序号 专利名 申请号 申请日 公开(公告)号 公开(公告)日 发明人
21 사진식자방법 및 사진식자기 KR1019820002580 1982-06-09 KR100023552B1 1987-06-10 아끼야마후미오; 찌바아끼라
22 기판을 포지셔닝 및 검사하기 위한 오프셋 정정 방법 및 장치 KR1020097007283 2007-09-14 KR101462288B1 2014-11-14 첸잭; 베일리앤드류디3세; 무링벤; 카인스티븐제이
기판의 이미지를 캡쳐하는 베벨 검사 모듈이 제공된다. 이 모듈은, 기판 척에 부착되고, 그 기판 척을 회전시켜 기판이 회전할 수 있게 하는 회전 모터를 포함한다. 이 모듈은, 카메라, 및 그 카메라에 부착되고 회전하여, 기판으로 광이 향할 수 있게 하는 광학 인클로저를 더 포함한다. 카메라는, 그 카메라를 180 도 평면에서 회전하게 하여, 기판의 상단 뷰, 바닥 뷰, 및 측면 뷰 중 적어도 하나를 포함하는 이미지를 카메라가 캡쳐할 수 있게 하는 카메라 마운트에 탑재된다. 또한, 이 모듈은, 기판에 조명을 제공하도록 구성되어, 기판과 배경 사이의 콘트라스트를 나타내는 이미지를 카메라가 캡쳐할 수 있게 하는 백라이트 장치를 포함한다. 기판, 플라즈마 처리, 기판 위치 정정, 에칭, 처리 중심
23 사진식자방법 및 사진식자기 KR1019820002580 1982-06-09 KR1019870000429B1 1987-03-10 아끼야마후미오; 찌바아끼라
A photocomposing machine synthesizes a special character/ figure not easily found in a character table. The layout of the desired character/figure is composed so that; i) Each component of the desired character/figure is selected from the character table and displayed on the CRT. ii) The selected components are transformed/ shifted according to the layout of the desired character/ figure. iii) All information data of the synthesized character/ figure on the CRT are stored in a memory circuit.
24 사진식자기의 모니터 표시장치 KR1019830003089 1983-07-06 KR1019850003286A 1985-06-13 후세시게루-1
25 사진식자방법 및 사진식자기 KR1019820002580 1982-06-09 KR1019840000379A 1984-02-22 아끼야마후미오; 찌바아끼라
내용없음
26 사진식자기의 모니터 표시장치 KR1019830003089 1983-07-06 KR1019830002767B1 1983-12-14 후세시게루-1
A photograph typesetting machine consists of a character tablet(4); a camera(18) for monitoring the selected character; a control circuit(22) for encoding the character image; a reading address signal generator(26); a position signal generator(23), which produces a signal used for typesetting the character on the film(11); a writting address signal generator(35), which produces a signal that is a sum-valve with the poisiton signal and the reading address signal; and a CRT(27) that display the selected character.
27 사진식자장치 KR1019770000197 1977-01-29 KR1019810001774B1 1981-11-13 루이스엠모이로우드
The machine provides access to a relatively large number of different characters located on relatively large spinning discs or drums. The characters are located in arrays such as concentric rows on a disc. Several lenses are mounted on a lens carriage, and several light sources are mounted on a flash-lamp carriage. Character spacing is determined by motion of the lens carriage or the lamp carriage. Array selection is performed by motion of the lamp carriage or motion of the lens carriage. Composition of lines or columns of charactors taken from a relatively large number of different arrays is speeded considerably by controlling the order in which the characters are projected.
28 사진 식자기 KR1019800000006 1980-01-04 KR100010208B1 1981-08-21 이시이기요시; 후세시계루; 호리우찌히로하루
29 사진 식자기 KR1019800000006 1980-01-04 KR1019810000148B1 1981-02-19 이시이기요시; 후세시계루; 호리우찌히로하루
Type photo-composing machine comprises an instruction button(57) for defining various kinds of information and for applying the information as input signals, memory means connected to the photoelectrically converting means and control circuit for memorizing the photoelectrically converted character image in accordance with the order of character selected and for storing the feed amount determined by the control circuit.
30 Print product on demand US114933 1998-07-14 US6151130A 2000-11-21 Thomas A. Liguori; Robert T. Jennings
A process and apparatus for placing printed color images on a series of objects, by: generating digital data representing a plurality of different color images; providing a print medium composed of a substrate carrying a coating which is releasable from the substrate and is formulated to retain printing inks; providing a digitally controlled color printer having a plurality of print heads; supplying the generated digital data to the printer; feeding the print medium through the printer and past the print heads while operating the print heads under control of the generated data to print the color images on the coating; and placing a portion of the coating on which an image has been printed in contact with one of the objects and transferring the image to the object.
31 Method for forming plate characters in a half-tone gravure platemaking process US589167 1990-09-26 US5023166A 1991-06-11 Kouichi Takakura
A method for forming plate characters in a half-tone gravure platemaking process being characterized in that a laser beam moved so that the laser beam is intermittently irradiated onto a light sensitive material and a plate character is formed on the light-sensitive material by exposure. The character thus formed is made up with a character frame portion and a character fill portion surrounded by the character frame portion, the character frame portion being formed by a plurality of intermittently arranged groove-form cells each having a predetermined length and a width which can prevent flow of ink when ink is applied by wiping the plate surface with a doctor, and the character fill portion being formed by dot-form cells which have a shadow-portion dot percentage.
32 Combined process of printing and forming a hologram US183005 1988-04-18 US4933120A 1990-06-12 Salvatore F. D'Amato; Peter Sorbo; Richard E. Dunning
A new technique and apparatus for printing that includes the formation of a hologram, or other type of diffraction pattern, directly on a desired end product of paper, or other sheet material. The hologram, or other diffraction pattern, is formed by casting a surface relief pattern directly onto the sheet material in a limited area.
33 Optical printer US416838 1982-09-13 USRE32099E 1986-03-25 Bernhard Hill; Klaus Schmidt; Gerhard Graf
A template to form the characters to be written is placed between the light source and the record carrier. The template is formed as a light-switching mask the switching elements of which can be controlled by a character generator. The switching elements may be arranged separately beside each other or in matrix form in accordance with the fact whether the characters are to be written per line or per page. Printing in color is also possible. The optical printer combines the functions of a printer, a picture memory and a display.
34 Apparatus for treating materials issuing from photocomposing machines US496449 1983-05-20 US4486082A 1984-12-04 Gerald Wagner; Dieter Wauer
An apparatus which controls the operation of metering pumps serving to regenerate the baths in a developing machine for exposed photosensitive material issuing from a photocomposing machine has a computer whose outputs transmit appropriate signals to the metering pumps via amplifiers and whose inputs respectively receive signals from a scanner serving to ascertain the width of photosensitive material in the photocomposing machine and the composition of the emulsion, from a forward-reverse counter which ascertains the total length of photosensitive material admitted into the developing machine per unit of time, and from an integrating circuit which receives signals denoting the amounts of radiation issuing from a cathode ray tube or a laser recorder and impinging upon the photosensitive material. This renders it unnecessary to monitor the condition of the baths and/or the photosensitive material in the developing machine.
35 Optical printer US21127 1979-03-16 US4278981A 1981-07-14 Bernhard Hill; Klaus P. Schmidt; Gerhard Graf
A template to form the characters to be written is placed between the light source and the record carrier. The template is formed as a light-switching mask the switching elements of which can be controlled by a character generator. The switching elements may be arranged separately beside each other or in matrix form in accordance with the fact whether the characters are to be written per line or per page. Printing in color is also possible. The optical printer combines the functions of a printer, a picture memory and a display.
36 Photographic type composing machine US763611 1977-01-28 US4119977A 1978-10-10 Louis M. Moyroud
The machine provides access to a relatively large number of different characters located on relatively large spinning discs or drums. The characters are located in arrays such as concentric rows on a disc. A plurality of lenses is mounted on a lens carriage, and one or more light sources is mounted on a flash-lamp carriage. Character spacing is determined by motion of the lens carriage and/or the lamp carriage. Array selection is performed by motion of the lamp carriage, and/or motion of the lens carriage. Composition of lines or columns of characters taken from a relatively large number of different arrays, such as would be the case in type composition using Chinese ideographs, is speeded considerably by controlling the order in which the characters are projected so that the lens carriage need not reverse its direction of motion during composition of a line. A simple mechanism is used to change lenses for size changes by the selective use of stops at the ends of the travel path of the lens carriage. Two discs or drums can be used alternatingly to increase the number of characters available. A simple attachment is provided for composing long lines of enlarged characters for composing headlines and the like. This avoids the necessity of providing a separate headlining machine. Another simple attachment is provided for inserting Pi characters. This attachment makes use of the lamp carriage and drive mechanism in selecting the Pi characters for projection. A method which is especially useful in economically producing large matrix discs is described. An economical "floppy" or flexible film disc also is described. A system and method are described for electronically detecting base-line and spacing errors in the characters on the character matrix, storing the errors, and correcting the errors electronically during projection of the characters onto the photographic film.
37 Inexpensive and reliable custom programmable phototypesetter US652024 1976-01-26 US4067022A 1978-01-03 Peter R. Ebner
A phototypesetter is disclosed having a stepping motor which actuates an escapement carriage coupled to an elongated carriage driving member. A projection lens carriage and a collimating lens carriage are selectively electromagnetically coupled to the elongated driving member, thereby to project images of varying character sizes through a focusing lens coupled to the escapement carriage, which sequentially projects focused character images across a photosensitive film on a line by line basis. A track select mirror is also selectively electromagnetically coupled to the elongated driving member for selectively projecting one of a plurality of tracks bearing characters of differing fonts carried by a rotatable font carrier element. A group of customized lens carriage positioning control codes and customized sizing codes, unique for each phototypesetter as a function of lens parameter variations, are stored within a size dictionary and a particular set, associated with the character size being typeset is read out of the dictionary and is employed to control the customized positioning of the lens carriages and image (film) positioning stepping motors. A novel technique is also disclosed whereby a customized group of the above-mentioned codes is rapidly and easily generated by an iterative image inspection process for each particular phototypesetter during manufacture.
38 Digital flash intensity control system for phototypesetters US628692 1975-11-03 US4051486A 1977-09-27 Peter R. Ebner; Louis E. Griffith
For variable letter sizes being photographically recorded in a second generation phototypesetter, it is desired to increase generated quantities of light flux produced by the flash lamp operating in conjunction with a font disc where larger letter sizes are thereby imaged upon the photosensitive medium, and conversely, to reduce such flux where smaller characters are to be projected. The disclosed system employs a digital letter size code for controlling the amount of charge inserted into a storage capacitor via a digital to analog converter and multivibrator. When the flash lamp is triggered at the appropriate time to selectively illuminate a given character, the energy associated with the stored charge is employed to energize the lamp.
39 Photocomposing machine and font strip therefor for kerned characters US587856 1975-06-18 US4027313A 1977-05-31 Herbert Klepper; Walter Hansen; Joel S. Harris; Farrokh Golesorkhi
A photocomposing machine and font strip therefor are described which allow type designers to have the flexibility to design typographical characters which are kerned. The photocomposing machine is able to automatically kern those characters which are designed to be kerned. The automatic kerning is accomplished by intentionally offsetting each character's placement on the font strip to the left with respect to the machine's aperture, and providing an optical system in the photocomposing machine which intentionally offsets the projection of the font strip through the aperture of the machine to the right, thereby cancelling the offset of unkerned characters. Kerned characters are placed to the right on the font strip in order to allow the machine's optical system offset to overlap the image of kerned characters on the space normally reserved for the next character.
40 Method and apparatus for generating character patterns US520220 1974-11-01 US3999167A 1976-12-21 Masamichi Ito; Takashi Hirasaki; Hiroshi Sato
Apparatus for generating a character pattern where the character pattern comprises a plurality of dots where certain ones of the dots fall within the character outline and others of the dots fall outside of the character outline, the apparatus comprising first storing means for storing preselected ones of the dots; decoder means responsive to at least some of the stored dots for reconstructing the dots not stored in the first storing means; pattern combining means responsive to the stored dots and the reconstructed dots for generating the character pattern therefrom whereby the memory capacity of the first storing means is lessened by having to store therein only the preselected ones of the dots; second storing means for storing the reconstructed dots; and the decoder means being further responsive to reconstructed dots previously stored in the second storing means for effecting the reconstruction of the dots not stored in the first storing means.
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