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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to portable telephone apparatus and more
particularly to portable radiotelephones which utilize switches or similar
elements for control functions and a keypad for dialing telephone numbers.
Telephones having a rotary or pushbutton dial mechanism and other buttons
integral to the handset portion have become commonplace in landline
subscriber stations. This arrangement offers the telephone user the
convenience of bringing the user interface mechanism and control buttons
close to the user.
Radiotelephone operation, such as that offered in cellular radiotelephone
or in cordless telephone sets, provide a mobility to the telephone user
which landline telephone does not provide. The lack of a cord and the
small size of the portable radiotelephone unit enables the user to carry
the unit essentially wherever the user goes. This portability, however,
allows the portable unit to be placed in locations where foreign objects
may come in contact with the user interface mechanism and activate number
or control buttons. Some protection may be offered by a device which
covers the user interface mechanism and control buttons when not in use
but small objects such as coins, paperclips, etc. may be trapped between
the cover and the mechanism. Undesired operation of buttons in a
radiotelephone setting may turn the equipment on or off, cause
transmission of unwanted signals and prevent use of a radio channel, or
cause undesired functions to occur. Such undesired activation of buttons
is likely to engage functions which reduce the operating life of the
battery which powers the portable unit.
Some cordless telephones have been offered in the United States which
disable the dialling, number memory, and call processing functions when a
cover is closed over the dialling keypad. One such cordless telephone is
manufactured by the Panasonic Company as model number KXT3000. While
offering protection against false telephone number and call processing,
the on-off switch and volume control remain subject to undesired
activation. Although it might appear that simply turning the unit on or
off when the cover is closed would solve all unwanted operation, an
operational state is necessary in which the unit is capable of receiving a
call and alerting the user but not of taking any other unwanted actions.
Such a call receiving state should be enabled by the user and not be
subject to accidental deactivation by an unwanted switching off of the
unit. Furthermore, if the unit has purposefully been switched off by the
user, it should not be unusually subject to being accidentally switched
on.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is, therefore, one object of the present invention to prevent unwanted
operation of dial and control button mechanisms by foreign objects which
may be trapped between the mechanisms and a cover.
It is another object of the present invention to disable the power on-off
button when the cover is closed to prevent such unwanted operation.
It is a further object of the present invention to deactivate the volume
control when the cover is closed.
Accordingly, these and other objects are realized in the present invention
which encompasses a portable radiotelephone having a keypad covered by a
movable element which produces an on-hook condition when the movable
element is in a first position covering the keypad and which produces an
off-hook condition when the movable element is in a second position
exposing the keypad. When an on-hook condition is produced, a switchable
power source is prevented from being switched on or off.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is an isometric drawing of a portable radiotelephone which may
employ the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a side view of the portable radiotelephone of FIG. 1 in which a
foreign object may be trapped between the flip cover element and the user
interface.
FIG. 3 is a diagram of the hookswitch switch mechanism which may be
employed in the radiotelephone of FIG. 1.
FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of the slave microcomputer which may employ
the present invention.
FIG. 5 is a schematic diagram of the master microcomputer which may employ
the present invention.
FIG. 6 is a flowchart of the deactivation process which may be employed in
the present invention.
FIG. 7 is a flowchart of the master microcomputer process of deactivation
employed in the present invention.
FIGS. 8A and 8B, combined, are a flowchart of the slave microcomputer
process of deactivation employed in the present invention.
FIG. 9 is a flowchart of the master microcomputer process of
activation/deactivation of the power switch upon initial power-up of the
master microcomputer as employed in the present invention.
FIG. 10 is a flowchart of the activation/deactivation of the power switch
after initial power-up of the master microcomputer as employed in the
present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
A portable radiotelephone adapted to be used in a cellular radiotelephone
system is shown in FIG. 1. This portable unit consists of two readily
apparent portions, a body portion 102 and a flip element portion 104. The
drawing of FIG. 1 shows the flip element 104 in an "open" position such
that a user of the portable unit may listen via earpiece 106 and may speak
into the microphone 107. The dial or keypad 110 consists of a plurality of
buttons numbered one through zero, # and *, familiar telephone arrangement
as well as additional function buttons such as "send", "end", "on-off",
and other buttons associated with memory recall. Disposed on the side of
the body portion 102 are two volume control buttons: volume increase 108
and volume decrease 109, which may adjust the volume of the earpiece
and/or the ringer.
When the flip element 104 is open as shown in FIG. 1, the portable cellular
telephone can be in the state of answering or making a telephone call.
Such a state is commonly known as "off-hook". (It should be noted that in
the cellular system an additional operator activity is required to place a
call: upon entering a telephone number to be dialed, the send button must
be depressed in order to activate the portable unit's transmitter and to
complete the call. In the preferred embodiment, the send button may also
be used to answer a call if the flip element is already open). Upon
completion of the telephone call, the user may hang up the portable
telephone (go "on-hook") by moving the flip element 104 into a stowed
position, that is, rotated about the axis of hinges 112 and 114 so that
the flip element 104 rests nearly against keypad 110. This action
activates a hookswitch (HKS) which causes the telephone call to be
terminated. Depression of the end button without closing the flip element
may also terminate the call.
Activation of the hookswitch occurs in the preferred embodiment when the
angle between the body 102 and the flip element 104 equals approximately
45.degree.. The closing of the flip element 104 can best be perceived in
FIG. 2. It can be imagined that should a foreign object 202 become lodged
between the flip element 104 and the body 102, undesired key depressions
of keypad 110 might occur.
The hookswitch in the preferred embodiment is located between the flip
element 104 and the body portion 102 and may be seen in the detail of FIG.
3. A contact 302 consisting of a conventional conductive spring material
is disposed in hinge 114 of flip element 104 and rotates with the flip
element 104. A printed circuit board element 304 is disposed in the body
portion 102 in a position such that the contact 302 presses against the
circuit board element 304. Metalization disposed on printed circuit board
element 304 is positioned such that when the flip element 104 is opened to
an angle of 45.degree., an electrical connection is completed between the
metalization through the contact 302 to ground. The combination of the
contact 302 and the printed circuit board element 304 is the hookswitch
(HKS) 306.
In the preferred embodiment, two interconnected microcomputer systems are
utilized to control the basic functions of the portable unit (the master
microcomputer) and to control the key pad and display functions (the slave
microcomputer). The slave microcomputer is shown in the schematic of FIG.
4. The slave microcomputer system consists of a microprocessor 402 which,
in the preferred embodiment, is an MC68HC05C4 microprocessor (which also
has on-board memory). The basic function of the slave microprocessor is to
provide interface to the user of the portable radiotelepone via keyboard,
display, and other buttons and indicators. The slave microprocessor is
coupled to a multi-segment display 404 which, in the preferred embodiment,
is a conventional LED eight digit display. The slave microprocessor 402 is
also coupled to a keypad matrix of buttons 110' which enables the portable
radiotelephone user to input (dial) telephone numbers, store and recall
telephone number information, and perform other radiotelephone functions
(such as initiating a telephone call). In the preferred embodiment, one of
the keys 408 of the matrix 110' is specially dedicated to the function of
turning the power on and off. Power on/off is accomplished by a momentary
switch closure (by key 408) to ground which activates on/off circuitry.
Volume increase switch 108' and volume decrease switch 109' are
electrically coupled to the slave microprocessor 402 as part of the
row/column matrix. Their physical location is away from the keypad 110' to
allow for greater user convenience.
The function which is normally performed by a hookswitch in a conventional
landline telephone is performed in the portable radiotelephone of the
present invention as previously described in relation to FIG. 3. The
hookswitch is shown schematically as switch 306 in FIG. 4. A DC (Direct
Current) circuit is made or broken by HKS 306 to ground and applied to
microprocessor 402. Furthermore, a pulse is generated from any change of
state of the HKS 306 by a transistor 410 capacitors 412 and 414 and
resistors 416, 418, and 419. The output of transistor 410 is taken from
the collector and applied to the interrupt request (IRQ) input and the
keypad column inputs of microprocessor 402 having a negative duration of
approximately 10 microseconds. Microprocessor 402 stores the status of HKS
306 and provides an indication of the change of state of HKS 306 to the
master microprocessor.
Communication between the slave microprocessor 402 and the master
microprocessor is maintained on a data bus 420. This data bus 420 is
coupled to the master microprocessor 502 as shown in FIG. 5 of the master
microcomputer. Other functions also share the data bus 420: the portable
radiotelephone transceiver 504 accepts radio channel synthesizer
information and message encoding/decoding from the bus 420, and
specialized watchdog functions 506 operate from instructions given on bus
420. In the preferred embodiment, master microprocessor is realized by a
conventional 68HCll microprocessor. The remainder of the microcomputer
associated with microprocessor 502 consists of memory 508, which in the
preferred embodiment may be a plurality of conventional EPROMs and
EEPROMs, and a specialized power controller 510 which performs the
functions of turning on and off the several different voltages required by
the different portable transceiver functions, as well as conditioning the
on/off signal. In order to aid in the understanding of the operation of
the present invention, peripheral power switching circuits such as
external power sensing and memory keep-alive are omitted from FIG. 5 and
the descriptive text.
Assuming that the portable radiotelephone has been powered-up and the flip
element has been opened to enable the HKS, a keypad 110 pushbutton
activation by the portable radiotelepone user results in a communication
between the slave microprocessor 402 and the master microprocessor 502 via
the bus 420. The slave microprocessor 402, in the preferred embodiment,
communicates that a closure has occurred between a particular row and a
particular column corresponding to the key pressed by the user. The master
microprocessor 502 may then take the appropriate action, such as returning
a digit instruction via bus 420 for the slave microprocessor 402 to cause
the display 404 to illuminate or otherwise display. Thus, the slave
microprocessor 402 is commanded by the master microprocessor 502 or the
user in order to complete an assignment.
When both the slave microprocessor 402 and the master microprocessor 502
operate together, the process shown in FIG. 6 is that which is followed to
determine if the keypad keys and control switches should cause a response
by the portable rdiotelephone. Since it is an important feature of the
present invention to disable the user interface when the flip element is
closed, this feature is incorporated into the process of FIG. 6. Although
the preferred embodiment has been implemented employing two
microprocessors, this should not be a limitation of the invention for it
is possible to implement the present invention in a single microprocessor
should the designer so desire. For either a single microprocessor or a
multiple microprocessor system, the microprocessors may be interrupt
driven in order to save battery power. The process of FIG. 6, therefore,
commences with an interrupt due to a change of state of the hookswitch 306
or a key closure from keypad 110 to enable the microcomputer system at
602. A determination is made, at 604, whether the flip element is open or
closed. If the flip element is open, then the keypad 110 is read to
determine which key has been closed at 606. If a key has been depressed at
608, then the function or character designated by the key is acted upon at
610. If a keypad 110 key has not been depressed, then no action is taken
and the microcomputer system resumes its normal functions of controlling
the transceiver, the display, and other housekeeping chores as shown at
612. If it is determined that the flip element is not open (at 604), then
any keypad key depression is considered to be spurious and is ignored by
progressing directly from the determination block at 604 to the normal
housekeeping functions block at 612. The entire process is repeated for a
predetermined period of time until a determination is made at the
microcomputer system should go into a low power consumption mode as
determined at 614. The microcomputer system is put into a "sleep" state at
616 and only the low power functions await for an interrupt signal at 618.
If the microcomputer system is implemented as a master and a slave
microcomputer, the master microprocessor utilizes the process shown in
FIG. 7 (as part of its standard operating procedure) to prevent spurious
key depressions from activating the portable transceiver. Since the slave
microprocessor 402 can send either a flip element closed indication or a
flip open indication, a detection of those indications is necessary by the
master microcomputer. A test is made, at 702, of whether a flip element
closed indication has been received from the slave microprocessor 402 on
the bus 420. If a flip element closed indication is received, then the
master microprocesor 502 sends a keypad disable command, at 704, to the
slave microprocessor 402 on the bus 420. The master microcomputer then
returns to its programmed routine of chores. If a flip element closed
indication is not received, at 702, then a test is made of whether a flip
element open indication has been received from the slave microprocessor
402, at 706. If such an indication has been received by the master
microprocessor 502, then a command is sent to the slave microprocessor 402
on the bus 420 to enable the slave microprocessor 402 to again read any
keypad button depressions and to send such information to the master
microprocessor 502. Upon completion of the enable command, the master
microprocessor 502 returns to its routine chores.
The process followed by the slave microcomputer in realizing the present
invention in the preferred embodiment is shown in FIGS. 8A and 8B. The
slave microprocessor 402 memorizes the state of the hookswitch 306
corresponding to whether the flip element is open or closed. The slave
microprocessor 402 determines, as part of its routine of chores, whether
the hookswitch 306 has changed state by comparing the current state
against the stored state at 802 and 804. If the state is different, then a
determination is made, at 806, whether the flip element is open or closed.
If the flip element is determined to be open, then an open flip element
command is transmitted to the master microprocessor at 808. If the
determination at 806 yields a closed flip element, then a closed flip
element command is conveyed to the master microprocessor at 810. In either
case the master microprocessor 502 always maintains the flip element state
in its associated storage. The slave microprocessor, as part of its
routine of chores, checks for a keypad enable or a keypad disable command
received from the master microprocessor 502. This determination is made at
decision blocks 812 and 814. A keypad enable command sets a keypad enable
flag in microprocessor 402 memory at 816, while a keypad disable command
clears the keypad enable flag at 818 before the process of FIG. 8 resumes
its normal background flow. Further along the normal background process,
the slave microprocessor 402 reads the keypad enable flag, at 820, and
reads the row and column lines from the keypad in addition to the volume
increase switch 108 and the volume decrease switch 109, at 822, to
determine if any key or switch has been depressed (such determination made
at 824). If a key or switch has been depressed, then an identification of
the key or switch depression is sent to the master microprocessor at 826.
The process of FIG. 8 then returns to the normal slave microprocessor
background functions. Thus, if the flip element is determined to be open,
then the keys of the keypad and the volume increase and decrease switches
are read in conventional fashion. If the flip element is determined to be
closed, then the keys of the keypad and the volume increase and decrease
switches are ignored. There is, however, one further exception.
The on/off key is also covered and protected by the flip element. In the
preferred embodiment, the on/off key is placed among the matrix of keypad
keys for aesthetic reasons. It is a desirable feature that once the power
is turned on, the portable transceiver remain in a power-on mode and not
be turned off due to a spurious on/off key depression when the flip
element is closed. Likewise, when the portable transceiver is turned off,
it is equally desirable that the portable transceiver remain in the
power-off condition even though a spurious on/off key depression may occur
when the flip element is closed. Two processes enable this operation.
Depressions of the on/off key are ignored when the flip element is closed.
Referring again to FIG. 4, when a momentary depression of the on/off
switch 408 occurs, a ground is applied to the on/off line and to the power
controller 510 of FIG. 5. The ground, applied through switch 408, is
buffered by power controller 510 and applied to the master microprocessor
502 via line 512. Upon receipt of this buffered on/off signal on line 512,
the master microprocessor 502 follows the process flowcharted in FIG. 9.
The master microprocessor 502 and the rest of the associated microcomputer
system undergoes a reset operation at 902 and requests a system
characterization (a definition of what peripherals exist on the bus) at
904. As part of the characterization process, the slave microprocessor 402
reports the state of the flip element. The current flip element state is
then stored, at 905. The master microprocessor then determines if the flip
element is open, at 906. If this determination is positive, then the
master microcomputer proceeds with its normal wake-up and housekeeping
routines. If the flip element is determined to be closed at 906, then a
check is made to determine if an external supply has been connected to the
portable radiotelephone (at 908). Such a circuitry sharing arrangement is
further described in U.S. patent application No. 107,227, "Radio
Arrangement Having Two Radios Sharing Circuitry", filed on behalf of
Michael P. Metroka on Oct. 9, 1987. If an external supply is determined to
exist at 908, then the master microprocessor 502 returns to its normal
housekeeping routines. If an external supply is not connected, then a
power turn off routine is followed at 910. (Power turn off is accomplished
by the master microprocessosr 502 by storing its status and other
essential parameters in memory before allowing the watchdog functions 506
of FIG. 5 to runout. A watchdog power function runout is communicated to
the power controller 510 which subsequently turns off the portable
radiotelephone).
Once the master microcomputer has successfully powered up, any on/off
switch depressions are ignored so long as the flip element is closed (as
shown in the process of FIG. 10). A determination of the signal sense on
line 512 of FIG. 5 is made by the master microprocessor 502 at 1002. If
the sense is a signal high, then the master microprocessor continues with
its background routines. If the sense is low, then The master
microprocessor 502 reads the status of the flip element storage (at 1014)
and either proceeds with a turn off routine (at 1016) if the flip element
is open, or ignores a depression of the on/off switch as a spurious
depression if the flip element is closed. Thus, a valid on/off command may
be processed only if the flip element is open.
In summary, then, a portable radiotelephone having the capability of
ignoring spurious control switch inputs has been shown and described. A
flip element which covers a keypad and other control buttons when in a
closed position also activates a hookswitch. When the hookswitch and
microprocessor indicate that the flip element is in a closed position, the
on/off switch cannot be activated to turn the portable radiotelephone on
or off. Also, switches which control volume level are deactivated when the
flip element is in the closed position. While a particular embodiment of
the invention has been shown and described, it is to be understood that
the invention is not to be taken as limited to the specific embodiment
herein, and that changes and modifications may be made without departing
from the true spirit of the invention. It is contemplated therefore to
cover the present invention, and any and all such changes and
modifications, by the appended claims.
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Description  |
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