METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING AND KIT FOR ASSEMBLING A PERSONAL ENTERTAINMENT DEVICE (PED) WITH DOUBLE-OPENING FLAP
Field of the Invention The present invention relates to the field of personal entertainment, electronic and communication devices. More particularly, the present invention relates to the field of cost effective manufacturing of more than one version of a personal entertainment device in a compact format.
Background of the Invention Conventional personal entertainment devices (PEDs) are limited both in scope and inventory because the format of conventional PEDs is fixed according to the product design and permanent. At the manufacturing stage, conventional PEDs are designed with an inflexible, fixed layout that does not allow for modifications at short notice, hi particular, conventional PEDs do not allow for optional interfaces to be interchanged at the manufacturing stage, to increase the possible combinations of interfaces and panels comprising the PEDs. The current fixed nature of conventional PEDs thus limits the variety of PEDs available to consumers, causing many consumers to purchase more than one PED to satisfy their leisure needs and also requires manufacturers to design and inventory multiple products. What is needed is a method ofmanufacturing personalized personal entertainment devices to meet the needs of a broad spectrum of consumers. Specifically, to address the problems noted above, what is needed is a method ofmanufacturing and a kit to assemble a personal entertainment device that accommodates a variety of combinations of interfaces and panels.
Summary of the Invention The present invention is directed to manufacturing an electronic device comprising interchangeable designated panels. The property of panels being interchangeable at the manufacturing stage advantageously increases the number of possible combinations of various interfaces that the electronic device can possess. The device can have combinations of gaming interfaces, keyboard interfaces, PDA technology interfaces, music listening interfaces, video player interfaces, and the like. By having'the capacity to include a number
of possible combination of interfaces on designated panels, the device can be customized based on the growing leisure needs of consumers. Preferably, the electronic device is a handheld portable device. Preferably, the electronic device is an entertainment device. Based upon the selection of designated panels for the device, the device can be a music listening device, a gaming device, a personal entertainment device (PED), a personal digital assistant (PDA), a web browser, or any other type of personal entertainment device (PED). In one embodiment of the present invention, a method ofmanufacturing an electronic device having at least three substantially planar panels comprises three steps. The first step is to provide a first panel having a display, a first side edge, and a second side edge. The second step is to hingedly couple the first side edge of a first substantially planar panel to a second substantially planar panel. The second panel includes a first interface and is selected from a first set of panels. The third step is to hingedly couple a third substantially planar panel to the second side edge of the first panel. The third panel includes a second interface and is selected from a second set of panels. Preferably the second panel includes a third interface on an opposite face from the first interface. When the device is in a first position the first interface and the second interface are obscured while the third interface is exposed. When the device is in a second position the first interface and the second interface are exposed while the third interface is exposed. The third interface is preferably a music playing interface, such as for MP3 music files, such that the device can play music while the flaps are closed when the device is in the first position. Further, an operator can selectively access the first interface alone, the second interface alone, and both the first interface and the second interface when the device is in the second position. In another embodiment of the present invention, the method ofmanufacturing the electronic device further comprises the step of operatively coupling the first panel to the second panel and the third panel. The first, second, and third panels are configured to exchange electronic data signals. Also, when the device is configured in the first position, no interface controls the display. Alternatively, when the device is configured in the first position, the third interface, preferably a music player interface, controls the display. When the device is configured in the second position, the display is selectively controlled by the first interface alone, the second interface alone, and both the first and second interfaces. In yet another embodiment of the present invention, a kit to assemble an electronic device comprises three substantially planar panels. The first panel includes a display and has
a first side edge and a second side edge. The second panel is configured to be hingedly coupled to the first side edge of the first panel. The second panel includes a first interface and is selected from a first set of panels. The third panel includes a second interface and is configured to be hingedly coupled to the second side edge of the first panel. The third panel is selected from a second set of panels and includes a second interface. Preferably the second panel includes a third interface on an opposite face from the first interface. The third interface is preferably a music playing interface, such as for MP3 music files, such that the device can play music while the flaps are closed when the device is in the first position. When the device is in the first position the first and second interfaces are obscured while the third interface is exposed. When the device is in the second position the first and second interfaces are exposed while the third interface is exposed. Thus, when the device is in the second position, an operator can selectively access the first interface alone, the second interface alone, and both the first and the second interfaces.
Brief Description of the Drawings FIG. 1 shows an electronic device with three substantially planar panels in a first position. FIGs. 2A and 2B show the electronic device of FIG. 1 in a second position from a side view and a top view, respectively. FIGs. 3A and 3B are schematic drawings illustrating the first, second, and third steps of a method ofmanufacturing of the electronic device of FIG. 1, in accordance with the preferred embodiment of the present invention. FIGs. 4A, 4B, 4C, and 4D are schematic drawings showing different embodiments of the second and third panels of the electronic device of FIG. 1. FIG. 5 is a schematic drawing of a kit to assemble the electronic device of FIG. 1.
Detailed Description of the Present Invention There are a number of conventional personal entertainment devices (PEDs) and personal digital assistants (PDAs) commercially available. Hereafter, both PEDs and PDAs will collectively be referred to as PEDS to avoid obscuring the invention with extraneous details. Conventional PEDs are problematic as they are fixed by design, especially during the manufacturing stage. In particular, conventional PEDs fail to allow last-minute changes in interfaces, elements, functions, and specific panels of the devices. Oftentimes, to satisfy their
multiple personal needs, consumers are forced to purchase multiple PEDs, which can quickly become price prohibitive for the average consumer. Also, consumers do not want to carry multiple bulky PEDs for their personal needs, since PEDs are meant to be portable and lightweight devices and ideally, consumers want to satisfy all their personal needs in one compact PED. The present invention advantageously solves these problems through a method of manufacturing and a kit to assemble an electronic device having a double flap and a display. According to the present invention, the device at the manufacturing stage has the flexibility of interchangeable device panels which include separate interfaces. Each interchangeable panel is selected from a groups of panels specifically configured to be a component of the device.
Thus, at the manufacturing stage, a manufacturing company can manufacture multi-paneled PEDs with the flexibility to allow for last-minute changes and modifications, to include certain combinations of PED interfaces in high demand by consumers. For instance, a manufacturing company can manufacture in succession a first PED with panels including a gaming interface and a keyboard interface, a second PED with panels including a music player interface and a gaming interface, followed by a third PED with panels including a video teleconference interface and a PDA (personal digital assistant) interface. Each of these first, second and third PEDs can include a common control and display panel. By having the flexibility of choosing which interchangeable panels to couple in a particular PED at the manufacturing stage, the manufacturing company can also easily meet the present demands of the ever-changing market industry of PEDs. A company no longer has to take the financial risk ofmanufacturing and inventorying multiple conventional fixed PEDs. Instead, a company can gain consumer feedback prior to manufacturing further PEDs and can mix and match interchangeable panels with the interfaces in highest demand. The electronic device is preferably a portable PED and it comprises three substantially planar panels. To explain the various steps of the preferred method ofmanufacturing the electronic device and the kit to assemble such a device, it is necessary to explain the format of the electronic device, complete with the first, second, and third substantially planar panels. The preferred embodiments of the electronic device are described in U.S. Patent Application No. Serial Number 10/781,400, filed on February 17, 2004, and entitled "PERSONAL ENTERTAINMENT DEVICE (PED) WITH DOUBLE-OPENING FLAP," which is incorporated by reference in its entirety. However, FIGs. 1, 2A and 2B are provided as a brief overview of the components and functions of the electronic device described in more detail in
U.S. Patent Application No. Serial Number 10/781,400, filed on February 17, 2004, and entitled "PERSONAL ENTERTAINMENT DEVICE (PED) WITH DOUBLE-OPENING FLAP." FIG. 1 shows the electronic device 100 comprising a first substantially planar panel 130, a second substantially planar panel 140 and a third substantially planar panel 150.
According to the preferred embodiment, as shown in FIG. 1, the first panel 130 includes a display 120 which can be partially seen through an opening between the second panel 140 and the third panel 150, as shown in FIG. 1. When the device 100 is configured in the first position, the second panel 140 and the third panel 150 are folded over the first panel 130. The second panel 140 includes a first interface (not shown) and the third panel 150 includes a second interface (not shown). In the preferred embodiment, the second panel 140 further includes a third interface having interface buttons 110 on the opposite face of the first interface (not shown). As shown in FIG. 1, the interface buttons 110 are exposed when the device 100 is configured in the first position, so the device 100 can operate as a music player, for example, to play MP3 files, when the second panel 140 and the third panel 150 are folded over the first panel 130. Thus, the first position is also referred to as a closed position. Also, the second panel 140 and the third panel 150 are described herein as the flaps of the device 100, since the second panel 140 and the third panel 150 can hingedly open and close over the first panel 130, depending on the configuration of the device 100. When the device 100 is in the first position, in the preferred embodiment, the first interface and the second interface are obscured. In the preferred embodiment, when the device 100 is in the first position, the interface buttons 110 of the third interface are exposed and accessible. In certain alternative embodiments, no music playing interface is present on the back of the second panel 140. FIGs. 2A and 2B both show the device 100 of FIG. 1 in the second position from a side view and a top view, respectively. The second position is also described herein as the open position, as the second panel 140 and the third panel 150 are no longer folded over the first panel 130 as shown in FIGs. 2A and 2B. Instead, the second panel 140 and the third panel 150 are hingedly open in relation to the first panel 130. Thus, as shown in FIG. 2B, when the device 100 is in the second position, the first interface 115 of the second panel 140 and the second interface 125 of the third panel 150 are exposed and accessible. In the preferred embodiment, the first interface 115 and the second interface 125 are on the front faces of the second panel 140 and the third panel 150, respectively, as shown in FIG. 2B. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the first interface 115, the second interface
125, and the interface buttons 110 of the third interface can be at any location of the second panel 140 and the third panel 150, respectively. For instance, as shown in FIG. 1, interface buttons 110 of a third interface can be located on the back face of the second panel 140. In FIG. 2B, the device 100 is in the second position and is viewed from the top. When the device 100 is in the second position, preferably the entire display 120 is exposed.
Also, as described previously, the first interface 115 of the second panel 140 and the second interface 125 of the third panel 150 are exposed. The second panel 140 is hingedly coupled to a first side edge 147 of the first panel 130. Similarly, the third panel 150 is hingedly coupled to a second side edge 157 of the first panel 130. A first hinged coupler 175 joins a side edge 145 of the second panel 140 to the first side edge 147 of the first panel 130.
Likewise, a second hinged coupler 185 joins a side edge 155 of the third panel 150 to the second side edge 157 of the first panel 130. When the device 100 is in the second position, an operator can selectively access the first interface 115 alone, the second interface 125 alone, and both the first interface 115 and the second interface 125. This selective access of interfaces is convenient, since the electronic device 100 can be held in the palms of an operator's hands while the first interface 115 and the second interface 125 are accessible when the device 100 is in the second position. Preferably, an operator can rest the second panel 140 and the second panel 150 of the electronic device 100 in his hands, while accessing the first interface 115 and the second interface 125 with his thumbs. The present invention is directed to a method ofmanufacturing the electronic device 100. Such a method comprises of three steps, as illustrated in FIGs. 3 A and 3B. As shown in FIG. 3 A, the first step of the method is the providing of a first substantially planar panel 130. The first panel 130 includes a display 120 and has a first side edge 147 and a second side edge 157. Although FIG- 3 A shows the preferred embodiment of the display 120 encompassing nearly the entire first panel 130, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the display 120 can be located anywhere on the first panel 130 and the display 120 can be of any size and shape. It will be appreciated that the first panel 130 includes electronic circuits for driving the display 120 and for controlling the device 100 (FIG. 1). Turning to FIG. 3B, the second step of the method ofmanufacturing the electronic device 100 is hingedly coupling a second substantially planar panel 210 to the first side edge 147 of the first panel 130. The second panel 210 includes a first interface 115 and is selected from a first set of panels 200. Preferably the second panel 210 includes a third interface on
an opposite face from the first interface 115. The third interface is preferably a music playing interface, such as for MP3 music files, such that the device 100 can play music while the flaps are closed when the device 100 is in the first position. However, in certain alternative embodiments, no music playing interface is present on the back of the second panel 210. In the example shown in FIG. 3B, the first set of panels 200 includes a gaming panel 205, a keyboard panel 210, and a PDA panel 220. The gaming panel 205 includes a gaming interface, the keyboard panel 210 includes a keyboard interface, and the PDA panel 220 includes a PDA interface. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the first set of panels 200 can include any number of plurality of panels, and the panels themselves can include a wide range of interfaces. For instance, in the preferred embodiment, as previously discussed, the second panel 210 includes a third interface on the opposite face from the first interface 115. Still referring to FIG. 3B, in the second step of the method ofmanufacturing, one of the first set of panels 200 is selected. In the example shown in FIG. 3B, the keyboard panel
210 is selected from the first set of panels 200. The keyboard panel 210 comprises a keyboard interface 115, a side edge 145 and a first hinged coupler 175. The keyboard panel 210 is then hingedly coupled to the first side edge 147 of the first panel 130. Thus, the first hinged coupler 175 joins the side edge 145 of the keyboard panel 210 to the first side edge 147 of the first panel 130 in the second step of the method ofmanufacturing, according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention. At the end of the second step of the method ofmanufacturing, the first panel 130 including the display 120 is hingedly coupled to the second panel 210. Still referring to FIG. 3B, the third step of the method ofmanufacturing the electronic device 100 (FIG. 1) requires the hingedly coupling of a third substantially planar panel 310 to the second side edge 157 of the first panel 130. The third panel 310 is selected from a second set of panels 300 and includes a second interface 125. In the example shown in FIG. 3B, the second set of panels 300 included a gaming panel 305, a keyboard panel 310 and a PDA panel 320. Still referring to the example shown in FIG. 3B, the third panel is the keyboard panel 310 selected from the second set of panels 300. The third panel 310 includes a keyboard interface 125, a second hinged coupler 185, and a side edge 155. During the third step of manufacturing, the third panel 310 is hingedly coupled to the second side edge 157 of the first panel 130. The second hinged coupler 185 joins the second side edge 157 of the first panel
130 to the side edge 155 of the third panel 310. Upon completion of the third step ofmanufacturing, the electronic device 100 (FIG. 1) is completely assembled in accordance to the preferred embodiment of the present invention with the interface buttons 110 of the third interface exposed and the first interface (not shown) and the second interface (not shown) obscured. FIG. 1 is a top view of the completed device 100 in the first position and FIG. 2B is a top view of the completed device 100 in the second position, upon completion of the preferred embodiment of the three-step method ofmanufacturing. When the device 100 is in the second position, as shown in FIG. 2B, an operator can selectively access the first interface 115 alone, the second interface 125 alone, and both the first interface 115 and the second interface 125. At this juncture, it should be noted that the panels of the device 100 are interchangeable during the stage ofmanufacturing due to the flexibility of the method of manufacturing of the present invention. Thus, turning to FIG. 3B, a manufacturer can manufacture a PED having keyboard panels as the second panel 210 and third panel 310 (as shown in FIG. 3B), and within a short time, just as easily manufacture another PED having a gaming panel 205 from the first set of panels 200 for the second panel and a PDA panel 320 from the second set of panels 300 for the third panel. Also, this invention advantageously allows for a manufacturer to make modifications to existing PED design, by increasing the number of interface-carrying panels in the first set of panels 200 and the second set of panels 300 without limitation. Thus, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the first set of panels 200 and the second set of panels 300 are not restricted to the panels illustrated in FIG. 3B. Instead, the first set of panels 200 and the second set of panels 300 can include a myriad of panels having a vast variety of interfaces. Also, it will be further appreciated by those skilled in the art that there are no limitations on the numbers and types of possible combinations of the second panel 140 (FIG.
2B) and the third panel (FIG. 2B) of the device 100 (FIG. 1). For instance, turning to FIG. 3B, out of the choices of panels of the first set of panels 200 and the second set of panels 300, a manufacturer can manufacture PEDs having the following possible combinations: (1) two gaming panels, 205 and 305; (2) one gaming panel 205 and one keyboard panel 310; (3) one gaming panel 205 and one PDA panel 320; ( 4) one keyboard panel 210 and one PDA panel 320, or (5) two PDA panels, 220 and 320. However, FIG. 3B is for illustrative purposes only, and the combinations of the second panel and the third panel are only limited to the types of existing interface-carrying panels present in the first set of panels 200 and the second set of
panels 300. FIGs 4A, 4B, 4C, and 4D show only several of the many possible interchangeable panels for the device 100 (FIG. 1). In FIG. 4A, a gaming panel 205 to serve as the second panel selected from the first set of panels 200 (FIG. 3B) includes a first hinged coupler 175 and a side edge 145. The gaming panel 205 also includes a gaming keypad 250. In FIG. 4B, a second gaming panel 305 selected from the second set of panels 300 (FIG. 3B) is shown to serve as a third panel to the device 100 (FIG. 1). The second gaming panel 305 includes a second hinged coupler 185, a plurality of gaming keys 240, and a side edge 155. In FIG. 4C, a PDA panel 220, selected from the first set of panels 200 (FIG. 3B) and configured to serve as a second panel to the device 100 (FIG. 1), includes a first PDA keypad 160 and a plurality of PDA function keys 170. Also, the PDA panel 220 includes a first hinged coupler 175 and a side edge 145. In FIG. 4D, a second PDA panel 320, selected from the second set of panels 300 (FIG. 3B) and configured to serve as a third panel to the device 100 (FIG. 1), includes a second PDA keypad 180, a plurality of soft keys 215, a second coupler 185, and a side edge 155. As mentioned previously, the panels of the device 100
(FIG. 1) are interchangeable, and thus it will be appreciated to those skilled in the art that the panels shown in FIGs. 4A, 4B, 4C, and 4D can be mixed and matched to provide a number of possible combinations of PEDs. Thus, a pair of panels, one selected from the first set of panels 200 (FIG. 3B) and one selected from the second set of panels (FIG. 3B), can configure the electronic device 100 (FIG. 1) to operate as a music listening device, a gamer device or as an entertainment device. Alternatively, the pair of panels can collectively form a keyboard panel, a gaming panel, or a PDA panel of the device 100. Referring back to FIG. 2B, the method ofmanufacturing further comprises the step of operatively coupling the first panel 130 to both the second panel 140 and the third panel 150. Also, the first panel 130, the second panel 140, and the third panel 150 are configured to exchange electronic data signals. When the device 100 is configured in the first position, as shown in FIG. 1, no interface controls the display 120. Thus, the display 120 does not respond to any entries made on any interface on the first panel 130, the second panel 140, and the third panel 150. Alternatively, when the device 100 includes a third interface with interface buttons 110, as shown in FIG. 1, the third interface controls at least the exposed portion of the display 120 when the device 100 is in the first position. Furthermore, when the device 100 is configured in the second position, as shown in FIG. 2B, the display 120 is selectively controllable by the first interface 115 alone, the second interface 125 alone, and
both the first interface 115 and the second interface 125. In the preferred embodiment, when the device 100 is in the second position, the display 120 is controllable by both the first interface 115 and the second interface 125 simultaneously. In yet another embodiment of the present invention, as shown in FIG. 5, a kit 400 to assemble an electronic device 100 (FIG. 1) comprises three substantially planar panels. A first panel 130 includes a display 120, a first side edge 147 and a second side edge 157. A second panel 210 includes a first interface 115 and is configured to be hingedly coupled to the first side edge 147 of the first panel 130. A third panel 310 includes a second interface 125 and is configured to be hingedly coupled to the second side edge 155 of the first panel 130. Upon assembling the device 100 (FIG. 1) from the kit 500, the device 100 shall have the appearance as shown in FIGs. 1 (for the first position), 2A and 2B (for the second position). Thus, when the device 100 is in a first position, as shown in FIG. 1, the first interface 115 and the second interface 125 are obscured while the interface buttons 110 of the third interface exposed, in the preferred embodiment. When the device 100 is in a second position, as shown in FIG. 2B, the first interface 115 and the second interface 125 are exposed while the third interface is exposed. An operator can selectively access the first interface 115 alone, the second interface 125 alone, and both the first interface 115 and the second interface 125 when the device 100 is in the second position (FIG. 2B). Still referring to FIG. 5, the first panel 130 of the kit 400 is configured to be operatively coupled to both the second panel 210 and the third panel 310. The second panel
210 is selected from a first set of panels 200, which includes a gaming panel 205, a keyboard panel 210, and a PDA panel 220. The third panel 310 is selected from a first set of panels 300, which includes a gaming panel 305, a keyboard panel 310, and a PDA panel 320. In the example shown in FIG. 5, the kit 400 is comprised of a first keyboard panel 210 selected from the first set of panels 200, as well a second keyboard panel 310 selected from the second set of panels 300. The first panel 130, the second panel 210, and the third panel 310 of the kit 400 are configured to exchange electronic data signals. Upon completion of assembling the device 100 (FIG. 1) from the kit 400, when the device 100 is configured in the first position, no interface controls the display 120. When the device 100 is configured in the second position (FIG. 2B), the device 100 is selectively controllable by the first interface 115 alone, the second interface 125 alone, and both the first interface 115 and the second interface 125. In the preferred embodiment, when the device 100 is in the second position (FIG. 2B), the device 100 is controllable by both the first interface 115 and the second interface 125
simultaneously. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the electronic device 100 (FIG. 1) assembled from the kit 400 can take on a number of forms and functions, based on the combinations of the second panel 210 (FIG. 5) and the third panel 310 (FIG. 5) of the device 100. Thus, based on the specific pair of panels, one selected from the first set of panels 200
(FIG. 5) and one selected from the second set of panels 300 (FIG. 5), the electronic device 100 can be configured to operate as a gamer device, a music listening device, an entertainment device, and the like. Furthermore, the pair of panels can be configured to collectively form a keyboard panel, a gaming panel, a PDA panel, and any other type of collective panel. Also, if the kit 400 is provided after manufacturing, the second panel 210 and the third panel 310 are fixed. However, if the kit 400 is provided during manufacturing, the second panel 210 and the third panel 310 are interchangeable. If the second panel 210 and the third panel 310 are interchangeable, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the device 100 (FIG. 1) can recognize the second panel 210 and the third panel 310, including the first interface 115 and the second interface 125. Preferably, the device 100 will include a
ROM chip and utilize software for panel and interface recognition. The present invention has been described in terms of specific embodiments incorporating details to facilitate the understanding of the principles of construction and operation of the invention. Such reference herein to specific embodiments and details thereof is not intended to limit the scope of the claims appended hereto. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that modifications may be made in the embodiment chosen for illustration without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.