Pet communication and control system
20230380382 · 2023-11-30
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A system comprises a pet communication device, and a controller. The device comprises a circuit board supported in a housing. The circuit board has first and second non-overlapping bus elements configured in a grid. A point of overlap associated with first and second bus elements comprises a trigger point. An overlay is positioned atop the circuit board and includes a cutout corresponding to the overlap point. A button element is removably retained in the cutout above the overlap point. The button element comprises a depressible cover, and a physical structure underlying the depressible cover that configured to be brought into physical contact with the bus elements when depressed. The button element itself is electrically inert. The controller includes first code configured to provide an activation signal that activates the trigger point, and second code configured to track depression of the button element only following activation of the trigger point.
Claims
1. A pet communication and control system, comprising: a pet communication device, comprising: a circuit board supported in a housing, the circuit board comprising first and second bus elements that are configured in a grid, the first and second bus elements being arranged in a non-overlapping manner, wherein at least one point of overlap associated with the first and second bus elements comprises a trigger point; a power source connected to the grid; an overlay positioned atop the circuit board, wherein the overlay has a cutout corresponding to the at least one point of overlap; a button element configured to be removably retained in the cutout above the at least one point of overlap, the button element comprising a depressible cover, and a physical structure underlying the depressible cover that is configured to be brought into physical contact with the first and second bus elements at the trigger point when depressed from a first position to a second position, wherein the button element is electrically inert; and a controller comprising computer program code executable in a processor, the computer program code including first program code configured to provide an activation signal that activates the trigger point, and second program code configured to track depression of the button element only following activation of the trigger point.
2. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 1 wherein the pet communication device further includes a depressible spring positioned within the cutout underlying the cover and atop the trigger point.
3. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 2 wherein depression of the depressible cover closes a circuit located at the trigger point to generate an output signal.
4. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 1 wherein the pet communication device further includes third program code configured to output the output signal.
5. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 4 wherein the output signal is output to interface to one of: a lighting system, a video communication system, and a network-connected messaging service.
6. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 1 wherein the physical structure of the button element is formed of a conductive material.
7. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 6 wherein the physical structure is separate from the depressible cover or integral therewith.
8. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 1 wherein the pet communication device further includes a light or audio source associated with the button element.
9. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 8 wherein the second program code is further configured to activate the light or audio source in response to depression of the button element.
10. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 8 wherein the computer program code includes third program code configured to receive a message from an external source and, in response to activate the light or audio source.
11. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 10 wherein the external source is a network-connected social media account
12. The pet communication and control system as described in claim 1 wherein the overlay has an additional cutout configured to receive a second button element, the second button element having a depressible cover overlaying a second trigger point.
13. The pet communication and control system wherein the computer program code is a mobile application.
14. A communication device, comprising: a circuit board supported in a housing, the circuit board comprising first and second bus elements that are configured in a grid, the first and second bus elements being arranged in a non-overlapping manner, wherein at least one point of overlap associated with the first and second bus elements comprises a trigger point; a power source connected to the grid; an overlay positioned atop the circuit board, wherein the overlay has a cutout corresponding to the at least one point of overlap; and a button element configured to be removably retained in the cutout above the at least one point of overlap, the button element comprising a depressible cover, and a physical structure underlying the depressible cover that is configured to be brought into physical contact with the trigger point when depressed from a first position to a second position, wherein the button element is electrically inert.
15. The communication device as described in claim 14 further including includes a depressible spring positioned within the cutout underlying the cover and atop the trigger point.
16. The communication device as described in claim 14 further including a removable cover configured in the cutout.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0006]
[0007]
[0008]
[0009]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0010]
[0011] As depicted in
[0012] Preferably, each of the triggering elements in the pet communication device have a similar physical and electrical structural configuration (namely, the conducting elements forming the grid, and the overlay with the cutout to receive the depressible element, etc.). As noted above, however, whether a particular depressible element is active preferably depends on whether the trigger point that underlies that element has been turned on (for control or data logging purposes).
[0013] With the above-described configuration, a particular position on the pet communication device corresponding to the trigger point may include the removable button element or, in the alternative, a cover 315, that fits within the cutout (and thus overlays the underlying circuit elements). In the latter case, the trigger point cannot be activated even if the animal places a paw on the location. This structural configuration, however, enables a user to easily remove the cover when desired and to then position the button element in the location. In this manner, the user can also selectively expand (or reduce) the number of active positions that are exposed to the animal in the pet communication device. This flexibility is facilitated by the structural configuration depicted in
[0014] Referring back to
[0015] As also shown in
[0016] As noted above, the device and the controller communicate with one another over a wireless or wired connection. Network communication elements (e.g., transmitter, receiver, or other data processing elements) are supported in the device and controller for this purpose. Communications between the device and controller may be over a secure connection, encrypted, or otherwise protected against discovery or spoofing. In one embodiment, the controller is a micro-controller (although this is not a limitation), and a separate mobile application (app) is used for interoperability with external systems (such as described above). The mobile app may also provide a user interface for data display (e.g., visualizations), and the like.
[0017] While the above describes a particular order of operations performed by certain embodiments of the disclosed subject matter, it should be understood that such order is exemplary, as alternative embodiments may perform the operations in a different order, combine certain operations, overlap certain operations, or the like. References in the specification to a given embodiment indicate that the embodiment described may include a particular feature, structure, or characteristic, but every embodiment may not necessarily include the particular feature, structure, or characteristic.
[0018] While given components of the system have been described separately, one of ordinary skill will appreciate that some of the functions may be combined or shared in given instructions, program sequences, code portions, and the like.