Patent Abstract:
A method and an apparatus for communicating with electronic postcards include a server for processing electronic postcards. Input sites remote from the server are selected based upon exposure to significant numbers of business travelers and tourists and provided with input devices. A verified communication link is established between the input devices and the server. A sender generated postcard request received at one of the input devices including an addressee e-mail address ( 38 ), a sender message ( 36 ) and a scene selection ( 33 ) transmits an electronic postcard ( 30 ) to the addressee.

Full Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
   The present invention relates generally to a method and a system for creating and delivering electronic postcards. 
   Electronic communication has provided new ways to communicate greetings and short messages that typically are sent on cards such as greeting cards and postcards. In order to send a card, one must find a place to purchase the card, a postage stamp to affix to the card and a post office at which to mail the card. When one is travelling in an unfamiliar location, the steps associated with sending a card are particularly difficult. 
   Currently, a number of vendors maintain web sites that enable a person to create and send an electronic “greeting card” via e-mail. Such web sites provide a plurality of “cards” each having graphics and an associated message to which the sender can add a typed personal message. Typically, there are available a relatively small selection of “standard cards” and a larger selection of “premium cards” available to registered “members”. The sender provides an e-mail address for the addressee and the vendor associated with the web site transmits the “greeting card”. The vendor may send a confirmation (delivery or non-delivery) to an e-mail address provided by the sender. However, such systems require the sender have access to and operate an Internet connected computer, and the sender must provide personal information and a credit card number to access the “premium cards”. 
   The U.S. Pat. No. 5,343,386 shows an apparatus housed in a booth for producing printed postcards incorporating a self-portrait of the sender with a selected one of several standard pictorial backgrounds. A cash-receiving device, a video camera, a monitor and background selection buttons are connected to a computer that controls the operation of the apparatus. 
   The U.S. Pat. No. 5,587,740 shows a kiosk equipped with a digital camera for taking a photograph of a user in front of a scenic attraction. The kiosk also includes a computer, a credit card reader, a telephone connection and a color printer. 
   The U.S. Pat. No. 6,018,774 shows a system for creating an electronic postcard incorporating a user supplied image and optional text, such as a handwritten message, and sending a notification with an identifier to a recipient. The recipient must access a server with the identifier to view and print the postcard. 
   The U.S. Pat. No. 6,161,131 and the related U.S. Pat. No. 6,370,568 show an apparatus for creating a digital postcard and sending the postcard to a recipient via the Internet. The apparatus includes a digital camera for generating an image that is combined with a selected postcard template including geographical information overlaid on the image. 
   SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
   The present invention concerns a method and an apparatus for communicating with electronic postcards including: providing a server for processing electronic postcards; selecting at least one input site remote from the server; establishing a verified communication link between the at least one input site and the server; providing a sender input device at the at least one input site for receiving input information from a sender, the request including an addressee e-mail address; inputting sender information to the input device; generating an electronic postcard from the sender information; and transmitting the electronic postcard from the at least one input site to the server and from the server to the addressee e-mail address. 

   
     DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     The above, as well as other advantages of the present invention, will become readily apparent to those skilled in the art from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment when considered in the light of the accompanying drawings in which: 
       FIG. 1  is a flow diagram of a method of establishing “electronic postcard” communication according to the present invention; 
       FIG. 2  is a block diagram of a terminal for creating an electronic postcard in accordance with the present invention; 
       FIG. 3  is schematic view of the electronic postcard layout and content as created by the terminal shown in  FIG. 2 ; and 
       FIG. 4  is a block diagram of a communication system incorporating the terminal shown in  FIG. 2 . 
   

   DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT 
   A person desiring to send a postcard (a “sender”) from a travel location must first find a postcard sales location, then correctly address the card to the addressee, purchase and affix the proper postage and find a post office at which to mail the card. All of these steps take time and effort, and a failure to complete any one step frustrates the objective of informing the addressee that the sender was thinking about him or her. The method according to the present invention simplifies or eliminates each of the above-described steps so that “postcards” are easier to send and thus more likely to be sent. 
   As shown in  FIG. 1 , the method according to the present invention begins at a step  11  of establishing a web site to enable a sender to create and address an electronic postcard that is delivered to an addressee. As discussed below, the web site is implemented with a server that can be connected to the Internet or a similar communications network. Although a web site is utilized in this example, a server type computer having communication capabilities can be utilized to communicate with the input site. In a next step  12 , potential input sites are identified at which the transaction of inputting the sender information and payment for the service will take place. For example, likely input sites are gift shops in hotels, airports and tourist attractions, front desks at hotels and motels, theme parks and other sites all of which typically sell printed postcards and are exposed to significant business traveler and/or tourist traffic. Once an identified input site is selected for participation in the method according to the present invention, verified communication is established between the input site and the web site in a step  13 . Verified communication requires the web site to authenticate that an incoming request for an electronic postcard is originating from a particular one of the selected input sites. In a step  14 , an input device is provided at each of the selected input sites. The input device can be any suitable means for communicating with the web site such as a dedicated terminal or a personal computer running software necessary to communicate with the web site. 
   Now the method according to the present invention is ready to create and send electronic postcards. In a step  15 , a sender provides input information to the input device located at one of the selected input sites including an e-mail address for the addressee and a selection of a local scene. As one alternative, the sender inserts required information, including a handwritten message if desired, onto a preprinted form. The completed form is presented to an operator along with payment for the service and the sender has completed all of the work required of him or her. The operator uses the input device to create the electronic postcard from the information placed on the form by the sender. In some instances, the person receiving the form from the sender may be at a location that has a relatively low volume of transactions such as the reception desk at hotel. In those instances, the input site may include the pickup site of the person, e.g. a reception clerk, receiving the forms and a separate transmission site for the operator and the input device. Forms could be collected at various pickup sites and delivered to the transmission site. 
   In another alternative, the sender inputs the required information, including a handwritten message if desired, directly into the input device. In a step  16 , the input device transmits the completed electronic postcard to the web site and the web site verifies the identity of the input site. The web site then affixes to the electronic postcard a postmark associated with the identified input site in a step  17 . Now the web site sends the electronic postcard to the addressee at the associated e-mail address in a step  18 . As an alternative, the input site can include the postmark which would be verified by the web site before transmitting the electronic postcard to the addressee. 
   There is shown in  FIG. 2  a terminal  20  according to the present invention for use as the input device to create an electronic postcard according to the method of the present invention. A central processing unit CPU  21  controls the operation of the terminal  20  and has ports connected to several peripheral devices. One port of the CPU  21  is connected to an output of a payment device  22  that can operate to accept one or more modes of payment from the user. For example, the payment device  22  can include one or more of a conventional credit card reader, a conventional coin and bill acceptor and a conventional token acceptor. The payment device  22  also could be a keypad for entering a payment code obtained from a separate payment device as typically used at a gas station with a non-attended car wash. Furthermore, the payment device  22  can be any type of control actuated by a human operator to activate the terminal  20  in response to receipt of payment in any selected form. 
   A handwriting device  23  is connected to a port of the CPU  21  for converting a handwritten message into digital form to be incorporated in the electronic postcard. The message is converted in such a manner that the original handwriting can be displayed to an addressee. 
   A keyboard  24  is connected to a port of the CPU  21  for user input of information such as a message (instead of a handwritten message) and an addressee name and address. The address can be an e-mail address for electronic delivery, a mailing address for a hard copy delivery, or both. 
   A display  25  is connected to a port of the CPU  21  for generating images to aid the user in the creation of the electronic postcard. The display  25  can include a touch screen that performs a portion or all of the functions of the payment device  22  and the keyboard  24 . For example, the payment code and the user message can be input through the display  25  rather than through the payment device  22  and the keyboard  24  respectively. The display  25  also can be used to prompt the user to perform required tasks, verify inputted information and display scene images as described below. 
   A printer  26  can be connected to a port of the CPU  21  for generating a payment receipt and/or verification of the addressee information and/or a hard copy of the electronic postcard. 
   A modem  27  is connected to a port of the CPU  21  for two-way communication whereby the electronic postcard is transmitted on a communication line  28  connected to the modem. As discussed below, the terminal  20  is configured to operate as a component of an electronic postcard delivery system. 
   A memory or data storage device  29  is connected to a port of the CPU  21  and stores a plurality of digital images typically related to scenes found in the area around the location of the terminal  20 . The CPU  21  can cause these stored scenes to be reproduced on the display  25  for viewing and selection by the user. The selection can be made using any suitable device such as the keyboard  24  or a touch screen of the display  25 . The scene selection, message and addressee information can be accumulated and stored in the memory  29  until the electronic postcard is complete and ready to be sent through the modem  12  onto the communication line  28 . 
   Referring to  FIG. 3 , there is shown a graphic representation of an electronic postcard  30 . Although the electronic postcard  30  is depicted using the layout of a typical paper postcard, any suitable arrangement of the information can be used for an electronic display and/or a hard copy. The postcard  30  includes a scene “side”  31  and a message “side”  32 . Associated with the scene side  31  is a scene information area  33  representing a selected one of a plurality of available images stored in the memory  29  of the terminal  20  shown in  FIG. 1 . The message “side”  32  is divided into a message information area  34 , including a scene description  35  and a user generated message  36 , a postmark information area  37  and an address information area  38 . The scene description  35  typically is a short identification of the scene information in the area  33 . The message information  36  is the handwritten or typed message entered into the terminal  20  by the user. The postmark  37  can include a location identification such as the business (hotel gift shop), the city and the country where the electronic postcard  30  was generated. If authenticity is important, a verification code can be generated by the terminal  30  and included in the postmark  37 . The address  38  can be an e-mail address and/or a postal address for use as described below. The layout of the postcard  30  shown in  FIG. 2  is simply illustrative of how the information can be displayed on a computer screen or printed out. 
   There is shown in  FIG. 4 , an electronic postcard system  39  according to the present invention. The system includes a plurality of the input device terminals  20  available at the selected input sites throughout the world. Such locations might be, for example, businesses that traditionally sell preprinted postcards. The terminals  20  are connected by the communication line  28  to a communication network  40  such as a telephone network, a cable television network and/or the Internet. Also connected to the network  40  is a central server  41  located at the web site that processes the electronic postcards from the plurality of terminals  20 . The central server  41  can either verify the postmark  37  as having come from a corresponding one of the terminals  20  or add the postmark to the postcard  30 . The central server  41  also stores the postcard  30  for reference should an addressee request verification of the postmark. Then the central server sends the postcard  30  to the e-mail address of the addressee through the network  40 . If a postal address is provided in addition to or instead of the e-mail address, the central server  41  can generate a hard copy of the postcard  30  that can be mailed by the operator of the central server. 
   A local server  42  can be connected to the network  40 . The local server  42  represents, for example, an association with a geographical area such as a country where it is more efficient to process the postcards directed to addressees in that country through the local server than through the central server  41 . However, the local server  42  would also communicate all postcards to the central server  41 . The central server  41  can then accumulate operating data from the system  39  such as the volume of postcards generated by each of the terminals  20 , and payments collected and fees owed by the local operators of the terminals. 
   The central server  41  and/or the local server  42  also can maintain account information for a frequent user of the system. The account information can include, for example, credit card charge authorization data, a list of postcards sent and/or an address book of e-mail addresses (postal addresses, telephone numbers, etc.) to make it more convenient to send an electronic postcard and make less likely that the user will forget to send a postcard to someone. 
   In accordance with the provisions of the patent statutes, the present invention has been described in what is considered to represent its preferred embodiment. However, it should be noted that the invention can be practiced otherwise than as specifically illustrated and described without departing from its spirit or scope.

Technology Classification (CPC): 7