Quantum Research CEO awarded US and European patents for technology to eliminate touch keyboard switching anomalies



Hal Philipp, Quantum CEO, has been allowed both US and European patents for a technology that eliminates ambiguity between adjacent keys in touch keypads and keyboards. The technique, known as adjacent key suppression or AKS, uses an iterative technique that repeatedly measures a detected signal strength associated with each key, compares all the measured signal strengths to find a maximum, then determines that the maximum signal strength comes from the user-selected key. AKS then suppresses or ignores signals from all other keys as long as the signal from the selected key remains above a nominal threshold value.

The technique was developed for keyboards using Quantum's patented charge-transfer sensing technique but is applicable to other kinds of non-bi-stable keyboards including ones based on piezoelectric sensors. It is particularly important for smaller keyboards and keypads, such as those found on mobile phones and remote controls, where the user's fingertip may be large enough to cover more than one key at a time. AKS ensures that the key which is covered most by the fingertip is determined to be the required one and that there is no false triggering of nearby keys.

A number of other algorithms are possible. For example, simultaneous activation of more than one key can be avoided by ensuring that the first key touched is accepted as the intended key.