute
key XEQ.
[0013] Preferably the key columns are laid out on the keyboard 40 to conform with the shape
of a human hand to thereby fit the natural finger position of the hand to the keys
in operating position. This reduces fatigue, and prevents errors from unnatural reach
positions or those that require an abnormal finger position.
[0014] With the twelve keys therefore a keyboard 40 having alphanumeric capacity and operable
in the touch type mode with the fingers of one hand is made possible by this invention
in the compact miniature pocket-sized housing 41, slightly larger than the size of
a human hand. Radio transmissions are handled by antenna 42, and may permit audio
communications by way of speaker-microphone 43. Provisions are made for visual readout
on panel 44 and for printout or storage on tape 45 from an internal printer or recorder.
The internal data processing and communications system is of the modern computer-data
processing type that affords internal storage and stored program subroutines that
permit many different kinds of functions for providing such features as dictating
mode of operation, calculations, data organization, and communication with like pager
instruments.
[0015] The key diagram of Figure 2 illustrates the advance in the art made by this invention
in communicating with alphanumeric character capabilities by means of manual keyboard
input from only twelve keys. The system thus is constructed to include special data
handling features by operation of the keyboard keys to process entries in response
to two successive mutually exclusive time sequential keystrokes from different ones
of the keys. Thus, the operation in the two keystroke per entry mode is as set forth
in our US-A-4,547,860. As set forth in that patent even fewer keyboard keys are required
by operation of the decimal point key 46 in a mode that permits it to be an entry
key. Since a decimal point only appears once within a numeric word, the second decimal
point will serve as an entry key in a numeric calculating mode. It is thus possible
to operate in a one stroke per entry mode for numeric data and to use the execute
key XEQ to change the mode to a two stroke per entry mode for providing 144 selections
including a full alphabet.
[0016] Thus the keys in the row of keys 47 are designated with a keyboard chart to show
entry of a set of 36 alphabet characters. Consider entry of the letter "A" for example.
Because of location on the "4" key it serves as the first keystroke entry of two sequential
keystrokes required for entry of an alphabetic character. The second keystroke is
identified on the chart as the "7" key. This an "A" is entered by keystrokes 4-7.
Similarly a "G" is entered by strokes 6-7, etc. Clearly there is ample room on the
twelve keys for all the control functions and alphanumeric characters desired, even
for a comprehensive paging system providing many of the data processing functions
encountered with general purpose and programmable computers, if desired.
[0017] A telephone line voice grade communication system has been proposed in US-A-3,967,273,
as a means of communicating with digitalized audio tones coded in alphanumeric format
as obtained from a telephone instrument having only twelve keyboard keys operated
in a two-stroke per character mode. The received information may be decoded and stored
as alphanumeric text for input to a conventional computer system.
[0018] However, we do not wish to limit the mode of transmission, and the transmission channel
56 of Figure 3 operates independently from the two stroke per character coding of
keyboard 40. Accordingly the interface data organizer 55 of the alphanumeric digital
data processor 50 provides data that can be efficiently transmitted in digital format
at high transmission speeds over a radio communication link.
[0019] Furthermore, the information transmitted in digital form is compatible with the alphanumeric
information organized and stored in the register 52 from keyboard input so that when
sent or received at high speed transmission rates greatly exceeding manual keyboard
entry speeds it is readily processed in register 52. Thus the keyboard 40 may set
up instructions for printout (58) or display at the viewing panel 44 of the data received
and stored in register 52. Alternatively the system may serve only to provide a signal
alarm when a message is received, so that the data may be recalled from the memory
when desired by means of appropriate keyboard entered instructions.
[0020] If desired to make the system an on line voice transmission system, audio communications
may also be transmitted. In such systems, the pager instrument may be comprehensive
enough to have a voice recorder and dictation controls coupled to the transmission
channel in a manner directed by control signals entered by the keyboard 40 to program
the data processor or to select stored program subroutines therein.
[0021] The keyboard input signals coded in the two keystroke per entry format are processed
in the keyboard interface data organizer 51 to communicate to the alphanumeric digital
data processor 50 in internal machine language and are not used in the transmission
channel. The display register 57, of the type used in digital computers, processes
the information called out from storage in register 52 in a format for sequentially
printing out or viewing on the viewing panel 44 in the manner common in personal computers,
all under control of the instructions provided by the keyboard, as provided also in
personal computer operation.
[0022] This invention advances the art by providing a hand-held, keyboard controlled sending
and receiving paging instrument having only twelve keys operable to produce decimal
characters and alphabetic characters with a further set of over 100 instruction and
control entries being available. Thus a keyboard operating in the two stroke per entry
mode is directly coupled to actuate a digital data processing system and to enter
alphanumeric information thereinto by the twelve key keyboard.
[0023] This data processing system then organizes data for transmission by a radio transmission
link to like pager instruments in a two-way communication system, which sends alphanumeric
information out at high transmission rates. The transmissions are not limited in length,
except by the capacity of the internal pager memory. The system is flexible in its
capacity to organize data compatible with various radio transmission system specifications.
With the data processing system controlled by the 144 input functions from only twelve
keys this system can be most comprehensive in designating or organizing the functions
to be performed. Yet on a pocket-sized instrument, a keyboard simple to use in a touch
typing mode is afforded that eliminates the large number of keys formerly used on
data processing or paging devices having alphanumeric capabilities.
1. A pocket-sized pager instrument of the type for communicating with like pagers
over a communications channel and having alphanumeric data processing capability with
a manual keyboard for entering alphanumeric characters and control instructions, characterized by:
data processor means for processing and storing alphanumeric data,
a keyboard of a few keys arranged on said pager in an array with each key operable
by the fingers of one hand without interference coupled to said data processsing system
for entering thereinto for storage and processing a set of alphanumeric characters,
transmitting means coupled to the data processing means for communication by radio
communication over a paging communication channel of messages stored in the data processor
menas to other data processor means including pocket-sized pager instruments, and
message processing means in the instrument for receiving and displaying in alphanumeric
format data received over the communication channel.
2. An instrument as defined in claim 1, characterized in that the instrument comprises two way communication devices with said transmitting
means and message processing means including data interfacing means for communication
by radio transmission between instruments located at the transmitting and receiving
ends of the communication channel.
3. An instrument as defined in claim 1, characterized by means coupling the keyboard to the data processing means for entry of input alphanumeric
characters in response to two successive keystrokes from a subset of two of said keys.
4. An instrument as defined in claim 1, characterized by only twelve keys in the keyboard.
5. An instrument as defined in claim 4, characterized by the key array being laid out into a format fitting the fingers of a human hand
in a comfortable configuration for touch typing on the twelve keys.
6. An instrument as defined in claim 4, characterized by a set of operating control functions performed by the twelve keys.
7. An instrument as defined in claim 6, characterized by having all the control functions performed from the twelve keys.
8. An instrument as defined in claim 1, characterized in a set of operating control functions enterable by the keys.