序号 专利名 申请号 申请日 公开(公告)号 公开(公告)日 发明人
81 Smart device US15612808 2017-06-02 US10022614B1 2018-07-17 Bao Tran; Ha Tran
An Internet of Thing (IoT) device includes a body and sensors including a camera and an accelerometer; a processor; and a wireless transceiver coupled to the processor.
82 Smart sport device US15407255 2017-01-17 US09975033B2 2018-05-22 Bao Tran; Ha Tran
An Internet of Thing (IoT) sport device includes a body with a processor, a camera and a wireless transceiver coupled to the processor.
83 SMART DEVICE US15821718 2017-11-22 US20180133583A1 2018-05-17 Bao Tran; Ha Tran
An Internet of Thing (IoT) device includes a body and sensors including a camera and an accelerometer; a processor; and a wireless transceiver coupled to the processor.
84 SMART DEVICE US15594311 2017-05-12 US20180117447A1 2018-05-03 Bao Tran; Ha Tran
An Internet of Thing (IoT) device includes a camera coupled to a processor; and a wireless transceiver coupled to the processor. Blockchain smart contracts can be used with the device to facilitate secure operation.
85 ATHLETIC ACTIVITY USER EXPERIENCE AND ENVIRONMENT US15849042 2017-12-20 US20180114287A1 2018-04-26 Michael T. Hoffman; Tomislav Lakovic; Richard J. Engelberg
User activity including both athletic activity (e.g., running, walking, etc.) and non-athletic activity (shopping, reading articles, etc.) may be monitored and tracked by an athletic monitoring and tracking device and service. The user activity may be used to award a user with an amount of virtual currency to encourage the user to continue various activities. In one example, users may use the virtual currency to purchase or otherwise acquire various products, services, discounts and the like. A user may track an amount currency earned and/or needed relative to an amount required to acquire a desired product or service. Additionally or alternatively, a visual appearance of a user device (e.g., a watch or athletic activity band) may change based on the user's activity level, an amount of virtual currency earned and the like.
86 AUTONOMOUS PICTURE PRODUCTION SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR CAPTURING IMAGE OF SPECTATOR SEATING AREA US15811546 2017-11-13 US20180070057A1 2018-03-08 Douglas J. DeAngelis; Kirk Sigel; Edward G. Evansen
An autonomous picture production system for automatically capturing an image of a location within a spectator seating area of a stadium upon request of a spectator includes one or more motorized cameras, an external interaction device for receiving an external request from the spectator, a camera control device for determining an optimal camera from the one or more motorized cameras for capturing the image, the camera control device controlling the optimal camera to capture the image, and a database for storing the image, wherein the external interaction device informs the spectator how to retrieve the image from the database.
87 SMART DEVICE US15624927 2017-06-16 US20180001184A1 2018-01-04 Bao Tran; Ha Tran
An Internet of Thing (IoT) device includes a camera coupled to a processor; and a wireless transceiver coupled to the processor. Blockchain smart contracts can be used with the device to facilitate secure operation.
88 Smart device US15586199 2017-05-03 US09849364B2 2017-12-26 Bao Tran; Ha Tran
An Internet of Thing (IoT) device includes a camera coupled to a processor; and a wireless transceiver coupled to the processor. Blockchain smart contracts can be used with the device to facilitate secure operation.
89 SMART DEVICE US15626087 2017-06-17 US20170312578A1 2017-11-02 Bao Tran; Ha Tran
An Internet of Thing (IoT) sport device includes a sensor coupled to a processor; and a wireless transceiver coupled to the processor.
90 Smart sport device US15407253 2017-01-17 US09713756B1 2017-07-25 Bao Tran; Ha Tran
An Internet of Thing (IoT) sport device includes a helmet and sensors including a camera and an accelerometer; a processor; and a wireless transceiver coupled to the processor.
91 Training apparatus for athletes and others US14595381 2015-01-13 US09498691B2 2016-11-22 Justin Douglas Antoine
A training apparatus particularly suited for ice skaters. The training apparatus includes a cover, typically formed as shorts sized to be worn over traditional hockey pants or a hockey girdle, and one or more connectors. The connectors are attached to the cover in fixed positions around the upper leg and buttocks of the user of the training apparatus, and slidably and releasably receive through looped parts at least one elongate, flexible, elastic resistive member to provide resistance against the motion of a user while engaging in physical activities, such as skating. The connectors are mounted on both the front and back of the cover and include upper connectors mounted on an upper tubular section of the cover and lower connectors mounted on the front of leg sections of the cover.
92 Remote movement guidance US13500657 2011-09-16 US09256281B2 2016-02-09 Shmuel Ur
In one example of a user-guidance system, a remote control may be configured to guide a user's physical movements by transmitting movement signals that are to be translated into haptic instructions, and cooperative actuators may be configured to be worn by the user to translate the movement signals received from the remote control into the haptic instructions. The movement signals may be translated into the haptic instructions for physical movements of any limb or extremity of the user in either of a vertical direction or a horizontal direction; after the first movement signal, the movement signals may be transmitted prior to completion of an immediately previous physical movement; and the movement signals may include horizontal and vertical directional signal components that indicate the horizontal and vertical direction for the user's next physical movement. The haptic instructions that are translated from the horizontal and vertical directional signal components may differ in either duration or magnitude. The movement signals may include horizontal directional signal components that indicate the horizontal direction for the user's next physical movement, and the haptic instructions that are translated from the horizontal directional signal components may differ in either duration or magnitude.
93 TRAINING APPARATUS FOR ATHLETES AND OTHERS US14595381 2015-01-13 US20150202512A1 2015-07-23 Justin Douglas Antoine
A training apparatus particularly suited for ice skaters. The training apparatus includes a cover, typically formed as shorts sized to be worn over traditional hockey pants or a hockey girdle, and one or more connectors. The connectors are attached to the cover in fixed positions around the upper leg and buttocks of the user of the training apparatus, and slidably and releasably receive through looped parts at least one elongate, flexible, elastic resistive member to provide resistance against the motion of a user while engaging in physical activities, such as skating. The connectors are mounted on both the front and back of the cover and include upper connectors mounted on an upper tubular section of the cover and lower connectors mounted on the front of leg sections of the cover.
94 TRAINING APPARATUS FOR ATHLETES AND OTHERS US14157589 2014-01-17 US20150202482A1 2015-07-23 Justin Douglas Antoine
A training apparatus particularly suited for ice skaters. The training apparatus includes a cover, typically formed as shorts sized to be worn over traditional hockey pants or a hockey girdle, and one or more connectors. The connectors are attached to the cover in fixed positions around the upper leg and buttocks of the user of the training apparatus, and slidably and releasably receive through looped parts at least one elongate, flexible, elastic resistive member to provide resistance against the motion of a user while engaging in physical activities, such as skating. The connectors are mounted on both the front and back of the cover and include upper connectors mounted on an upper tubular section of the cover and lower connectors mounted on the front of leg sections of the cover.
95 Skiing or Skating Training Assist US14218365 2014-03-18 US20140272857A1 2014-09-18 Sheena Lin WINDER; Roger L. WINDER
Described is an apparatus to facilitate training for skiing, skating, rollerblading, and the like, where an experienced person may assist or direct a novice. The apparatus includes a central support bar with three crossbars, one for the experienced person to grasp and two for the novice to hold onto and sit on or put behind the knees, respectively.
96 METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR DETECTING AN EVENT ON A SPORTS TRACK US13989506 2011-11-08 US20140052279A1 2014-02-20 Bas Jan Emile Van Rens
The disclosure relates to a method and system for detecting an event on a sports track. By applying one or more track segments across the width of the sports track and detecting passage of participants for the track segments, a comparison can be made between detected passage results and known passage results that may e.g. be available from a storage internal or external to the system. A deviation between the detection results and the known results that exceeds a particular deviation margin may be used as an immediate sign of an irregularity occurring during the sports event. The irregularity may e.g. relate to malfunctioning of one or more components of the time monitoring system or to deviating behavior by a participant to the sports event.
97 Using equivalence points to compare athletic performances across distance, gender, exact age, event and course differences US11408891 2006-04-24 US20070250291A1 2007-10-25 Stephen Beale
Hundreds of thousands of youths participate in racing sports in the United States. Racing sports, such as swimming, track and speed skating all use elapsed time as the primary measure of achievement. But an elapsed time by itself, such as 55.23 seconds, is of little value in determining if a particular performance was “good.” A “good” time for one age, gender, event, distance and/or race condition might not be a “good” time under a different set of factors. Various time standards have been created to rank athletic performances. These standards are generally set up to evaluate the performances of athletes within an age group which typically ranges from one to two years. Unfortunately, athletic performances vary widely within such age groups. It is very difficult to compare the performances of two athletes who have an age difference of a few months. The methodologies described herein will overcome the inherent approximations in these existing performance standard systems. My methodology will calculate an exact age-adjusted point value for a given performance. Given this exact, age-adjusted point value for the elapsed time of a specific race, my methodology will then be able to convert that elapsed time to the expected elapsed time of an equivalent performance under a different set of factors (for example, a different event, length, course, age and/or gender).
98 Smashball US11035439 2005-08-25 US20070049424A1 2007-03-01 Joseangel Hernandez-Ramil; Cristina Hernandez-Ramil
The contents of this package are the rules and regulations for a new sport that I have created. The package contains all the rules and regulations of the game. This sport is going to be called Smashball in a National League environment. It n be played on either an indoors and outdoors playing surface. All that is needed is a smooth skating surface. This is a game that is extremely challenging and very enjoyable to watch as well as play.
99 Skateboard hockey US11028092 2005-01-03 US20060145444A1 2006-07-06 Norman Garland
A device operatively connected to a skateboard. The device is moveable and adapted for contact of a puck.
100 In-line skate holder US09630174 2000-08-01 US06595480B1 2003-07-22 Jordan Orlick
A skate holder for facilitating the putting on and taking off of skates includes a base, a pair of retaining walls defining a holder slot therebetween for receiving the skate, each retaining wall having an upper edge, a bottom surface of the holder slot positioned at an inclined angle in relation to the base, wherein the upper edges of the retaining walls have the same angle of inclination as the bottom surface of the holder slot with respect to the base, and a stop is positioned between the retaining walls at a lower end of the holder slot. The retaining walls are preferably positioned in a parallel facing relationship to each other and extend upwardly from the base at a perpendicular angle to the base.
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