TOUCH-LESS TOUCH SCREEN USER INTERFACE
It was the touch screens which initially
created great furore.Gone are the days when you have to fiddle with the touch
screens and end scratching up. Touch screen displays are ubiquitous
worldwide.Frequent touching a touchscreen display with a pointing device such
as a finger can result in the gradual de-sensitization of the touchscreen to
input and can ultimately lead to failure of the touchscreen. To avoid this a
simple user interface for Touchless control of electrically operated equipment
is being developed. EllipticLabs innovative technology lets you control your
gadgets like Computers, MP3 players or mobile phones without touching them. A
simple user interface for Touchless control of electrically operated equipment.
Unlike other systems which depend on distance to the sensor or sensor selection
this system depends on hand and or finger motions, a hand wave in a certain
direction, or a flick of the hand in one area, or holding the hand in one area
or pointing with one finger for example. The device is based on optical pattern
recognition using a solid state optical matrix sensor with a lens to detect
hand
motions.
This sensor is then connected to a digital image processor, which interprets
the patterns of motion and outputs the results as signals to control fixtures,
appliances, machinery, or any device controllable through electrical signals.
INTRODUCTION:
The touch less touch screen sounds like it would be nice and easy,
however after closer examination it looks like it could be quite a workout.
This unique screen is made by TouchKo, White
Electronics Designs, and Groupe 3D. The screen resembles the Nintendo Wii without the Wii Controller.
With the touchless touch screen your hand doesn’t have to come in contact with
the screen at all, it works by detecting your hand movements in front of it.
This is a pretty unique and interesting invention, until you break out in a
sweat. Now this technology doesn’t compare to the hologram-like IO2 Technologies
Heliodisplay M3, but thats for anyone that has $18,100 laying around.
You
probably wont see this screen in stores any time soon. Everybody loves a touch
screen and when you get a gadget with touch screen the experience is really
exhilarating. When the I-phone was introduced,everyone felt the same.But
gradually,the exhilaration started fading. While using the phone with the
finger tip or with the stylus the screen started getting lots of finger prints
and scratches. When we use a screen protector; still dirty marks over such
beautiful glossy screen is a strict no-no. Same thing happens with I-pod touch.
. Most of the time we have to wipe the screen to get a better unobtrusive view
of the screen
Thanks to EllipticLabs
innovative technology that lets you control your
gadgets like Computers, MP3
players or mobile phones without touching them. Simply point your finger in the
air towards the device and move it accordingly to control the navigation in the
device. They term this as “Touchless human/machine user interface for 3D navigation ”.
TOUCH
LESS MONITOR:
Sure, everybody is doing
touchscreen interfaces these days, but this is the first time I’ve seen a
monitor that can respond to gestures without actually having to touch the
screen.
The
monitor, based on technology from TouchKo
was recently demonstrated by White
Electronic Designs and Tactyl Services
at the CeBIT
show. Designed for applications where touch may be difficult, such as for
doctors who might be wearing surgical gloves, the display features capacitive sensors that can read
movements from up to 15cm away from the screen. Software can then translate
gestures into screen commands.
Touchscreen interfaces are
great, but all that touching, like foreplay, can be a little bit of a drag.
Enter the wonder kids from Elliptic Labs,
who are hard at work on implementing a touchless
interface. The input method is, well, in thin air. The technology detects
motion in 3D and requires no special
worn-sensors for operation. By simply pointing at the screen,users can
manipulate the object being displayed in 3D. Details are light on how this
actually functions, but what we do know is this:
What is the technology behind it?
It obviously requires a sensor
but the sensor is neither hand mounted nor present on the screen. The sensor
can be placed either onthe table or near the screen. And the hardware setup is
so compact that it can be fitted into a tiny device like a MP3 player or a
mobile phone. It recognizes the position of an object from as 5 feet.
WORKING:
The system is capable of
detecting movements in 3-dimensions without ever having to put your fingers on
the screen. Their patented touchless interface doesn’t require that you wear
any special sensors on your hand either. You just point at the screen (from as
far as 5 feet away), and you can manipulate objects in 3D.
Sensors
are mounted around the screen that is being used, by interacting in the
line-of-sight of these sensors the motion is detected and interpreted into
on-screen movements. What is to stop unintentional gestures being used as input
is not entirely clear, but it looks promising nonetheless. The best part?
Elliptic Labs says their technology will be easily small enough to be
implemented into cell phones and the like. IPod touchless, anyone?
Touch-less
Gives Glimpse of GBUI:
We
have seen the futuristic user interfaces of movies like Minority Report
and the Matrix Revolutions where
people wave their hands in 3 dimensions and the computer understands what the
user wants and shifts and sorts data with precision. Microsoft's XD Huang demonstrated
how his company sees the future of the GUI at ITEXPO this past
September in fact. But at the show, the example was in 2 dimensions, not
3.The
GBUI as seen in the Matrix
Microsoft's vision on the UI
in their Redmond headquarters and it involves lots of gestures which allow you
to take applications and forward them on to others with simple hand movements.
The demos included the concept of software understanding business processes and
helping you work. So after reading a document - you could just push it off the
side of your screen and the system would know to post it on an intranet and
also send a link to a specific group of people.
Touch-less UI:
The basic idea described in the
patent is that there would be sensors arrayed around the perimeter of the
device capable of sensing finger movements in 3-D space. The user could use
her fingers similarly to a touch
phone, but actually without
having to touch the screen.
That's cool, isn't it? I think the
idea is not only great, because user input will not be limited to 2-D anymore,
but that I can use my thick, dirty, bandaged, etc. fingers as well (as opposed
to "plain" touch UI). I'm a bit skeptic, though, how accurate it can
be, whether the software will have AI or the user will
have to learn how to move her fingers. We'll see hopefully very soon!
Finally, there is one more thing to mention, it's the built-in accelerometer.
Finally, there is one more thing to mention, it's the built-in accelerometer.
Touch-less
SDK:
The Touchless SDK is an open
source SDK for .NET applications. It enables developers to create multi-touch
based applications using a webcam for input. Color based
markers defined by the user are
tracked and their information is published through
events to clients of the SDK. In
a nutshell, the Touchless SDK enables touch without touching. Well, Microsoft
Office Labs has just released “Touchless,” a webcam-driven multi-touch
interface SDK that enables “touch without touching.”
Using the SDK lets
developers offer users “a new and cheap way of experiencing multi-touch
capabilities, without the need of expensive hardware or software. All the user
needs is a camera,” to track the multi-colored objects as defined by the
developer. Just about any webcam will work
Touch-less demo:
The Touch less Demo is an open source
application that anyone with a webcam can use to experience multi-touch, no
geekiness required. The demo was created using the Touch less SDK and Windows
Forms with C#. There are 4 fun demos: Snake - where you control a snake
with a marker, Defender - up to 4 player version of a pong-like
game, Map - where you can rotate, zoom, and move a map using 2 markers,
and Draw the marker is used to guess what…. draw!
Mike demonstrated Touch less at
a recent Office Labs’ Productivity Science Fair where it was
voted by attendees as “most interesting project.” If you wind up using the SDK,
one would love to hear what use you make of it!
WindowShop pic:
In addition, it is worth pointing
out that you may need a few cameras in stereo to maximize accuracy and you
could theoretically use your hands as a mouse - meaning you can likely take
advantage of all the functions of the GBUI while resting your hand on the desk
in front of you for most of the day.
At some point we will see this
stuff hit the OS and when that happens, the consumer can decide if the mouse
and keyboard will rule the future or the GBUI will be the killer tech of the
next decade.
Touch wall:
Touch Wall refers to the touch
screen hardware setup itself; the corresponding software to run Touch Wall,
which is built on a standard version of Vista, is called Plex. Touch Wall and
Plex are superficially similar to Microsoft Surface,
a multi-touch table computer that was introduced in 2007 and which recently
became commercially
available in select AT&T
stores. It is a fundamentally simpler mechanical system, and is also
significantly cheaper to produce. While Surface retails at around $10,000, the
hardware to “turn almost anything into a multi-touch interface” for Touch Wall
is just “hundreds of dollars”.
Touch Wall consists of three
infrared lasers that scan a surface. A camera notes when something breaks
through the laser line and feeds that information back to the Plex software.
Early prototypes, say Pratley and Sands, were made, simply, on a cardboard
screen. A projector was used to show the Plex interface on the cardboard, and a
the system worked fine. Touch Wall certainly isn’t the first multi-touch
product we’ve seen (see iPhone). In addition to Surface, of course, there are a
number of early prototypes
emerging in this space. But what Microsoft has done with a few hundred dollars
worth of readily available hardware is stunning.
It’s also clear that the only
real limit on the screen size is the projector, meaning that entire walls can
easily be turned into a multi touch user interface. Scrap those white boards in
the office, and make every flat surface into a touch display instead. You might
even save some
money.
What’s next??
Many
personal computers will likely have similar screens in the near future. But
touch interfaces are nothing new -- witness ATM machines.
How
about getting completely out of touch? A startup called LM3Labs says it's working with major computer makers in Japan,
Taiwan and the US to incorporate touch less navigation into their laptops,
Called Airstrike; the system uses tiny charge-coupled device (CCD) cameras
integrated into each side of the keyboard to detect user movements.
You can drag windows around or
close them, for instance, by pointing and gesturing in midair above the keyboard.You should be able to buy an
Airstrike-equipped laptop next year, with high-end stand-alone keyboards
to follow.
Any such system is unlikely to
replace typing and mousing. But that's not the point. Airstrike aims to give
you an occasional quick break from those activities.
CONCLUSION:
Today’s thoughts are again around user
interface. Efforts are being put to better the technology day-in and day-out.
The Touchless touch screen user interface can be used effectively in computers,
cell phones, webcams and laptops. May be few years down the line, our body can
be transformed into a virtual mouse, virtual keyboard and what not??, Our body
may be turned in to an input device!
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
http://comogy.com/concepts/170-universal-remote-concept.html
http://dvice.com/archives/2008/05/universal_remot.php?p=4&cat=undefined#more
www.hitslot.com
http://hitslot.com/?p=214
http://www.touchuserinterface.com/2008/09/touchless-touch-screen-that-senses-your.html
http://technabob.com/blog/2007/03/19/the-touchless-touchscreen-monitor/
http://www.etre.com/blog/2008/02/elliptic_labs_touchless_user_interface/
http://www.engadget.com/tag/interface/
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