US20070028177A1 - Method of doing business providing litigation services using a virtual scripting room - Google Patents

Method of doing business providing litigation services using a virtual scripting room Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20070028177A1
US20070028177A1 US11/462,358 US46235806A US2007028177A1 US 20070028177 A1 US20070028177 A1 US 20070028177A1 US 46235806 A US46235806 A US 46235806A US 2007028177 A1 US2007028177 A1 US 2007028177A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
controller
presentation
network
storage devices
contributions
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
US11/462,358
Inventor
Nicholas Hariton
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Priority to US11/462,358 priority Critical patent/US20070028177A1/en
Publication of US20070028177A1 publication Critical patent/US20070028177A1/en
Priority to US12/939,369 priority patent/US9792584B2/en
Priority to US15/704,201 priority patent/US10592863B2/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06QINFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G06Q10/00Administration; Management
    • G06Q10/10Office automation; Time management
    • GPHYSICS
    • G06COMPUTING; CALCULATING OR COUNTING
    • G06QINFORMATION AND COMMUNICATION TECHNOLOGY [ICT] SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES; SYSTEMS OR METHODS SPECIALLY ADAPTED FOR ADMINISTRATIVE, COMMERCIAL, FINANCIAL, MANAGERIAL OR SUPERVISORY PURPOSES, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • G06Q50/00Systems or methods specially adapted for specific business sectors, e.g. utilities or tourism
    • G06Q50/10Services
    • G06Q50/18Legal services; Handling legal documents
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L65/00Network arrangements, protocols or services for supporting real-time applications in data packet communication
    • H04L65/1066Session management
    • H04L65/1101Session protocols
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L67/00Network arrangements or protocols for supporting network services or applications
    • H04L67/01Protocols
    • H04L67/10Protocols in which an application is distributed across nodes in the network

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a method and a system for of doing business providing litigation services and in particular to a method of doing business preparing multimedia presentations scripts by providing a virtual scripting room allowing a plurality of remotely located participants to contribute concurrently to the presentation script.
  • the sources (individuals or documents) must be in the same physical location as the scripting technician (the “Scripting Room”).
  • a trial consultant or technician (“Operator” or controller)
  • counsels counsels
  • Clients or contributors
  • Software for creating such a scripted presentation is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,473,744, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference.
  • the Clients may provide the Operator an outline of an examination, opening statement, or closing statement.
  • a physical scripting room as currently utilized in the art may include Clients 11 and 12 working with an Operator 10 (trial consultant or technician) to script a multimedia presentation.
  • the Operator utilizes multimedia software and data source material on a CPU 14 and associated display monitor 15 , which the Clients (and the Operator) view on a large screen display 16 linked to the Operator's CPU.
  • the Clients and the Operator still must physically meet to review the Script and work together in the Scripting Room to make final revisions to the Script. This entails synchronizing the schedules of potentially a large number of persons, and will typically involve the additional expense and effort of travel.
  • the present invention offers a solution to this problem by providing, in one aspect, a method and system for preparing a presentation, comprising connecting a plurality of geographically dispersed contributors to a controller through a network to collaborate to prepare the presentation; allowing the contributors to propose contributions to the presentation, the proposed contributions residing on storage devices under the control of the contributors; making the proposed contributions available for viewing and comment by all contributors; allowing the controller to select one or more of the proposed contributions; and providing the controller access through the network to the storage devices to retrieve the selected contributions for inclusion into the presentation.
  • the present invention provides a method and system for making a presentation wherein selected contributions are retrieved from respective storage devices immediately prior to displaying the selected contribution.
  • the invention provides a method and system for making a presentation that includes providing access through a network to view the presentation while the presentation is being made.
  • FIG. 1 is a view of a typical Scripting Room as known in the art
  • FIG. 2 is a view of a typical court room in which the presentation prepared in the Scripting Room is displayed, as known in the art;
  • FIG. 3 is a diagram illustrating distributed scripting according to the invention.
  • FIG. 4 is another diagram illustrating distributed scripting according to the invention.
  • FIG. 5 represents various system functionality components
  • FIG. 6 is a diagram of functions that may be performed by a Presentation Creator in accordance with the invention.
  • FIG. 7 is a diagram of functions that may be performed by a Presenter in accordance with the invention.
  • FIG. 8 is a diagram of functions that may be performed by an Application Administrator in accordance with the invention.
  • FIG. 2 depicts a typical courtroom in which the presentation Script would be displayed to enhance the effective presentation of visual evidence (documents, video taped depositions, photographs, etc.) and ultimately to assist the presenting attorney to control juror focus.
  • the Operator 17 is utilizing multimedia software to display the Script and associated data source material from her CPU and associated hard drives at the direction of the speaking attorney 24 .
  • the Script is displayed on a conveniently positioned large screen display 18 to both the judge 19 and the jury 20 .
  • there are display devices on counsel table 21 in front of the judge 22 , in front of the witness (not shown), and in front of the Operator 23 .
  • a Script is a series of presentation segments that will be used during a trial.
  • a Segment is a logically grouped set of graphical components that make up a single element of a script. Using a variety of windows on the screen's real estate, a Segment may integrate animation, video deposition segments, live action video, graphics, document images, text, and any other type of information that may be visually displayed.
  • An Exhibit is a collection of files that will be used for display as a single entity. For example, several TIFF files may be placed in an exhibit.
  • a Case is a unit used to identify a group of scripts. The main office refers to the physical facility where the Operator is located as well as the entity (e.g. the business entity) that control this facility and the Operator.
  • a Distributed Scripting method is provided whereby the physical Scripting Room is replaced by a virtual one (“Virtual Scripting Room”).
  • the Operator and the scripting computer are located in the Scripting Room, while the Clients may be situated in their offices wherever located.
  • the Operator and the Clients are in effect together in the Virtual Scripting Room connected by the Internet (or directly connected via Intranet, fiber optic cable, satellite, ISDN or other high-speed transmission line).
  • the connection may either be in real time or the Clients may time shift.
  • the scripting computer executes software that enables communication between the Operator and the various clients, as well as the development of the Script itself.
  • the interactive nature of the software facilitates time shifting and collaboration in general.
  • Elements of the Script (video, documents, graphics and text) are streamed between the Operator and the Clients.
  • Each Client has the ability to utilize the software's tools to modify existing script segments, to create new script segments, and to append comments to any scripted segment.
  • the revisions are stored with a Script as temporary script segments identified by creator and revision number (example: Client Able working on script segment 6 first revision: Segment 6 A- 1 ; second revision: 6 A- 2 ; etc.). However, only the changes made or accepted by the Operator become final in a Script.
  • the Operator may view a single script segment, all of its renditions, and its modifications and comments simultaneously as thumbnails sized proportionally to fill the screen, and may open and activate each by a left mouse click.
  • the Virtual Scripting Room may be equipped with video teleconferencing running on each Client's monitor and on a second monitor for the Operator.
  • Clients 25 and 26 are shown working with an Operator 27 (trial consultant or technician) to script a multimedia presentation in the Virtual Scripting Room.
  • Operator 27 arial consultant or technician
  • Client 25 is located in his office in the State of Washington, while Client 26 is located in the City of New York.
  • the Operator is located in the Los Angeles Scripting Room.
  • Each of the CPUs of the Clients and the Operator are connected over the Internet (or directly connected via Intranet, fiber optic cable, satellite, ISDN or other high-speed transmission line).
  • the Operator is utilizing two display devices: a monitor 28 to show script segments, suggested revisions, suggested new segments and notes from the Clients, and another monitor 29 to provide the visual image of the Clients to the Operator via video teleconferencing.
  • the Operators CPU includes a storage device (not shown) as is known in the art (e.g. hard drive, cd-rom, zip drive, tape drive) for storing the presentation and any segments contributed by the Clients.
  • the Clients are able to view the scripted segments and the work in progress on their respective display devices 30 and 31 . They may also able to view the real time image of the Operator on their display devices, when each Client and the Operator have digital video cameras for video teleconferencing 32 , 33 and 34 .
  • All Clients may make changes to the Script, but only the Operator has the ability to save the Script and thus the final authority on the form and components of the final Script.
  • the Operator, and/or an Application Administrator, can confer such privileges upon some of the Clients.
  • a Client may also choose to work independently on a working copy of the Script, and may save this working copy independently of the final copy, and may further provide this working copy for review by the other Clients and the Operator for possible incorporation into the final Script.
  • each Client's actions are saved in a log for later recall and accountability.
  • the method of the invention includes the ability to utilize data source material (Image, Video, Audio, Text, CAD and Graphic Files) located outside of the Scripting Room.
  • the software may enable this feature by tracking and storing in a Script the complete path, including access codes, to each data source element.
  • Each Client in the Virtual Scripting Room may contribute data source material either by scripting such material or providing the Operator access to such Client's hard drives or other media storage devices (cd-rom drives, zip drives, optical drives, tape drives, magneto-optical drives, etc.).
  • This feature is particularly suited to utilizing data stored in Internet based repositories, such as FTP servers or on “Internet hard drives” such as those provided by Xdrive, i-drive, and others.
  • any storage device connected to the same network as the Clients and Operator may be used to supply data for inclusion into the Script.
  • the Script contains a path for each component of each segment, so that the Script is completely portable and does not rely on default paths or storage devices that must be connected to the computer upon which the Script is being executed (such as a computer in the court room).
  • data supplied by the Clients for inclusion into the Script may be transferred to the scripting computer for local storage together with the Script, and upon displaying the presentation, the data is available locally on the same computer as the Script.
  • the data may be transferred ‘on-the-fly’ from the original source when displaying the presentation, without the need of first saving the data on the computer on which the presentation Script is being executed. This features offers additional flexibility in incorporating last-minute changes in the presentation while actually displaying the presentation, and eliminates the need for downloading and locally storing all data that may possibly be required during the presentation.
  • the Distributed Scripting methodology provided by the present invention enables delivery of trial presentation services from a single main office to clients nationwide and worldwide.
  • the delivery of worldwide services may be further facilitated by the use of regional service providers (each a “Local Provider”) as depicted in FIG. 4 .
  • Each Local Provider may not only provide local support, but may also source regional litigation clients.
  • Local Providers would be litigation photocopy companies with the ability to scan and create document images, but could be any type of litigation support entity, including court reporters.
  • Digital video and other graphics may be created regionally or in the main office.
  • the Local Provider would gather the source data and provide it to the main office either physically or electronically.
  • the Local Provider may also provide Clients with a remote scripting facility linked over the Internet to the Virtual Scripting Room in the main office.
  • regional attorney Clients would work with a Trial Consultant/Technician Operator in the main office from their own computers, connecting via the Internet to the Virtual Scripting Room.
  • remote users could monitor the preparation of the Script via Web browsers such as Internet Explorer or Netscape by logging on to a web site, optionally entering a password, and viewing the Script as the Operator and Clients build it and edit it.
  • Web browsers such as Internet Explorer or Netscape
  • a Trial Consultant could provide in-court presentation services.
  • the role of the Trial Consultant can be a function of the ability of the software to: (i) create software rather than graphic based “slides” prior to trial containing segments of video, documents and/or graphics; (ii) order the “slides” into a Script paralleling the attorney's examination outline; and (iii) as a result of the “slides” being maintained as a software matrix rather than as a single graphic file, modify existing “slides”, randomly access and display any slide within a Script, and incorporate new or revised animations, video deposition segments, live action video, graphics, and document images during trial.
  • the Trial Consultant may also assist in the analysis of evidentiary issues arising in connection with the multimedia presentation of evidence both as a sword (how far to go) and as a shield (when to object to the other side's use of evidence).
  • the regional attorney Client or personnel provided by the Local Provider could do the in-court presentation of scripts.
  • the main office could provide daily supplemental Scripting and support either through a Virtual Scripting Room, or by the now on-site Trial Consultant.
  • FIG. 4 depicts the use of Distributed Scripting with the assistance of a Local Provider 35 to provide multimedia support services to a trial team in a remote location.
  • the Clients 36 and 37 are working with an Operator 38 (trial consultant or technician) to script a multimedia presentation in the Virtual Scripting Room.
  • Operator 38 arial consultant or technician
  • Client 36 perhaps an expert, is located in his office in the State of Washington, while Client 37 is located in the City of New York.
  • the Operator is located in the Los Angeles Scripting Room.
  • Each of the CPUs of the Clients, perhaps the Local Provider, and the Operator are connected over the Internet (or directly connected via Intranet, fiber optic cable, satellite, ISDN or other high-speed transmission line).
  • the Operator 38 is utilizing two display devices: a monitor to show script segments, suggested revisions, suggested new segments and notes from the Clients, and another monitor to provide the visual image of the Clients to the Operator via video Tele-conferencing.
  • the Clients are able to view the scripted segments and the work in progress on associated display devices.
  • the Local Provider may act to gather the source data and provide it to the main office either physically or electronically.
  • the Operator is utilizing multimedia software to display a Script and associated data source material from not only her CPU and associated hard drives, but may also utilize remote storage devices 39 such as Internet hard drives.
  • the Scripts and other visual evidence will be displayed to the trier of fact located in a remote courtroom 40 , by an in-court Operator 37 , by the speaking attorney 35 , by the Local Provider (not shown), or even by an Operator 38 located in the main office. Most typically, the main office Operator 38 will electronically transfer a compressed Script and underlying data source material to the in-court Operator 37 .
  • the courtroom For a remote Operator to present evidence in the courtroom, or an Operator located in a courtroom to pull scripted source data from remote hard drives, the courtroom must have telecommunication facilities such as access to the Internet. Alternatively, remote telecommunication devices such as cellular telephones may be used to access the Internet or other communication network.
  • the communications capability of the software may also permit the broadcast of the presentation over the network (e.g. the Internet) as the presentation is made in court.
  • the network e.g. the Internet
  • attorneys located remotely may track the presentation; the presentation may also be provided to a news service such as CNN for live TV broadcast.
  • the software may also be compatible with Web browsers such as Microsoft Internet Explorer and Netscape, and allow the presentation to be viewed by remote users accessing the Internet through such browsers.
  • Use Case diagrams map each user role to the tasks associated with that role and the key software components that service those tasks. They are composed using the following symbols:
  • Actor an Actor represents anyone or anything that interacts with the system.
  • An actor is a stick figure; see FIG. 5 a.
  • Use Case represents a task or task grouping that the system performs.
  • a Use Case is represented by an oval with text inside describing the task (Edit List) or a group of tasks (List Manager); see FIG. 5 b.
  • Relationship provides information about how Actors and Use Cases interact with each other. They are depicted as lines with arrowheads. A line with an arrowhead on each end indicates a 2-way communication. A line with an arrowhead on one end indicates that one diagram object is using the one that is pointed to by the arrow; see FIG. 5 c.
  • a common misunderstanding is not differentiating a person's responsibilities from the roles they play in the business.
  • the database administrator, system administrator, and application administrator are different individuals, each of whom has only one role.
  • other businesses have a single individual who is responsible for more than one role.
  • Combining the database administrator and application administrator is common, for instance.
  • the Presentation Creator typically builds the multimedia presentation from components like documents, audio recording, video recording, animations, and pictures, as shown in FIG. 6 .
  • the Presenter manages the presentation for the lawyer. Usually the Presentation Creator and the Presenter are the same person, as depicted in FIG. 7 .
  • the Application Administrator handles all technical tasks required to install, operate, and fix the application. In order to perform these tasks, in particular the problem resolution tasks, they can temporarily assume any role in the system, as shown in FIG. 8 .
  • Child refers to client nomenclature, not object-oriented nomenclature.
  • the text in a window can be enlarged or diminished in 2-point increments using one button.
  • the text in a window can be highlighted in color.
  • the text in a window can be highlighted and underlined in separate colors.
  • the text in a window can be selected and circled or boxed using precise drawing elements like circles and rectangles.
  • the text in a window can be selected and marked in the following ways:
  • the text in a window can be marked by graphical elements like checkmarks and bullets.
  • the text in a window can be obscured from view.
  • Freehand drawing can be performed on a text window.
  • Text can be selected and highlighted while all other text is changed to a different color, for instance, grayed out.
  • Individual text highlighting can be “undone” or removed without affecting other highlighted text.
  • Each text edit can be individually removed or undone.
  • Individual documents in a segment containing multiple documents can be brought to front with a single keystroke and/or mouse action (mouse roller wheel selection). Repeating the keystroke and/or mouse action cycles through each document, raising to the front in turn.
  • keystroke and/or mouse action cycles through each document, raising to the front in turn.
  • Documents in a segment can be expanded to full screen.
  • the system allows the user to page forward and backwards through the document a page at a time. In addition, there must be a way to jump to the beginning and end of the document. Finally, will be a method to jump to a specific page number.
  • Documents can be rotated by 90 degree angles.
  • Subsections of pictures can be selected (either with a oval or rectangle) and highlighted.
  • Subsections of pictures can be selected (either with a oval, or rectangle) and turned opaque.
  • Subsections of pictures can be selected (either with a oval, or rectangle), extracted into a separate window and blown up.
  • a picture subsection window can be incrementally magnified or diminished with a single button, one for magnifying and one for decreasing the size of the subsection.
  • Freehand drawing can be performed on a graphic window.
  • Pictures in a segment can be expanded to full screen.
  • Subsections of video can be selected (either with a circle, or rectangle) and highlighted.
  • Subsections of video can be selected (either with a circle, or rectangle) and extracted and enlarged as a still picture into a separate window.
  • a video recording can be slowed and sped up incrementally using single user actions for each.
  • a video recording can be slowed to a stop and then advanced one frame at a time.
  • the full still picture can be captured and extracted to a separate window.
  • the volume can be controlled on a per video basis.
  • the volume can be set during segment building and controlled during presentation.
  • the volume can be modulated for a minimum and maximum volume. For instance, a sound below the minimum is increased to the minimum and a sound above the maximum is reduced the maximum.
  • Multiple marks can be created in a video recording.
  • a repeating loop can be run between video recording marks.
  • the video can be set to run to a mark and pause until some action is taken that runs it to the next mark.
  • the video recording can rewind or fast forward and automatically stop on the first encountered mark.
  • a video recording(s) can be synchronized with positions in a document(s). That is, when the user clicks a particular section of the document (transcript), the video jumps to the synchronized position in the video recording and vice versa.
  • a video recording can be synchronized with other video recordings. That is, when the user re-positions in one video, it causes the synchronized video to automatically re-position and stay in sync.
  • Freehand drawing can be performed on a video window.
  • Video in a segment can be expanded to full screen.
  • Full video controls are provided, similar to those found on a VCR.
  • a segment or set of segments can be cut and pasted into a different script.
  • Annotations can be created and attached to any segment component.
  • Segment can be saved using a single action like a keystroke, button, or mouse click.
  • a script can be merged with another script.
  • a script can be copied to another script.
  • a set of segments can be re-ordered in a script.
  • a set of segments can be extracted and saved as a script.
  • Each segment has an id reflecting its order in the script.
  • a “hot save” function for saving a segment along with or without its association For example, it would be named “HS3_filename”.
  • the “hot save” function will put the saved segment at the end of the segment list in script.
  • the system may provide the ability to have scripted documents show up at specific, timed points in the video.
  • the system may allow the user to create document scrolling in synchronization with video.
  • the system may print scripts.
  • the system may print individual or selected or all segments.
  • the system may print a slide show format of the segments in a script (proof sheet).
  • the system may print a slide show w/barcodes (proof sheet w/barcodes).
  • the system may print segment components.
  • the system may print a segment description-barcode cross-reference.
  • the system may print a barcode-file name cross-reference within a specified directory. The user can select which files will be included in the cross-reference.
  • An element's size can be set individually within a segment.
  • the software will preferably be able to interface with a wide variety of other software, e.g. word processors (MS Word, WordPerfect, etc.), presentation software (Power Point, etc.), databases (Oracle, Dbase, etc.), case management software (Summation, etc.), video preparation and editing software (e.g. QuickTime), image preparation and editing software (e.g. Photoshop), and others.
  • the software may convert certain files into a preferred format (e.g. convert all Word files into RTF format) and save the min this preferred format.
  • the software will ideally also be able to read and display any format on-the-fly.
  • This function will enable the Presenter to incorporate new components into segment at a moment's notice even if the new components are located remotely and are not available on the CPU running the Script in court.
  • the invention allows the Presenter to access new information located anywhere in the world, provided that the information is accessible remotely (e.g. stored on servers connected to the Internet), and incorporate the information into the presentation Script as may be required by new and unanticipated developments.
  • This feature may take the form of an utility that permits a form or other text document to be treated as a scripting object in a fashion similar to other data source material, with the exception that the Operator may at any time add text to the form and save both the form and the new text in a script segment together with other objects (graphics, photographs, etc).
  • This utility may be used in the medical and insurance fields, for instance, where a physician in a medical testing facility could in the course of evaluating an Ultra Sound or NMR image complete an electronic medical evaluation/diagnosis form and script the image and completed form together in a single script segment. In this situation, the Script represents a patient's medical file rather than a witness examination.
  • the patient Script could be maintained by the main office in the role of the Operator, while the testing facility physician, the treating physician, the specialist (surgeon) and the hospital would each have the role of a Client.
  • the resulting Script may be transmitted to other facilities for viewing, diagnosis, patient treatment, or for billing and insurance reimbursement.
  • a Script may be presented either: (a) to an audience physically in the presence of the Operator, as in the case of a jury in a courtroom where a lawyer is presenting evidence with assistance of an Operator; or (b) to an audience connected to the Operator over the Internet (or directly connected via Intranet, fiber optic cable, satellite, ISDN or other transmission line; “Distributed Presentation”), as in the case of Internet based marketing—e.g. the Victoria's Secret fashion shows, General Motors introduction of new car models, or the latest Microsoft software introduction.
  • the audience may be a single individual, a group of individuals sitting together or a geographically distributed group located throughout the world.
  • Each of the following examples may utilize Distributed Scripting and/or Distributed Presentation.
  • the Script is the claim file; the Clients are the claim adjuster, the investigators, repair or replacement sources, the claims manager and the payer; the Operator is either the Insurance Company or the main office.
  • the Script is the patient file; the Clients are the testing facility physician, the treating physician, the specialist (surgeon), the hospital and ultimately the insurer; the Operator is the main office.
  • the Script is the presentation topic; the Clients are the internal team members responsible for the project, external consultants and in some cases the audience; the Operator is the corporation.
  • the Script is the assemblage of the corporate collateral being created; the Clients are the in-house marketing personnel, the in-house executive in charge of the project, the senior executive who ultimately approves the project, the external marketing/advertising executive in charge of the project, the graphic designers; the Operator is either the corporation or the marketing entity.
  • the Script is the advertising campaign being created; the Clients are the in-house marketing personnel, the in-house executive in charge of the project, the senior executive who ultimately approves the project, the external advertising executive in charge of the project, the graphic designers and other team members; the Operator is the advertising company.
  • the Script is the offering materials, Company history and prospects; the Clients are the senior management of the corporation, the auditors, the investment bankers and attorneys; the Operator is either the lead investment bank or the main office.
  • the Script is the presentation topic; the Clients are the internal team members responsible for the project, external consultants and in some cases the audience; the Operator is either the Web hosting corporation, or the main office.
  • the Script is the project, including the development contract, the finance contract, and the plans, progress reports and testing; the Clients are the financing entity, the architects, subcontractors, the general contractor and inspectors; the Operator is the owner/buyer.
  • the Script is the borrower and the loan package; the Clients are the borrower, the loan officer, the approval committee; the Operator is the Bank or lending institution.
  • the Script is the individual aircraft, satellite or space craft, including the development contract, the finance contract, and the plans, progress reports and testing; the Clients are the financing entity, the architects, subcontractors, the manufacturer, the construction managers, safety inspectors and regulatory agencies; the Operator is the owner/buyer.
  • the Script is the vessel, including the construction contract, the finance contract, and the plans, progress reports and testing; the Clients are the financing entity, the architects, subcontractors, the builder, the project manager, safety inspectors and certification societies; the Operator is the owner/buyer.
  • Focus Group Results The Script is the research results, statistical charts and conclusions; the Clients are the researcher and/or the facilitator, the entity paying for the study; the audience are the financial backers of the study, the studio executives, in the case of a movie, the product line executives, in the case of a new product release; the Operator is either the entity putting on the research or the main office.
  • the Script is the research results, statistical charts, case themes and conclusions; the Clients are the Jury consultant, the facilitator, the attorneys on the trial team involved in the litigation; the audience are the trial team members, the client party to the litigation and/or the client representative; the Operator is either the jury consulting firm or the main office.

Abstract

A method for preparing a presentation connects a plurality of geographically dispersed contributors to a controller through a network to collaborate to prepare the presentation, allows the contributors to propose contributions to the presentation residing on storage devices under the control of the contributors, makes the proposed contributions available for viewing and comment by all contributors, allows the controller to select one or more of the proposed contributions, and provides the controller access through the network to the storage devices to retrieve the selected contributions for inclusion into the presentation.

Description

    RELATED APPLICATIONS
  • This Application is a Division of application Ser. No. 09/881,133 filed on Jun. 14, 2001 which claims the priority of Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/211,912, filed Jun. 16, 2000.
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention
  • The present invention relates to a method and a system for of doing business providing litigation services and in particular to a method of doing business preparing multimedia presentations scripts by providing a virtual scripting room allowing a plurality of remotely located participants to contribute concurrently to the presentation script.
  • 2. Description of the Prior Art
  • To prepare a multimedia presentation, the sources (individuals or documents) must be in the same physical location as the scripting technician (the “Scripting Room”). Within the context of a lawsuit, for example (and as shown in FIG. 1), a trial consultant or technician (“Operator” or controller), meets with one or more attorneys, witnesses and/or experts (“Clients” or contributors) in the Scripting Room and together they utilize multimedia software to create a scripted presentation (a “Script”) of evidence relating to a specific witness or the opening/closing of a trial. Software for creating such a scripted presentation is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,473,744, which is incorporated herein in its entirety by reference. As an alternative, the Clients may provide the Operator an outline of an examination, opening statement, or closing statement.
  • In the Scripting Room, the Operator creates a script corresponding to the outline. A physical scripting room as currently utilized in the art may include Clients 11 and 12 working with an Operator 10 (trial consultant or technician) to script a multimedia presentation. The Operator utilizes multimedia software and data source material on a CPU 14 and associated display monitor 15, which the Clients (and the Operator) view on a large screen display 16 linked to the Operator's CPU.
  • Regardless of how the Script is initiated, the Clients and the Operator still must physically meet to review the Script and work together in the Scripting Room to make final revisions to the Script. This entails synchronizing the schedules of potentially a large number of persons, and will typically involve the additional expense and effort of travel.
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • The present invention offers a solution to this problem by providing, in one aspect, a method and system for preparing a presentation, comprising connecting a plurality of geographically dispersed contributors to a controller through a network to collaborate to prepare the presentation; allowing the contributors to propose contributions to the presentation, the proposed contributions residing on storage devices under the control of the contributors; making the proposed contributions available for viewing and comment by all contributors; allowing the controller to select one or more of the proposed contributions; and providing the controller access through the network to the storage devices to retrieve the selected contributions for inclusion into the presentation.
  • In a further aspect, the present invention provides a method and system for making a presentation wherein selected contributions are retrieved from respective storage devices immediately prior to displaying the selected contribution. In a yet further aspect, the invention provides a method and system for making a presentation that includes providing access through a network to view the presentation while the presentation is being made.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1 is a view of a typical Scripting Room as known in the art;
  • FIG. 2 is a view of a typical court room in which the presentation prepared in the Scripting Room is displayed, as known in the art;
  • FIG. 3 is a diagram illustrating distributed scripting according to the invention;
  • FIG. 4 is another diagram illustrating distributed scripting according to the invention;
  • FIG. 5 represents various system functionality components;
  • FIG. 6 is a diagram of functions that may be performed by a Presentation Creator in accordance with the invention;
  • FIG. 7 is a diagram of functions that may be performed by a Presenter in accordance with the invention; and
  • FIG. 8 is a diagram of functions that may be performed by an Application Administrator in accordance with the invention.
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
  • With reference to the previous example of a presentation prepared within the context of a lawsuit, FIG. 2 depicts a typical courtroom in which the presentation Script would be displayed to enhance the effective presentation of visual evidence (documents, video taped depositions, photographs, etc.) and ultimately to assist the presenting attorney to control juror focus. The Operator 17 is utilizing multimedia software to display the Script and associated data source material from her CPU and associated hard drives at the direction of the speaking attorney 24. The Script is displayed on a conveniently positioned large screen display 18 to both the judge 19 and the jury 20. In addition, there are display devices on counsel table 21, in front of the judge 22, in front of the witness (not shown), and in front of the Operator 23.
  • Common terms used throughout the specification are defined as follows. A Script is a series of presentation segments that will be used during a trial. A Segment is a logically grouped set of graphical components that make up a single element of a script. Using a variety of windows on the screen's real estate, a Segment may integrate animation, video deposition segments, live action video, graphics, document images, text, and any other type of information that may be visually displayed. An Exhibit is a collection of files that will be used for display as a single entity. For example, several TIFF files may be placed in an exhibit. A Case is a unit used to identify a group of scripts. The main office refers to the physical facility where the Operator is located as well as the entity (e.g. the business entity) that control this facility and the Operator.
  • With reference to the drawings, and as further described in detail elsewhere in the specification, in one aspect of the present invention a Distributed Scripting method is provided whereby the physical Scripting Room is replaced by a virtual one (“Virtual Scripting Room”). As shown in FIG. 3, in the Distributed Scripting method of the invention the Operator and the scripting computer are located in the Scripting Room, while the Clients may be situated in their offices wherever located. The Operator and the Clients are in effect together in the Virtual Scripting Room connected by the Internet (or directly connected via Intranet, fiber optic cable, satellite, ISDN or other high-speed transmission line). The connection may either be in real time or the Clients may time shift.
  • The scripting computer executes software that enables communication between the Operator and the various clients, as well as the development of the Script itself. The interactive nature of the software facilitates time shifting and collaboration in general. Elements of the Script (video, documents, graphics and text) are streamed between the Operator and the Clients. Each Client has the ability to utilize the software's tools to modify existing script segments, to create new script segments, and to append comments to any scripted segment. The revisions are stored with a Script as temporary script segments identified by creator and revision number (example: Client Able working on script segment 6 first revision: Segment 6A-1; second revision: 6A-2; etc.). However, only the changes made or accepted by the Operator become final in a Script. The Operator may view a single script segment, all of its renditions, and its modifications and comments simultaneously as thumbnails sized proportionally to fill the screen, and may open and activate each by a left mouse click. The Virtual Scripting Room may be equipped with video teleconferencing running on each Client's monitor and on a second monitor for the Operator.
  • With further reference to FIG. 3, Clients 25 and 26 are shown working with an Operator 27 (trial consultant or technician) to script a multimedia presentation in the Virtual Scripting Room. For this example of Distributed Scripting, Client 25 is located in his office in the State of Washington, while Client 26 is located in the City of New York. The Operator is located in the Los Angeles Scripting Room. Each of the CPUs of the Clients and the Operator are connected over the Internet (or directly connected via Intranet, fiber optic cable, satellite, ISDN or other high-speed transmission line). The Operator is utilizing two display devices: a monitor 28 to show script segments, suggested revisions, suggested new segments and notes from the Clients, and another monitor 29 to provide the visual image of the Clients to the Operator via video teleconferencing. The Operators CPU includes a storage device (not shown) as is known in the art (e.g. hard drive, cd-rom, zip drive, tape drive) for storing the presentation and any segments contributed by the Clients. The Clients are able to view the scripted segments and the work in progress on their respective display devices 30 and 31. They may also able to view the real time image of the Operator on their display devices, when each Client and the Operator have digital video cameras for video teleconferencing 32,33 and 34.
  • All Clients may make changes to the Script, but only the Operator has the ability to save the Script and thus the final authority on the form and components of the final Script. The Operator, and/or an Application Administrator, can confer such privileges upon some of the Clients. A Client may also choose to work independently on a working copy of the Script, and may save this working copy independently of the final copy, and may further provide this working copy for review by the other Clients and the Operator for possible incorporation into the final Script. As the Clients make changes to the Script, each Client's actions are saved in a log for later recall and accountability.
  • To further facilitate Distributed Scripting, the method of the invention includes the ability to utilize data source material (Image, Video, Audio, Text, CAD and Graphic Files) located outside of the Scripting Room. The software may enable this feature by tracking and storing in a Script the complete path, including access codes, to each data source element. Each Client in the Virtual Scripting Room may contribute data source material either by scripting such material or providing the Operator access to such Client's hard drives or other media storage devices (cd-rom drives, zip drives, optical drives, tape drives, magneto-optical drives, etc.). This feature is particularly suited to utilizing data stored in Internet based repositories, such as FTP servers or on “Internet hard drives” such as those provided by Xdrive, i-drive, and others. Of course, any storage device connected to the same network as the Clients and Operator may be used to supply data for inclusion into the Script.
  • Each individual component of any one segment may thus be remotely located on a different storage device. In this embodiment, the Script contains a path for each component of each segment, so that the Script is completely portable and does not rely on default paths or storage devices that must be connected to the computer upon which the Script is being executed (such as a computer in the court room). Thus, data supplied by the Clients for inclusion into the Script may be transferred to the scripting computer for local storage together with the Script, and upon displaying the presentation, the data is available locally on the same computer as the Script. Alternatively, the data may be transferred ‘on-the-fly’ from the original source when displaying the presentation, without the need of first saving the data on the computer on which the presentation Script is being executed. This features offers additional flexibility in incorporating last-minute changes in the presentation while actually displaying the presentation, and eliminates the need for downloading and locally storing all data that may possibly be required during the presentation.
  • The Distributed Scripting methodology provided by the present invention enables delivery of trial presentation services from a single main office to clients nationwide and worldwide. The delivery of worldwide services may be further facilitated by the use of regional service providers (each a “Local Provider”) as depicted in FIG. 4. Each Local Provider may not only provide local support, but may also source regional litigation clients. Typically, Local Providers would be litigation photocopy companies with the ability to scan and create document images, but could be any type of litigation support entity, including court reporters. Digital video and other graphics may be created regionally or in the main office. The Local Provider would gather the source data and provide it to the main office either physically or electronically. The Local Provider may also provide Clients with a remote scripting facility linked over the Internet to the Virtual Scripting Room in the main office. In an alternative embodiment, regional attorney Clients would work with a Trial Consultant/Technician Operator in the main office from their own computers, connecting via the Internet to the Virtual Scripting Room.
  • Because the software will have communication capability, remote users could monitor the preparation of the Script via Web browsers such as Internet Explorer or Netscape by logging on to a web site, optionally entering a password, and viewing the Script as the Operator and Clients build it and edit it.
  • Once Scripting has been completed, a Trial Consultant could provide in-court presentation services. The role of the Trial Consultant can be a function of the ability of the software to: (i) create software rather than graphic based “slides” prior to trial containing segments of video, documents and/or graphics; (ii) order the “slides” into a Script paralleling the attorney's examination outline; and (iii) as a result of the “slides” being maintained as a software matrix rather than as a single graphic file, modify existing “slides”, randomly access and display any slide within a Script, and incorporate new or revised animations, video deposition segments, live action video, graphics, and document images during trial. The Trial Consultant may also assist in the analysis of evidentiary issues arising in connection with the multimedia presentation of evidence both as a sword (how far to go) and as a shield (when to object to the other side's use of evidence).
  • In some cases, the regional attorney Client or personnel provided by the Local Provider could do the in-court presentation of scripts. In this scenario, the main office could provide daily supplemental Scripting and support either through a Virtual Scripting Room, or by the now on-site Trial Consultant.
  • FIG. 4 depicts the use of Distributed Scripting with the assistance of a Local Provider 35 to provide multimedia support services to a trial team in a remote location. The Clients 36 and 37 are working with an Operator 38 (trial consultant or technician) to script a multimedia presentation in the Virtual Scripting Room. Once again, Client 36, perhaps an expert, is located in his office in the State of Washington, while Client 37 is located in the City of New York. The Operator is located in the Los Angeles Scripting Room. Each of the CPUs of the Clients, perhaps the Local Provider, and the Operator are connected over the Internet (or directly connected via Intranet, fiber optic cable, satellite, ISDN or other high-speed transmission line).
  • As in FIG. 3, the Operator 38 is utilizing two display devices: a monitor to show script segments, suggested revisions, suggested new segments and notes from the Clients, and another monitor to provide the visual image of the Clients to the Operator via video Tele-conferencing. The Clients are able to view the scripted segments and the work in progress on associated display devices. The Local Provider may act to gather the source data and provide it to the main office either physically or electronically. The Operator is utilizing multimedia software to display a Script and associated data source material from not only her CPU and associated hard drives, but may also utilize remote storage devices 39 such as Internet hard drives. The Scripts and other visual evidence will be displayed to the trier of fact located in a remote courtroom 40, by an in-court Operator 37, by the speaking attorney 35, by the Local Provider (not shown), or even by an Operator 38 located in the main office. Most typically, the main office Operator 38 will electronically transfer a compressed Script and underlying data source material to the in-court Operator 37. For a remote Operator to present evidence in the courtroom, or an Operator located in a courtroom to pull scripted source data from remote hard drives, the courtroom must have telecommunication facilities such as access to the Internet. Alternatively, remote telecommunication devices such as cellular telephones may be used to access the Internet or other communication network.
  • The communications capability of the software may also permit the broadcast of the presentation over the network (e.g. the Internet) as the presentation is made in court. Thus, attorneys located remotely may track the presentation; the presentation may also be provided to a news service such as CNN for live TV broadcast. The software may also be compatible with Web browsers such as Microsoft Internet Explorer and Netscape, and allow the presentation to be viewed by remote users accessing the Internet through such browsers.
  • Software
  • The following subsection presents in greater detail a model of the system functionality as may be implemented in a software package embodying the method and system of the invention. The graphical depictions in this subsection are Use Case diagrams. Use Case diagrams map each user role to the tasks associated with that role and the key software components that service those tasks. They are composed using the following symbols:
  • Actor—an Actor represents anyone or anything that interacts with the system. An actor is a stick figure; see FIG. 5 a.
  • Use Case—a Use Case represents a task or task grouping that the system performs. A Use Case is represented by an oval with text inside describing the task (Edit List) or a group of tasks (List Manager); see FIG. 5 b.
  • Relationship—A Relationship provides information about how Actors and Use Cases interact with each other. They are depicted as lines with arrowheads. A line with an arrowhead on each end indicates a 2-way communication. A line with an arrowhead on one end indicates that one diagram object is using the one that is pointed to by the arrow; see FIG. 5 c.
  • A common misunderstanding is not differentiating a person's responsibilities from the roles they play in the business. In some businesses, for example, the database administrator, system administrator, and application administrator are different individuals, each of whom has only one role. However, other businesses have a single individual who is responsible for more than one role. Combining the database administrator and application administrator is common, for instance. For a system to be flexible enough to accommodate these differences in operating styles, it should be designed with the assumption that a single individual can perform one or more roles in the system.
  • The Presentation Creator typically builds the multimedia presentation from components like documents, audio recording, video recording, animations, and pictures, as shown in FIG. 6. The Presenter manages the presentation for the lawyer. Usually the Presentation Creator and the Presenter are the same person, as depicted in FIG. 7. The Application Administrator handles all technical tasks required to install, operate, and fix the application. In order to perform these tasks, in particular the problem resolution tasks, they can temporarily assume any role in the system, as shown in FIG. 8.
  • Functional Requirements
  • This subsection describes the functions that may offered in a preferred software implementation of the system.
  • The text in a document may be extracted into separate (child) windows (“child” refers to client nomenclature, not object-oriented nomenclature).
  • The text in a window can be enlarged or diminished in 2-point increments using one button.
  • The text in a window can be highlighted in color.
  • The text in a window can be highlighted and underlined in separate colors.
  • The text in a window can be selected and circled or boxed using precise drawing elements like circles and rectangles.
  • The text in a window can be selected and marked in the following ways:
  • strikethrough
  • highlight
  • underline
  • The text in a window can be marked by graphical elements like checkmarks and bullets.
  • The text in a window can be obscured from view.
  • Freehand drawing can be performed on a text window.
  • Text can be selected and highlighted while all other text is changed to a different color, for instance, grayed out.
  • Individual text highlighting can be “undone” or removed without affecting other highlighted text.
  • Individual text formats like strikethrough, etc. can be “undone” or removed without affecting other text formats.
  • Individual text edits that obscure text can be “undone” or removed without affecting other obscured (or redacted) text.
  • Each text edit can be individually removed or undone.
  • All text highlighting on a segment can be removed with one action.
  • Individual documents in a segment containing multiple documents can be brought to front with a single keystroke and/or mouse action (mouse roller wheel selection). Repeating the keystroke and/or mouse action cycles through each document, raising to the front in turn.
  • Documents in a segment can be expanded to full screen.
  • The system allows the user to page forward and backwards through the document a page at a time. In addition, there must be a way to jump to the beginning and end of the document. Finally, will be a method to jump to a specific page number.
  • Documents can be rotated by 90 degree angles.
  • Subsections of pictures can be selected (either with a oval or rectangle) and highlighted.
  • Subsections of pictures can be selected (either with a oval, or rectangle) and turned opaque.
  • Subsections of pictures can be selected (either with a oval, or rectangle), extracted into a separate window and blown up.
  • A picture subsection window can be incrementally magnified or diminished with a single button, one for magnifying and one for decreasing the size of the subsection.
  • Freehand drawing can be performed on a graphic window.
  • Pictures in a segment can be expanded to full screen.
  • Subsections of video can be selected (either with a circle, or rectangle) and highlighted.
  • Subsections of video can be selected (either with a circle, or rectangle) and extracted and enlarged as a still picture into a separate window.
  • A video recording can be slowed and sped up incrementally using single user actions for each.
  • A video recording can be slowed to a stop and then advanced one frame at a time.
  • When a video recording is being advanced one frame at a time, the full still picture can be captured and extracted to a separate window.
  • The volume can be controlled on a per video basis. The volume can be set during segment building and controlled during presentation.
  • The volume can be modulated for a minimum and maximum volume. For instance, a sound below the minimum is increased to the minimum and a sound above the maximum is reduced the maximum.
  • Multiple marks can be created in a video recording.
  • A repeating loop can be run between video recording marks.
  • The video can be set to run to a mark and pause until some action is taken that runs it to the next mark.
  • The video recording can rewind or fast forward and automatically stop on the first encountered mark.
  • A video recording(s) can be synchronized with positions in a document(s). That is, when the user clicks a particular section of the document (transcript), the video jumps to the synchronized position in the video recording and vice versa.
  • A video recording can be synchronized with other video recordings. That is, when the user re-positions in one video, it causes the synchronized video to automatically re-position and stay in sync.
  • Freehand drawing can be performed on a video window.
  • Video in a segment can be expanded to full screen.
  • Full video controls are provided, similar to those found on a VCR.
  • A segment or set of segments can be cut and pasted into a different script.
  • Annotations can be created and attached to any segment component.
  • Segment can be saved using a single action like a keystroke, button, or mouse click.
  • A script can be merged with another script.
  • A script can be copied to another script.
  • A set of segments can be re-ordered in a script.
  • A set of segments can be extracted and saved as a script.
  • Each segment has an id reflecting its order in the script.
  • A “hot save” function for saving a segment along with or without its association. For example, it would be named “HS3_filename”.
  • The “hot save” function will put the saved segment at the end of the segment list in script.
  • Need to pull and work with, in presentation mode, elements that not part of the script or segment. File select needs to be unobtrusive.
  • Saving process in script mode needs to be simplified. Needs a hot key to save all segments and the script.
  • Need to have full segment edit capabilities in presentation mode.
  • Be able to show segments in script order or select and display on the fly.
  • Need small segment id on screen for the current segment.
  • While playing video, The system may provide the ability to have scripted documents show up at specific, timed points in the video.
  • The system may allow the user to create document scrolling in synchronization with video.
  • The system may print scripts.
  • The system may print individual or selected or all segments.
  • The system may print a slide show format of the segments in a script (proof sheet).
  • The system may print a slide show w/barcodes (proof sheet w/barcodes).
  • The system may print segment components.
  • The system may print a segment description-barcode cross-reference.
  • The system may print a barcode-file name cross-reference within a specified directory. The user can select which files will be included in the cross-reference.
  • Saving a segment containing multiple elements retains the dominance (i.e. which document is in front) seen on the screen.
  • An element's size can be set individually within a segment.
  • The software will preferably be able to interface with a wide variety of other software, e.g. word processors (MS Word, WordPerfect, etc.), presentation software (Power Point, etc.), databases (Oracle, Dbase, etc.), case management software (Summation, etc.), video preparation and editing software (e.g. QuickTime), image preparation and editing software (e.g. Photoshop), and others. The software may convert certain files into a preferred format (e.g. convert all Word files into RTF format) and save the min this preferred format. However, the software will ideally also be able to read and display any format on-the-fly.
  • This function will enable the Presenter to incorporate new components into segment at a moment's notice even if the new components are located remotely and are not available on the CPU running the Script in court. In this manner, the invention allows the Presenter to access new information located anywhere in the world, provided that the information is accessible remotely (e.g. stored on servers connected to the Internet), and incorporate the information into the presentation Script as may be required by new and unanticipated developments.
  • Potential Uses and Markets
  • Other services may be provided in addition to the in-court presentation of evidence via the method and system of the invention. Such additional services may be further aided by the addition of two supplemental software features, as described below.
  • 1) Interactive Text Objects
  • This feature may take the form of an utility that permits a form or other text document to be treated as a scripting object in a fashion similar to other data source material, with the exception that the Operator may at any time add text to the form and save both the form and the new text in a script segment together with other objects (graphics, photographs, etc). This utility may be used in the medical and insurance fields, for instance, where a physician in a medical testing facility could in the course of evaluating an Ultra Sound or NMR image complete an electronic medical evaluation/diagnosis form and script the image and completed form together in a single script segment. In this situation, the Script represents a patient's medical file rather than a witness examination. The patient Script could be maintained by the main office in the role of the Operator, while the testing facility physician, the treating physician, the specialist (surgeon) and the hospital would each have the role of a Client. The resulting Script may be transmitted to other facilities for viewing, diagnosis, patient treatment, or for billing and insurance reimbursement.
  • 2) Distributed Presentation
  • Ultimately a Script, whether created in a physical or virtual scripting room, may be presented either: (a) to an audience physically in the presence of the Operator, as in the case of a jury in a courtroom where a lawyer is presenting evidence with assistance of an Operator; or (b) to an audience connected to the Operator over the Internet (or directly connected via Intranet, fiber optic cable, satellite, ISDN or other transmission line; “Distributed Presentation”), as in the case of Internet based marketing—e.g. the Victoria's Secret fashion shows, General Motors introduction of new car models, or the latest Microsoft software introduction. The audience may be a single individual, a group of individuals sitting together or a geographically distributed group located throughout the world.
  • Each of the following examples may utilize Distributed Scripting and/or Distributed Presentation.
  • Insurance Claim Processing and Reimbursement—The Script is the claim file; the Clients are the claim adjuster, the investigators, repair or replacement sources, the claims manager and the payer; the Operator is either the Insurance Company or the main office.
  • Medical Diagnostic and Payment—The Script is the patient file; the Clients are the testing facility physician, the treating physician, the specialist (surgeon), the hospital and ultimately the insurer; the Operator is the main office.
  • Corporate Presentations and Marketing—The Script is the presentation topic; the Clients are the internal team members responsible for the project, external consultants and in some cases the audience; the Operator is the corporation.
  • Development of Corporate Collateral and Marketing—The Script is the assemblage of the corporate collateral being created; the Clients are the in-house marketing personnel, the in-house executive in charge of the project, the senior executive who ultimately approves the project, the external marketing/advertising executive in charge of the project, the graphic designers; the Operator is either the corporation or the marketing entity.
  • Advertising Graphic Development and Delivery—The Script is the advertising campaign being created; the Clients are the in-house marketing personnel, the in-house executive in charge of the project, the senior executive who ultimately approves the project, the external advertising executive in charge of the project, the graphic designers and other team members; the Operator is the advertising company.
  • Corporate Road Shows—The Script is the offering materials, Company history and prospects; the Clients are the senior management of the corporation, the auditors, the investment bankers and attorneys; the Operator is either the lead investment bank or the main office.
  • Internet Conferencing—The Script is the presentation topic; the Clients are the internal team members responsible for the project, external consultants and in some cases the audience; the Operator is either the Web hosting corporation, or the main office.
  • Project Development and Oversight: Architecture, Construction and Finance—The Script is the project, including the development contract, the finance contract, and the plans, progress reports and testing; the Clients are the financing entity, the architects, subcontractors, the general contractor and inspectors; the Operator is the owner/buyer.
  • Banking: Finance Packages and Loan Processing—The Script is the borrower and the loan package; the Clients are the borrower, the loan officer, the approval committee; the Operator is the Bank or lending institution.
  • Aircraft, Satellite and Space Craft Construction Management and Reporting—The Script is the individual aircraft, satellite or space craft, including the development contract, the finance contract, and the plans, progress reports and testing; the Clients are the financing entity, the architects, subcontractors, the manufacturer, the construction managers, safety inspectors and regulatory agencies; the Operator is the owner/buyer.
  • Shipbuilding—The Script is the vessel, including the construction contract, the finance contract, and the plans, progress reports and testing; the Clients are the financing entity, the architects, subcontractors, the builder, the project manager, safety inspectors and certification societies; the Operator is the owner/buyer.
  • Focus Group Results—The Script is the research results, statistical charts and conclusions; the Clients are the researcher and/or the facilitator, the entity paying for the study; the audience are the financial backers of the study, the studio executives, in the case of a movie, the product line executives, in the case of a new product release; the Operator is either the entity putting on the research or the main office.
  • Focus Group Results: Litigation—The Script is the research results, statistical charts, case themes and conclusions; the Clients are the Jury consultant, the facilitator, the attorneys on the trial team involved in the litigation; the audience are the trial team members, the client party to the litigation and/or the client representative; the Operator is either the jury consulting firm or the main office.
  • Having now described the invention in accordance with the requirements of the patent statutes, those skilled in this art will understand how to make changes and modifications in the present invention to meet their specific requirements or conditions. Such changes and modifications may be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as set forth in the following claims.

Claims (94)

1. A method for preparing a presentation, comprising:
connecting a plurality of geographically dispersed contributors to a controller through a network to collaborate to prepare the presentation;
allowing the contributors to propose contributions to the presentation, the proposed contributions residing on storage devices under the control of the contributors;
making the proposed contributions available for viewing and comment by the contributors;
allowing the controller to select one or more of the proposed contributions; and
providing the controller access through the network to the storage devices to retrieve the selected contributions for inclusion into the presentation.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein providing access to the storage devices further comprises:
transferring a selected contribution through the network to the controller for inclusion in the presentation.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein transferring a selected contribution comprises:
transferring a selected contribution from a contributor to the controller through the network for inclusion in the presentation.
4. The method of claim 2, wherein transferring a selected contribution comprises:
transferring a selected contribution through the network from a storage device to the controller for inclusion in the presentation.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the storage devices are selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
6. The method of claim 2, wherein connecting the contributors to the controller further comprises:
connecting the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller for preparing the presentation.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein connecting the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller comprises:
connecting the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller to prepare a presentation script identifying the selected contributions to be included in the presentation.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the script includes a path for retrieving a selected contribution through the network from a storage device.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the storage devices are selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
10. The method of claim 2, wherein providing access to the storage devices comprises:
providing a path for retrieving a contribution through the network from a storage device.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein the storage devices are selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
12. The method of claim 10, wherein the network is selected from the group of networks comprising the Internet, intranets, and local area networks.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein the contributions are selected from the group of contributions comprising graphics, text, video, and audio.
14. The method of claim 1, wherein the contributors are persons communicating with the controller through terminals connected to the network.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the controller is a person communicating with the contributors through a terminal connected to the network.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the presentation is prepared on the controller terminal.
17. The method of claim 1, further comprising:
displaying the presentation.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein displaying the presentation comprises:
retrieving a selected contribution from the respective storage device immediately prior to displaying the selected contribution.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein displaying the presentation further comprises:
providing access through the network to view the presentation.
20. A method for preparing a presentation, comprising:
connecting a plurality of geographically dispersed contributors to a controller through a network to collaborate to prepare the presentation;
allowing the contributors to propose contributions to the presentation, the proposed contributions residing on storage devices under the control of the contributors;
making the proposed contributions available for viewing and comment by all contributors;
allowing the controller to select one or more of the proposed contributions;
providing the controller access through the network to the storage devices to retrieve the selected contributions for inclusion into the presentation; and displaying the presentation.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein displaying the presentation comprises:
retrieving a selected contribution from the respective storage device immediately prior to displaying the selected contribution.
22. The method of claim 21, wherein displaying the presentation further comprises:
providing access through the network to view the presentation.
23. The method of claim 21, wherein providing access to the storage devices further comprises:
transferring a selected contribution through the network to the controller for inclusion in the presentation.
24. The method of claim 23, wherein transferring a selected contribution comprises:
transferring a selected contribution from a contributor to the controller through the network for inclusion in the presentation.
25. The method of claim 21, wherein transferring a selected contribution comprises:
transferring a selected contribution through the network from a storage device to the controller for inclusion in the presentation.
26. The method of claim 25, wherein the storage devices are selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
27. The method of claim 21, wherein connecting the contributors to the controller further comprises:
connecting the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller for preparing the presentation.
28. The method of claim 27, wherein connecting the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller comprises:
connecting the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller to prepare a presentation script identifying the selected contributions to be included in the presentation.
29. The method of claim 28, wherein the script includes a path for retrieving a selected contribution through the network from a storage device.
30. The method of claim 29, wherein the storage devices are selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
40. The method of claim 21, wherein providing access to the storage devices comprises:
providing a path for retrieving a contribution through the network from a storage device.
41. The method of claim 40, wherein the storage devices are selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
42. The method of claim 40, wherein the network is selected from the group of networks comprising the Internet, intranets, and local area networks.
43. The method of claim 21, wherein the contributions are selected from the group of contributions comprising graphics, text, video, and audio.
44. The method of claim 21, wherein the contributors are persons communicating with the controller through terminals connected to the network.
45. The method of claim 44, wherein the controller is a person communicating with the contributors through a terminal connected to the network.
46. The method of claim 45, wherein the presentation is prepared on the controller terminal.
47. A system for preparing a presentation, comprising:
a controller terminal for connecting through a network to a plurality of geographically dispersed contributor terminals to allow contributors to collaborate to prepare the presentation, the terminal operable to allow the contributors to propose contributions to the presentation that reside on storage devices under the control of the contributors, the terminal further operable to make the proposed contributions available through the network for viewing and comment by contributors, to allow a controller to select one or more of the proposed contributions for inclusion into the presentation, and to provide the controller access through the network to the storage devices to retrieve the selected contributions for inclusion into the presentation; and
a controller storage device connected to the controller terminal for storing the presentation and one or more of the selected contributions.
48. The system of claim 47, wherein the controller terminal operable to provide the controller access through the network to the storage devices comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network to the controller storage device for inclusion in the presentation.
49. The system of claim 48, wherein the controller terminal operable to provide the controller access through the network to the storage devices comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network from a contributor to the controller storage device for inclusion in the presentation.
50. The system of claim 48, wherein the controller terminal operable to provide the controller access through the network to the storage devices comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network from a storage device to the controller storage device for inclusion in the presentation.
51. The system of claim 50, wherein the controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution from a storage device comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network from a storage device selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
52. The system of claim 48, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to connect the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller for preparing the presentation.
53. The system of claim 52, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to connect the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller to prepare a presentation script identifying the selected contributions to be included in the presentation.
54. The system of claim 53, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to prepare a presentation script including a path for retrieving a selected contribution through the network from a storage device.
55. The system of claim 54, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network from a storage device selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
56. The system of claim 48, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to receive a network path from a contributor for retrieving a contribution through the network from a storage device under the control of the contributor.
57. The system of claim 56, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network from a storage device selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
58. The system of claim 56, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through a network selected from the group of networks comprising the Internet, intranets, and local area networks.
59. The system of claim 47, wherein the contributions are selected from the group of contributions comprising graphics, text, video, and audio.
60. The system of claim 47, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to prepare the presentation on the controller terminal.
61. The system of claim 47, wherein the controller terminal further comprises:
a controller terminal operable to display the presentation.
62. The system of claim 63, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to retrieve a selected contribution from the respective storage device immediately prior to displaying the selected contribution.
63. The system of claim 62, wherein the controller terminal further comprises:
a controller terminal operable to provide access through the network to view the presentation.
64. A system for preparing a presentation, comprising:
a controller terminal for connecting through a network to a plurality of geographically dispersed contributor terminals to allow contributors to collaborate to prepare the presentation, the terminal operable to allow the contributors to propose contributions to the presentation that reside on storage devices under the control of the contributors, the terminal further operable to make the proposed contributions available through the network for viewing and comment by contributors, to allow a controller to select one or more of the proposed contributions for inclusion into the presentation, to provide the controller access through the network to the storage devices to retrieve the selected contributions for inclusion into the presentation, and to display the presentation; and
a controller storage device connected to the controller terminal for storing the presentation and one or more of the selected contributions.
65. The system of claim 64, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to retrieve a selected contribution from the respective storage device immediately prior to displaying the selected contribution.
66. The system of claim 65, wherein the controller terminal further comprises:
a controller terminal operable to provide access through the network to view the presentation.
67. The system of claim 65, wherein the controller terminal operable to provide the controller access through the network to the storage devices comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network to the controller storage device for inclusion in the presentation.
68. The system of claim 67, wherein the controller terminal operable to provide the controller access through the network to the storage devices comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network from a contributor to the controller storage device for inclusion in the presentation.
69. The system of claim 67, wherein the controller terminal operable to provide the controller access through the network to the storage devices comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network from a storage device to the controller storage device for inclusion in the presentation.
70. The system of claim 69, wherein the controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution from a storage device comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network from a storage device selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
71. The system of claim 69, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to connect the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller for preparing the presentation.
72. The system of claim 71, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to connect the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller to prepare a presentation script identifying the selected contributions to be included in the presentation.
73. The system of claim 72, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to prepare a presentation script including a path for retrieving a selected contribution through the network from a storage device.
74. The system of claim 73, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network from a storage device selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
75. The system of claim 67, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to receive a network path from a contributor for retrieving a contribution through the network from a storage device under the control of the contributor.
76. The system of claim 75, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through the network from a storage device selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
77. The system of claim 75, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to transfer a selected contribution through a network selected from the group of networks comprising the Internet, intranets, and local area networks.
78. The system of claim 65, wherein the contributions are selected from the group of contributions comprising graphics, text, video, and audio.
79. The system of claim 65, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to prepare the presentation on the controller terminal.
80. A method for making a presentation, comprising:
connecting a plurality of geographically dispersed contributors to a controller through a network to make contributions to the presentation, the contributions residing on storage devices under the control of the contributors;
providing the controller access through the network to the storage devices to retrieve the contributions for inclusion into the presentation;
transferring one or more contributions from the storage devices to the controller immediately prior to display; and
displaying the transferred contributions as part of the presentation.
81. The method of claim 80, wherein displaying the presentation further comprises:
providing access through the network to view the presentation.
82. The method of claim 80, wherein the storage devices are selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
83. The method of claim 80, wherein connecting the contributors to the controller further comprises:
connecting the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller for preparing the presentation.
84. The method of claim 83, wherein connecting the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller comprises:
connecting the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller to prepare a presentation script identifying the selected contributions to be included in the presentation.
85. The method of claim 84, wherein the script includes a path for retrieving a selected contribution through the network from a storage device.
86. The method of claim 85, wherein the storage devices are selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
87. The method of claim 80, wherein providing access to the storage devices comprises:
providing a path for retrieving a contribution through the network from a storage device.
88. The method of claim 87, wherein the storage devices are selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
89. The method of claim 88, wherein the network is selected from the group of networks comprising the Internet, intranets, and local area networks.
90. The method of claim 80, wherein the contributions are selected from the group of contributions comprising graphics, text, video, and audio.
91. The method of claim 80, wherein the contributors are persons communicating with the controller through terminals connected to the network.
92. The method of claim 91, wherein the controller is a person communicating with the contributors through a terminal connected to the network.
93. A system for making a presentation, comprising:
a controller terminal for connecting through a network to a plurality of geographically dispersed contributor terminals to allow contributors to make contributions to the presentation that reside on storage devices under the control of the contributors, the terminal further operable to provide the controller access through the network to the storage devices to retrieve one or more contributions for inclusion into the presentation immediately prior to display and to display the retrieved contributions as part of the presentation; and
a controller storage device connected to the controller terminal for storing the presentation and one or more of the contributions.
94. The system of claim 93, wherein the controller terminal further comprises:
a controller terminal operable to provide access through the network to view the presentation.
95. The system of claim 93, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to provide access to storage devices selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
96. The system of claim 93, wherein the controller terminal further comprises:
a controller terminal operable to connect the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller for preparing the presentation.
97. The system of claim 96, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to connect the contributors to the controller to provide instructions to the controller to prepare a presentation script identifying the selected contributions to be included in the presentation.
98. The system of claim 97, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to prepare a presentation script including a path for retrieving a selected contribution through the network from a storage device.
99. The system of claim 98, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to provide access to storage devices selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
100. The system of claim 93, wherein the controller terminal operable to provide access to storage devices comprises:
a controller terminal operable to provide a path for retrieving a contribution through the network from a storage device.
101. The system of claim 100, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to provide access to storage devices selected from the group of storage devices comprising hard drives, optical drives, magnetic tape drives, and magneto-optical drives.
102. The system of claim 101, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to connect through a network selected from the group of networks comprising the Internet, intranets, and local area networks.
103. The system of claim 93, wherein the controller terminal comprises:
a controller terminal operable to retrieve and display contributions selected from the group of contributions comprising graphics, text, video, and audio.
US11/462,358 2000-06-16 2006-08-03 Method of doing business providing litigation services using a virtual scripting room Abandoned US20070028177A1 (en)

Priority Applications (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/462,358 US20070028177A1 (en) 2000-06-16 2006-08-03 Method of doing business providing litigation services using a virtual scripting room
US12/939,369 US9792584B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2010-11-04 Remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations
US15/704,201 US10592863B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2017-09-14 Method and apparatus for remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US21191200P 2000-06-16 2000-06-16
US09/881,133 US20020019845A1 (en) 2000-06-16 2001-06-14 Method and system for distributed scripting of presentations
US11/462,358 US20070028177A1 (en) 2000-06-16 2006-08-03 Method of doing business providing litigation services using a virtual scripting room

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US09/881,133 Division US20020019845A1 (en) 2000-06-16 2001-06-14 Method and system for distributed scripting of presentations

Related Child Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/939,369 Continuation US9792584B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2010-11-04 Remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20070028177A1 true US20070028177A1 (en) 2007-02-01

Family

ID=26906582

Family Applications (4)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US09/881,133 Abandoned US20020019845A1 (en) 2000-06-16 2001-06-14 Method and system for distributed scripting of presentations
US11/462,358 Abandoned US20070028177A1 (en) 2000-06-16 2006-08-03 Method of doing business providing litigation services using a virtual scripting room
US12/939,369 Active 2024-11-30 US9792584B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2010-11-04 Remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations
US15/704,201 Expired - Lifetime US10592863B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2017-09-14 Method and apparatus for remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US09/881,133 Abandoned US20020019845A1 (en) 2000-06-16 2001-06-14 Method and system for distributed scripting of presentations

Family Applications After (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US12/939,369 Active 2024-11-30 US9792584B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2010-11-04 Remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations
US15/704,201 Expired - Lifetime US10592863B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2017-09-14 Method and apparatus for remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (4) US20020019845A1 (en)

Cited By (3)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20080313542A1 (en) * 2007-06-15 2008-12-18 Trial Technologies, Inc. System and method for witness testimony collection
US9400593B2 (en) 2004-09-14 2016-07-26 Nicholas T. Hariton Distributed scripting for presentations with touch screen displays
US9792584B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2017-10-17 Nicholas T. Hariton Remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations

Families Citing this family (30)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US7237033B2 (en) * 2001-04-30 2007-06-26 Aol Llc Duplicating switch for streaming data units to a terminal
US7124166B2 (en) 2001-04-30 2006-10-17 Aol Llc Duplicating digital streams for digital conferencing using switching technologies
US7640361B1 (en) * 2001-08-24 2009-12-29 Mcafee, Inc. Systems and methods for converting infected electronic files to a safe format
US20030078973A1 (en) * 2001-09-25 2003-04-24 Przekop Michael V. Web-enabled system and method for on-demand distribution of transcript-synchronized video/audio records of legal proceedings to collaborative workgroups
US20040078225A1 (en) * 2002-03-18 2004-04-22 Merck & Co., Inc. Computer assisted and/or implemented process and system for managing and/or providing continuing healthcare education status and activities
US8028092B2 (en) 2002-06-28 2011-09-27 Aol Inc. Inserting advertising content
JP2004164229A (en) * 2002-11-12 2004-06-10 Oki Electric Ind Co Ltd Counseling business/support system, counseling business terminal, server and program
JP2004164228A (en) * 2002-11-12 2004-06-10 Oki Electric Ind Co Ltd Consultation task supporting system, consultation task terminal, consultation task supporting terminal, server and program
US7761505B2 (en) * 2002-11-18 2010-07-20 Openpeak Inc. System, method and computer program product for concurrent performance of video teleconference and delivery of multimedia presentation and archiving of same
US7818658B2 (en) * 2003-12-09 2010-10-19 Yi-Chih Chen Multimedia presentation system
US20060005168A1 (en) * 2004-07-02 2006-01-05 Mona Singh Method and system for more precisely linking metadata and digital images
US7526525B2 (en) * 2004-07-22 2009-04-28 International Business Machines Corporation Method for efficiently distributing and remotely managing meeting presentations
US20060053308A1 (en) * 2004-09-08 2006-03-09 Raidy 2 Go Ltd. Secured redundant memory subsystem
US7676543B2 (en) * 2005-06-27 2010-03-09 Scenera Technologies, Llc Associating presence information with a digital image
US7529772B2 (en) * 2005-09-27 2009-05-05 Scenera Technologies, Llc Method and system for associating user comments to a scene captured by a digital imaging device
US20070094304A1 (en) * 2005-09-30 2007-04-26 Horner Richard M Associating subscription information with media content
US20070239839A1 (en) * 2006-04-06 2007-10-11 Buday Michael E Method for multimedia review synchronization
US7987423B2 (en) * 2006-10-11 2011-07-26 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. Personalized slide show generation
US20110119587A1 (en) * 2008-12-31 2011-05-19 Microsoft Corporation Data model and player platform for rich interactive narratives
US9092437B2 (en) * 2008-12-31 2015-07-28 Microsoft Technology Licensing, Llc Experience streams for rich interactive narratives
US20110113315A1 (en) * 2008-12-31 2011-05-12 Microsoft Corporation Computer-assisted rich interactive narrative (rin) generation
US8411132B2 (en) 2011-01-27 2013-04-02 Audio Properties, Inc. System and method for real-time media data review
ITMI20130371A1 (en) * 2013-03-12 2014-09-13 Phonetica Lab Srl SIMULTANEOUS REMOTE DOCUMENT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM.
JP6972729B2 (en) * 2017-07-24 2021-11-24 コニカミノルタ株式会社 Image display system, material provision support device, material acquisition device, material provision support method, and computer program
US10102659B1 (en) 2017-09-18 2018-10-16 Nicholas T. Hariton Systems and methods for utilizing a device as a marker for augmented reality content
US10105601B1 (en) 2017-10-27 2018-10-23 Nicholas T. Hariton Systems and methods for rendering a virtual content object in an augmented reality environment
US10636188B2 (en) 2018-02-09 2020-04-28 Nicholas T. Hariton Systems and methods for utilizing a living entity as a marker for augmented reality content
US10198871B1 (en) 2018-04-27 2019-02-05 Nicholas T. Hariton Systems and methods for generating and facilitating access to a personalized augmented rendering of a user
US10586396B1 (en) 2019-04-30 2020-03-10 Nicholas T. Hariton Systems, methods, and storage media for conveying virtual content in an augmented reality environment
US11615163B2 (en) * 2020-12-02 2023-03-28 International Business Machines Corporation Interest tapering for topics

Citations (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4616327A (en) * 1984-01-13 1986-10-07 Computer Humor Systems, Pty, Ltd Personalized graphics and text materials, apparatus and method for producing the same
US4766381A (en) * 1987-08-12 1988-08-23 Vanderbilt University Driven inversion spin echo magnetic resonance imaging
US4864516A (en) * 1986-03-10 1989-09-05 International Business Machines Corporation Method for implementing an on-line presentation in an information processing system
US4876657A (en) * 1986-08-15 1989-10-24 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Presentation display apparatus for displaying two different images on separate displays for a listener and a speaker
US4905094A (en) * 1988-06-30 1990-02-27 Telaction Corporation System for audio/video presentation
US4962475A (en) * 1984-12-26 1990-10-09 International Business Machines Corporation Method for generating a document utilizing a plurality of windows associated with different data objects
US5093907A (en) * 1989-09-25 1992-03-03 Axa Corporation Graphic file directory and spreadsheet
US5119188A (en) * 1988-10-25 1992-06-02 Telaction Corporation Digital audio-video presentation display system
US5119474A (en) * 1989-06-16 1992-06-02 International Business Machines Corp. Computer-based, audio/visual creation and presentation system and method
US5204768A (en) * 1991-02-12 1993-04-20 Mind Path Technologies, Inc. Remote controlled electronic presentation system
US5245553A (en) * 1989-12-14 1993-09-14 Options Unlimited Research Full-duplex video communication and document generation system
US5307055A (en) * 1990-08-16 1994-04-26 General Parametrics Corporation Display control device incorporating an auxiliary display
US5473744A (en) * 1992-09-28 1995-12-05 Optical Magnetic Imaging Corporation Computer-assisted interactive method and apparatus for making a multi-media presentation
US5890177A (en) * 1996-04-24 1999-03-30 International Business Machines Corporation Method and apparatus for consolidating edits made by multiple editors working on multiple document copies
US6088702A (en) * 1998-02-25 2000-07-11 Plantz; Scott H. Group publishing system
US6643663B1 (en) * 1999-10-08 2003-11-04 The Belo Company Method and system for operating a content management system
US6687878B1 (en) * 1999-03-15 2004-02-03 Real Time Image Ltd. Synchronizing/updating local client notes with annotations previously made by other clients in a notes database
US6810382B1 (en) * 1994-04-04 2004-10-26 Vaughn A. Wamsley Personal injury claim management system
US20070168426A1 (en) * 1993-10-01 2007-07-19 Collaboration Properties, Inc. Storing and Accessing Media Files
US7590688B2 (en) * 1998-12-30 2009-09-15 Software Management, Inc. Method and system for conducting a plurality of cyber-based conventions

Family Cites Families (113)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4479195A (en) 1982-09-07 1984-10-23 At&T Bell Laboratories Data conference system
US4766581A (en) 1984-08-07 1988-08-23 Justin Korn Information retrieval system and method using independent user stations
US4695975A (en) 1984-10-23 1987-09-22 Profit Technology, Inc. Multi-image communications system
US5072412A (en) 1987-03-25 1991-12-10 Xerox Corporation User interface with multiple workspaces for sharing display system objects
US5220657A (en) 1987-12-02 1993-06-15 Xerox Corporation Updating local copy of shared data in a collaborative system
US5008853A (en) 1987-12-02 1991-04-16 Xerox Corporation Representation of collaborative multi-user activities relative to shared structured data objects in a networked workstation environment
US4949300A (en) 1988-01-07 1990-08-14 International Business Machines Corporation Sharing word-processing functions among multiple processors
CA1337132C (en) 1988-07-15 1995-09-26 Robert Filepp Reception system for an interactive computer network and method of operation
JP2793308B2 (en) 1989-12-21 1998-09-03 株式会社日立製作所 Dialogue system
JP3161725B2 (en) 1990-11-21 2001-04-25 株式会社日立製作所 Workstations and collaborative information processing systems
US5293619A (en) 1991-05-30 1994-03-08 Sandia Corporation Method and apparatus for collaborative use of application program
US5671428A (en) * 1991-08-28 1997-09-23 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Collaborative document processing system with version and comment management
CA2058219C (en) 1991-10-21 2002-04-02 Smart Technologies Inc. Interactive display system
US5303042A (en) 1992-03-25 1994-04-12 One Touch Systems, Inc. Computer-implemented method and apparatus for remote educational instruction
US5581760A (en) * 1992-07-06 1996-12-03 Microsoft Corporation Method and system for referring to and binding to objects using identifier objects
US5664126A (en) 1992-07-24 1997-09-02 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Human interface system for communicating networked users
US5446842A (en) 1993-02-26 1995-08-29 Taligent, Inc. Object-oriented collaboration system
US5649104A (en) 1993-03-19 1997-07-15 Ncr Corporation System for allowing user of any computer to draw image over that generated by the host computer and replicating the drawn image to other computers
US5608872A (en) 1993-03-19 1997-03-04 Ncr Corporation System for allowing all remote computers to perform annotation on an image and replicating the annotated image on the respective displays of other comuters
US5444615A (en) * 1993-03-24 1995-08-22 Engate Incorporated Attorney terminal having outline preparation capabilities for managing trial proceeding
US5689641A (en) * 1993-10-01 1997-11-18 Vicor, Inc. Multimedia collaboration system arrangement for routing compressed AV signal through a participant site without decompressing the AV signal
US5577188A (en) * 1994-05-31 1996-11-19 Future Labs, Inc. Method to provide for virtual screen overlay
EP0766847B1 (en) 1994-06-17 2001-10-31 Intel Corporation Apparatus and method for application sharing in a graphic user interface
US5623603A (en) 1994-11-02 1997-04-22 Fls Acquistion Corporation Method of transferring data at adjustable levels of priorities to provide optimum response to user demands
US5680619A (en) * 1995-04-03 1997-10-21 Mfactory, Inc. Hierarchical encapsulation of instantiated objects in a multimedia authoring system
US5539658A (en) 1995-05-16 1996-07-23 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Electronic presentation system using portable storage media
US5874960A (en) 1995-07-05 1999-02-23 Microsoft Corporation Method and system for sharing applications between computer systems
US6911987B1 (en) 1995-07-05 2005-06-28 Microsoft Corporation Method and system for transmitting data for a shared application
US5864711A (en) 1995-07-05 1999-01-26 Microsoft Corporation System for determining more accurate translation between first and second translator, and providing translated data to second computer if first translator is more accurate
US6199082B1 (en) 1995-07-17 2001-03-06 Microsoft Corporation Method for delivering separate design and content in a multimedia publishing system
US7047241B1 (en) 1995-10-13 2006-05-16 Digimarc Corporation System and methods for managing digital creative works
US6332147B1 (en) * 1995-11-03 2001-12-18 Xerox Corporation Computer controlled display system using a graphical replay device to control playback of temporal data representing collaborative activities
US5960448A (en) 1995-12-15 1999-09-28 Legal Video Services Inc. System and method for displaying a graphically enhanced view of a region of a document image in which the enhanced view is correlated with text derived from the document image
US6167432A (en) 1996-02-29 2000-12-26 Webex Communications, Inc., Method for creating peer-to-peer connections over an interconnected network to facilitate conferencing among users
JP2000516053A (en) 1996-05-07 2000-11-28 ウェブライン コミュニケーションズ コーポレーション Method and apparatus for integrating Internet multimedia content with telephone and audio communications
US5822525A (en) 1996-05-22 1998-10-13 Microsoft Corporation Method and system for presentation conferencing
US6199116B1 (en) 1996-05-24 2001-03-06 Microsoft Corporation Method and system for managing data while sharing application programs
US5781732A (en) * 1996-06-20 1998-07-14 Object Technology Licensing Corp. Framework for constructing shared documents that can be collaboratively accessed by multiple users
US6091408A (en) 1997-08-13 2000-07-18 Z-Axis Corporation Method for presenting information units on multiple presentation units
US6728784B1 (en) * 1996-08-21 2004-04-27 Netspeak Corporation Collaborative multimedia architecture for packet-switched data networks
US20020120925A1 (en) 2000-03-28 2002-08-29 Logan James D. Audio and video program recording, editing and playback systems using metadata
US5944791A (en) 1996-10-04 1999-08-31 Contigo Software Llc Collaborative web browser
US5974446A (en) 1996-10-24 1999-10-26 Academy Of Applied Science Internet based distance learning system for communicating between server and clients wherein clients communicate with each other or with teacher using different communication techniques via common user interface
US6563914B2 (en) 1997-02-26 2003-05-13 Call Sciences Limited Personal web-based teleconferencing method and system
US7490169B1 (en) 1997-03-31 2009-02-10 West Corporation Providing a presentation on a network having a plurality of synchronized media types
CA2284797C (en) 1997-03-31 2004-12-28 Broadband Associates Method and system for providing a presentation on a network
US7143177B1 (en) 1997-03-31 2006-11-28 West Corporation Providing a presentation on a network having a plurality of synchronized media types
US6437776B1 (en) * 1997-06-30 2002-08-20 Barton A. Walz Video assisted program environment
US7246147B2 (en) * 1997-08-07 2007-07-17 Canon Kabushiki Kaisha Upload and retrieval by an image device of a scanned image to and from a web file server
US6002398A (en) 1997-10-30 1999-12-14 Novell, Inc. Navigation between property pages with tabs and menus
US6041333A (en) * 1997-11-14 2000-03-21 Microsoft Corporation Method and apparatus for automatically updating a data file from a network
US5983263A (en) 1998-01-02 1999-11-09 Intel Corporation Method and apparatus for transmitting images during a multimedia teleconference
US6684211B1 (en) 1998-04-01 2004-01-27 Planetweb, Inc. Multimedia communication and presentation
US6121968A (en) * 1998-06-17 2000-09-19 Microsoft Corporation Adaptive menus
US6915301B2 (en) * 1998-08-25 2005-07-05 International Business Machines Corporation Dynamic object properties
US6230171B1 (en) 1998-08-29 2001-05-08 International Business Machines Corporation Markup system for shared HTML documents
US6631404B1 (en) 1998-09-11 2003-10-07 Lv Partners, L.P. Method and system for conducting a contest using a network
US6601087B1 (en) 1998-11-18 2003-07-29 Webex Communications, Inc. Instant document sharing
US6570590B1 (en) 1999-03-02 2003-05-27 Microsoft Corporation Application sharing in a frame
US6396500B1 (en) * 1999-03-18 2002-05-28 Microsoft Corporation Method and system for generating and displaying a slide show with animations and transitions in a browser
US6532218B1 (en) 1999-04-05 2003-03-11 Siemens Information & Communication Networks, Inc. System and method for multimedia collaborative conferencing
AU4460600A (en) * 1999-04-13 2000-11-14 Ilumin Corporation Collaborative creation, editing, reviewing, and signing of electronic documents
US7533146B1 (en) * 1999-06-14 2009-05-12 Epiphany, Inc. Shared web browser apparatus and method for interactive communications
US6636888B1 (en) * 1999-06-15 2003-10-21 Microsoft Corporation Scheduling presentation broadcasts in an integrated network environment
US7330875B1 (en) 1999-06-15 2008-02-12 Microsoft Corporation System and method for recording a presentation for on-demand viewing over a computer network
US6675216B1 (en) 1999-07-06 2004-01-06 Cisco Technolgy, Inc. Copy server for collaboration and electronic commerce
US6826595B1 (en) 2000-07-05 2004-11-30 Sap Portals Israel, Ltd. Internet collaboration system and method
US6351776B1 (en) * 1999-11-04 2002-02-26 Xdrive, Inc. Shared internet storage resource, user interface system, and method
US7299405B1 (en) * 2000-03-08 2007-11-20 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Method and system for information management to facilitate the exchange of ideas during a collaborative effort
US6668273B1 (en) 1999-11-18 2003-12-23 Raindance Communications, Inc. System and method for application viewing through collaborative web browsing session
US6748420B1 (en) 1999-11-23 2004-06-08 Cisco Technology, Inc. Methods and apparatus for providing shared access to an application
US6654032B1 (en) * 1999-12-23 2003-11-25 Webex Communications, Inc. Instant sharing of documents on a remote server
US7328239B1 (en) 2000-03-01 2008-02-05 Intercall, Inc. Method and apparatus for automatically data streaming a multiparty conference session
US6948131B1 (en) * 2000-03-08 2005-09-20 Vidiator Enterprises Inc. Communication system and method including rich media tools
US6308327B1 (en) 2000-03-21 2001-10-23 International Business Machines Corporation Method and apparatus for integrated real-time interactive content insertion and monitoring in E-commerce enabled interactive digital TV
US20010030667A1 (en) 2000-04-10 2001-10-18 Kelts Brett R. Interactive display interface for information objects
US20040095378A1 (en) 2000-06-09 2004-05-20 Michael Vigue Work/training using an electronic infrastructure
US20020019845A1 (en) 2000-06-16 2002-02-14 Hariton Nicholas T. Method and system for distributed scripting of presentations
US6711378B2 (en) 2000-06-30 2004-03-23 Fujitsu Limited Online education course with customized course scheduling
US7127486B1 (en) 2000-07-24 2006-10-24 Vignette Corporation Method and system for facilitating marketing dialogues
US6778972B2 (en) 2000-08-10 2004-08-17 Gustavo S. Leonardos′ System and method for providing integrated management of electronic information
US20020069405A1 (en) 2000-09-20 2002-06-06 Chapin Paul W. System and method for spokesperson interactive television advertisements
US20020089470A1 (en) 2000-11-22 2002-07-11 Mithila Raman Real time internet transcript presentation system
US20020065885A1 (en) 2000-11-30 2002-05-30 Mark Buonanno Multimedia B2B opportunity and error detection and resolution engine
US20020069099A1 (en) * 2000-12-05 2002-06-06 Knox Theresa M. Test plan review process
WO2002050657A1 (en) 2000-12-19 2002-06-27 Coolernet, Inc. System and method for multimedia authoring and playback
US20030018719A1 (en) 2000-12-27 2003-01-23 Ruths Derek Augustus Samuel Data-centric collaborative computing platform
US20030009603A1 (en) 2000-12-27 2003-01-09 Ruths Derek Augustus Samuel System and method for managing collaborative data representations
US20030014513A1 (en) 2000-12-27 2003-01-16 Ruths Derek Augustus Samuel System and method for collaborative data resource representation
US7203755B2 (en) 2000-12-29 2007-04-10 Webex—Communications, Inc. System and method for application sharing in collaborative setting
US7130883B2 (en) 2000-12-29 2006-10-31 Webex Communications, Inc. Distributed network system architecture for collaborative computing
US20030164853A1 (en) 2000-12-29 2003-09-04 Min Zhu Distributed document sharing
US20020085030A1 (en) 2000-12-29 2002-07-04 Jamal Ghani Graphical user interface for an interactive collaboration system
US7240287B2 (en) 2001-02-24 2007-07-03 Microsoft Corp. System and method for viewing and controlling a presentation
US20040030741A1 (en) 2001-04-02 2004-02-12 Wolton Richard Ernest Method and apparatus for search, visual navigation, analysis and retrieval of information from networks with remote notification and content delivery
US20030011636A1 (en) 2001-06-14 2003-01-16 Gene Feroglia Method for magnifying images on a display screen and an interactive television guide system implementing the method
JP2003076719A (en) 2001-06-22 2003-03-14 Sony Computer Entertainment Inc Information reading program, recording medium recored with information reading program, apparatus and method for reading information, program for generating information, recording medium recorded with program for generating information, apparatus and method for generating information, and information generation reading system
US7546602B2 (en) 2001-07-10 2009-06-09 Microsoft Corporation Application program interface for network software platform
US20040034543A1 (en) 2002-01-15 2004-02-19 Koninklijke Ahold Nv Methodology to design, construct, and implement human resources business procedures and processes
US8166388B2 (en) 2002-05-14 2012-04-24 Microsoft Corporation Overlaying electronic ink
US20040008180A1 (en) 2002-05-31 2004-01-15 Appling Thomas C. Method and apparatus for effecting a presentation
US20040046798A1 (en) 2002-06-12 2004-03-11 Arlene Alen Real estate presentation device and method
US20040012613A1 (en) 2002-07-01 2004-01-22 Rast Rodger H. Video cloaking and content augmentation
US20040048646A1 (en) 2002-09-11 2004-03-11 Martin Visocnik Electronic gaming device and method with moving bonus symbol and free games
CA2414053A1 (en) 2002-12-09 2004-06-09 Corel Corporation System and method for manipulating a document object model
US7532628B2 (en) 2002-12-30 2009-05-12 Cisco Technology, Inc. Composite controller for multimedia sessions
CA2515488C (en) 2003-02-10 2013-04-16 Raindance Communications, Inc. Methods and apparatus for providing egalitarian control in a multimedia collaboration session
US7558402B2 (en) 2003-03-07 2009-07-07 Siemens Medical Solutions Usa, Inc. System and method for tracking a global shape of an object in motion
US7395500B2 (en) 2003-08-29 2008-07-01 Yahoo! Inc. Space-optimizing content display
US20050073506A1 (en) 2003-10-05 2005-04-07 Durso Nick P. C-frame slidable touch input apparatus for displays of computing devices
US7433885B2 (en) 2003-12-15 2008-10-07 Quantum Matrix Holdings, Llc System and method for multi-dimensional organization, management, and manipulation of data
US20060064643A1 (en) 2004-09-14 2006-03-23 Hariton Nicholas T Distributed scripting for presentations with touch screen displays
CN101765861A (en) 2007-03-08 2010-06-30 微扫描系统公司 Detection and segmentation of a two-dimensional code

Patent Citations (20)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4616327A (en) * 1984-01-13 1986-10-07 Computer Humor Systems, Pty, Ltd Personalized graphics and text materials, apparatus and method for producing the same
US4962475A (en) * 1984-12-26 1990-10-09 International Business Machines Corporation Method for generating a document utilizing a plurality of windows associated with different data objects
US4864516A (en) * 1986-03-10 1989-09-05 International Business Machines Corporation Method for implementing an on-line presentation in an information processing system
US4876657A (en) * 1986-08-15 1989-10-24 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Presentation display apparatus for displaying two different images on separate displays for a listener and a speaker
US4766381A (en) * 1987-08-12 1988-08-23 Vanderbilt University Driven inversion spin echo magnetic resonance imaging
US4905094A (en) * 1988-06-30 1990-02-27 Telaction Corporation System for audio/video presentation
US5119188A (en) * 1988-10-25 1992-06-02 Telaction Corporation Digital audio-video presentation display system
US5119474A (en) * 1989-06-16 1992-06-02 International Business Machines Corp. Computer-based, audio/visual creation and presentation system and method
US5093907A (en) * 1989-09-25 1992-03-03 Axa Corporation Graphic file directory and spreadsheet
US5245553A (en) * 1989-12-14 1993-09-14 Options Unlimited Research Full-duplex video communication and document generation system
US5307055A (en) * 1990-08-16 1994-04-26 General Parametrics Corporation Display control device incorporating an auxiliary display
US5204768A (en) * 1991-02-12 1993-04-20 Mind Path Technologies, Inc. Remote controlled electronic presentation system
US5473744A (en) * 1992-09-28 1995-12-05 Optical Magnetic Imaging Corporation Computer-assisted interactive method and apparatus for making a multi-media presentation
US20070168426A1 (en) * 1993-10-01 2007-07-19 Collaboration Properties, Inc. Storing and Accessing Media Files
US6810382B1 (en) * 1994-04-04 2004-10-26 Vaughn A. Wamsley Personal injury claim management system
US5890177A (en) * 1996-04-24 1999-03-30 International Business Machines Corporation Method and apparatus for consolidating edits made by multiple editors working on multiple document copies
US6088702A (en) * 1998-02-25 2000-07-11 Plantz; Scott H. Group publishing system
US7590688B2 (en) * 1998-12-30 2009-09-15 Software Management, Inc. Method and system for conducting a plurality of cyber-based conventions
US6687878B1 (en) * 1999-03-15 2004-02-03 Real Time Image Ltd. Synchronizing/updating local client notes with annotations previously made by other clients in a notes database
US6643663B1 (en) * 1999-10-08 2003-11-04 The Belo Company Method and system for operating a content management system

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US9792584B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2017-10-17 Nicholas T. Hariton Remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations
US10592863B2 (en) 2000-06-16 2020-03-17 Nicholas T. Hariton Method and apparatus for remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations
US9400593B2 (en) 2004-09-14 2016-07-26 Nicholas T. Hariton Distributed scripting for presentations with touch screen displays
US10133455B2 (en) 2004-09-14 2018-11-20 Nicholas T. Hariton Distributed scripting for presentations with touch screen displays
US20080313542A1 (en) * 2007-06-15 2008-12-18 Trial Technologies, Inc. System and method for witness testimony collection

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20110106716A1 (en) 2011-05-05
US10592863B2 (en) 2020-03-17
US9792584B2 (en) 2017-10-17
US20180060817A1 (en) 2018-03-01
US20020019845A1 (en) 2002-02-14

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US10592863B2 (en) Method and apparatus for remote real time co-authoring of internet based multimedia collaborative presentations
US10133455B2 (en) Distributed scripting for presentations with touch screen displays
US10387836B2 (en) Systems and methods providing collaborating among a plurality of users
US7478163B2 (en) Method and apparatus for presenting multimedia content and for facilitating third party representation of an object
US9448696B1 (en) System and method for media content collaboration throughout a media production process
US8875011B2 (en) Systems and methodologies providing for collaboration among a plurality of users at a plurality of computing appliances
US20070073776A1 (en) Digital file management
US20130024418A1 (en) Systems And Methods Providing Collaborating Among A Plurality Of Users Each At A Respective Computing Appliance, And Providing Storage In Respective Data Layers Of Respective User Data, Provided Responsive To A Respective User Input, And Utilizing Event Processing Of Event Content Stored In The Data Layers
US9275021B2 (en) System and method for providing a two-part graphic design and interactive document application
US20190014159A9 (en) Systems and methodologies providing collaboration among a plurality of computing appliances, utilizing a plurality of areas of memory to store user input as associated with an associated computing appliance providing the input
US20080028314A1 (en) Slide kit creation and collaboration system with multimedia interface
US20040073868A1 (en) Method and system for compliance forms and compliance forms user interface
US20030236792A1 (en) Method and system for combining multimedia inputs into an indexed and searchable output
Karmouch et al. A multimedia medical communications system
Loxton Analyzing focus groups with MAXQDA
US9942297B2 (en) System and methods for facilitating the development and management of creative assets
US7753258B1 (en) Method and apparatus for completing a financial form
Gay et al. The use of hypermedia data to enhance design
WO2018105762A1 (en) Multilateral collaboration system for content production
Subramonyam et al. Composites: A tangible interaction paradigm for visual data analysis in design practice
Rajamanoharan ICT Influence on television newsrooms
OHLY 2.3 Computer-Supported Cooperative Work
Pankow Reference Modeling of an Integrated Movie Production System
Thur Multimedia: the case with the Army's Single Exercise Analysis System prototype
Projector New Produ

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION