The patent badge is an abbreviated version of the USPTO patent document. The patent badge does contain a link to the full patent document.

The patent badge is an abbreviated version of the USPTO patent document. The patent badge covers the following: Patent number, Date patent was issued, Date patent was filed, Title of the patent, Applicant, Inventor, Assignee, Attorney firm, Primary examiner, Assistant examiner, CPCs, and Abstract. The patent badge does contain a link to the full patent document (in Adobe Acrobat format, aka pdf). To download or print any patent click here.

Date of Patent:
Mar. 16, 2010

Filed:

Dec. 16, 2005
Applicants:

Andrew Marshall, Dallas, TX (US);

Tito Gelsomini, Plano, TX (US);

Harvey Edd Davis, Trenton, TX (US);

Inventors:

Andrew Marshall, Dallas, TX (US);

Tito Gelsomini, Plano, TX (US);

Harvey Edd Davis, Trenton, TX (US);

Assignee:
Attorneys:
Primary Examiner:
Int. Cl.
CPC ...
H04N 1/04 (2006.01); H04N 1/46 (2006.01);
U.S. Cl.
CPC ...
Abstract

A narrow scanning aperture, lens, and mirror are added to a digital camera to enable image or text scanning. A motion sensor on the same face as the scanner aperture provides approximate scan speed data as the scanner aperture is pressed against and manually moved across the document being scanned. Many documents are too large to scan in one strip, in which case multiple strips are scanned. As each strip is scanned, a bit-mapped image of the strip is created in a data buffer. Data from each strip is passed to a final image RAM which, on completion of scanning, holds a bit-mapped image of the entire scanned page, in B/W, gray scale, or color. Multi pass strip align then processes the image data to remove redundant data (from strip overlap) and position skew (from errors in position during the scan), resulting in a more accurate bit-mapped image in final image RAM of the entire scanned page or item. Image compression compresses the bit-mapped image to standard JPEG format for storage on the camera memory card. An alternative embodiment stores each scanned strip as a separate image. After strip images are downloaded to the PC, software on the PC 'stitches' these strips back into the full page by eliminating redundant pixels and strip-to-strip misalignment.


Find Patent Forward Citations

Loading…