Abstract:
An alphanumeric terminal providing a digital message having a fixed portion consisting of the address of the receiver in sixteen bits, followed by a repeat of the address in sixteen bits, a status indication in four bits, a request in four bits and an acknowledge plus an indication of whether text follows in two bits; and a variable portion consisting of a text message of zero to 384 bits, which fixed and variable portions of the message have parity bits inserted after each digital word and are delayed and interleaved (every other bit) with a similar undelayed message to form a composite message, which composite message is preceded by a pseudo random code of 127 bits. The terminal also includes noise and error detection circuitry, associated with the receiver, which separates the two interleaved messages and compares them for similarity, checks the parity bits for correctness and compares the amplitude of each bit to a predetermined upper and lower level to determine whether the bit is noise or a portion of the signal. From the various noise and error checks the terminal then provides a decision as to whether a digital word is good or bad and, if the digital word is in error and comes within the text portion of the message, an asterisk appears in the visual display so that the operator can mentally determine what the character should be.
Abstract:
An alphanumeric terminal providing a digital message having a fixed portion consisting of the address of the receiver in sixteen bits, followed by a repeat of the address in sixteen bits, a status indication in four bits, a request in four bits and an acknowledge plus an indication of whether text follows in two bits; and a variable portion consisting of a text message of zero to 384 bits, which fixed and variable portions of the message have parity bits inserted after each digital word and are delayed and interleaved (every other bit) with a similar undelayed message to form a composite message, which composite message is preceded by a pseudo random code of 127 bits. The terminal also includes noise and error detection circuitry, associated with the receiver, which separates the two interleaved messages and compares them for similarity, checks the parity bits for correctness and compares the amplitude of each bit to a predetermined upper and lower level to determine whether the bit is noise or a portion of the signal. From the various noise and error checks the terminal then provides a decision as to whether a digital word is good or bad and, if the digital word is in error and comes within the text portion of the message, an asterisk appears in the visual display so that the operator can mentally determine what the character should be.
Abstract:
A technique is used for providing additional information about a broadcast presentation that allows a user interested in the additional information to acquire it easily, using a selective call device or a television remote control device to easily acquire an information address during the broadcast when a prompt is presented during the broadcast. An advertiser can send the additional information over a wide area radio selective call communication system or can post it at a universal resource locator of a computer network. The information address is used to acquire the additional information. The information address can be stored, selected and deleted in the selective call device or remote control device. The prompt can be disabled or enabled manually or based on location.
Abstract:
CM-77891 MOBILE DATA TERMINAL A programmable mobile data terminal system sends and receives predeterminedly formatted digitally encoded messages. A keyboard subsystem and a character display subsystem are controlled by a programmable microcomputer subsystem which also processes received and transmitted messages. A transmit and receive system clock interrupts the operation of the microcomputer to process messages. The messages include a cyclical redundant check byte as well as a control number byte. Characters which are not editable blink. A terminal status display line is provided and a message received character is also provided. The system sets the system clock period to be the same for all data rates. Automatic restart of the system is provided as well as a means for detecting and generating a pseudo-random message preamble. Cursor positioning, memory interchange, and display keys are provided. Receipt and acknowledgement of various types of messages are also provided.
Abstract:
A technique is used for providing additional information about a broadcast (122) presentation that allows a user interested in the additional information to acquire it easily, using a selective call device (111) or a television remote control device to easily acquire an information address during the broadcast when a prompt is presented during the broadcast. An advertiser can send the additional information over a wide area radio selective call communication system (100) or can post it at a universal resource locator of a computer network. The information address is used to acquire the additional information. The information address can be stored, selected and deleted in the selective call device or remote control device. The prompt can be disabled or enabled manually or based on location.