A filing published by the U.S. Patent and
Trademark Office on Thursday reveals that Apple is looking to patent the
iOS Notification Center, a feature similar to Google's Notification Bar
which allows mobile device users to keep tabs on a multitude of apps
from a central hub.
Apple's application, titled "Systems and methods for displaying notification received from multiple applications," offers an outline of a system that can receive and aggregate "notifications" or alerts from a number of apps within iOS.
As with many other operations level iOS features, Notification Center is the result of an ongoing effort to create a more inviting and intuitive experience for the end user. In this case, however, many believe that Apple cribbed the functionality from Google's Android OS which implemented a very similar notification system before Notification Center was introduced in iOS 5. The internet search giant actually filed its own patent application for what it calls "Notification Bar" in 2009, some two years prior to Apple's "Notification Center" filing.
As with many other operations level iOS features, Notification Center is the result of an ongoing effort to create a more inviting and intuitive experience for the end user. In this case, however, many believe that Apple cribbed the functionality from Google's Android OS which implemented a very similar notification system before Notification Center was introduced in iOS 5. The internet search giant actually filed its own patent application for what it calls "Notification Bar" in 2009, some two years prior to Apple's "Notification Center" filing.
Most recently, Samsung sued Apple
in South Korea, alleging the iOS Notification Center infringes on
active patents. Not much information has been made available in the
reported suit, though the "active patent" is believed to be related to
Google's Notification Bar.
Illustration from Google's Notification Bar patent application.
Before iOS 5, Apple's mobile operating system had no "central hub" to which apps could send messages and notifications. Examples would be push notifications from messaging apps, new emails and alerts from reminder apps, all of which would have to be found by the user through a manual search of the graphical user interface.
From the application's background:
Because electronic devices can contain many applications, the potential for application-based notifications can become numerous and unwieldy, particularly if a user is required to access each application individually in order to view application-specific notifications. Accordingly, what is needed is a more efficient and intuitive approach for organizing notifications and providing users with instant access to these notifications.
In Apple's solution, a central "notification module" can interface with a
plurality of Application Programming Interfaces (APIs) while the device
is either locked or unlocked and present the messages or alerts to the
user according to a customizable display scheme. As seen in the current
iteration of Notification Center, users can select which apps are
granted access, the amount of notifications that are displayed and how
they are presented on screen.
For example, notifications from an instant messaging app can be displayed in a pop-up window that requires user intervention to dismiss, or banner that temporarily takes over the top of the screen and disappears within a few seconds. The system can be further refined to present a set number of messages as well as where those messages appear in the Notification Center's hierarchy.
For example, notifications from an instant messaging app can be displayed in a pop-up window that requires user intervention to dismiss, or banner that temporarily takes over the top of the screen and disappears within a few seconds. The system can be further refined to present a set number of messages as well as where those messages appear in the Notification Center's hierarchy.
Illustration of banner notifications.
The Notification Center window is a scrollable list that sections alerts
from multiple apps into panes, a number of which can be made into
permanent "widgets" that display data from Apple's weather and stock
apps. Users can access the centralized hub at anytime, even if the
device is running another app.
Example of static weather widget (608) and stock stock widget (610).
Other notable assets are badge app icons relating to the number of notifications sent by a given app, the ability to interact with alerts while the phone is locked and context-sensitive slider functions which bring a user directly to a notifying app from the lock screen.
"Slide to Unlock" alternatives as seen in lock screen.
Apple's patent application was first filed in June 2012 and claims the
benefit of a provisional application from June 2011, both of which
credit Imran A. Chaudhri and Eliza Block as its inventors. The patent
application was cross-filed with the World Intellectual Property
Organization in 2012.
Source: appleinsider
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