Welcome to the future of mix and match user interfaces
Imagine going from having only one or two senses to experience the world to five or fifty. That’s what is happening in human-to-computer communications as we develop new user interfaces.
Imagine going from having only one or two senses to experience the world to five or fifty. That’s what is happening in human-to-computer communications as we develop new user interfaces.
The world of alternative UIs is expanding, so getting developers to build compelling apps to advance your technology is tough. Leap Motion hopes an accelerator program can help it compete.
The mix of younger doctors and new gesture-based or wearable technology means that BYOD will soon become a trend in the operating room.
Don’t have a touchscreen computer? You’re not necessarily stuck using a mouse, touchpad or keyboard to browse the web. Add a Leap Motion controller and a Chrome extension to browse the web with air gestures on any computer.
The new gesture-based controller bears a strong resemblance to Leap Motion, but gestures are conducted on surfaces instead of in the air. It launched today on Kickstarter.
Leap Motion has already seen its millionth download, just weeks after the controller hit the market.
The $80 Leap motion controller is out on the market at last. With a UI that allows for 3D gestures, and an app store full of games, does it live up to the hype?
The New York Times has developed a “Top News” app for the upcoming gesture-controlled Leap Motion device.
Kill your keyboard and chase your mice away. The next generation of user interfaces are coming, and they rely on gestures, better sensors and wireless radios to tell your computers what to do.
Leap Motion, which is making a 3-D gesture-based interface has signed a deal with HP to get its hardware on select HP computers.