Bron; www.nu.nl
Leap Motion heeft een filmpje online gezet waarin het bedrijf toont hoe zijn bewegingsgevoelige besturing zal werken op Windows-pc's.
In het filmpje is te zien hoe iemand met enkel vingerbewegingen in de lucht iconen op het scherm beweegt, tekent en over het web browset.
"Je kunt alles doen dat je met multi-touch schermen doet, zonder iets aan te raken", aldus het bedrijf in een blogpost. Bestaande applicaties in Windows 7 en Windows 8 zullen de handbewegingen herkennen.
HP en Asus hebben al een overeenkomst met Leap Motion gesloten om de besturing in de toekomst te leveren bij hun pc's. De techniek wordt op 22 juli gelanceerd. In eerste instantie zal een apart kastje nodig zijn.
De Leap Motion controller kost 79,99 dollar, zo'n 62 euro. Er komt ook een Leap App Store met apps die speciaal voor het systeem zijn ontwikkeld.
It's what we've always envisioned for Leap Motion — to break down the barriers between people and technology. Here's a video to show you how close we are.
With Leap Motion technology, Windows OS is natural, easy, and fun to use. You'll navigate your desktop, browse the web, flip through photos, and do everything you do everyday in extraordinary ways —all with the wave of a hand or lift of a finger.
Posts tonen met het label LEAP. Alle posts tonen
Posts tonen met het label LEAP. Alle posts tonen
dinsdag 21 mei 2013
dinsdag 12 maart 2013
the LEAP Motion Controller.
We tried out our Developer Unit of the LEAP Motion Controller in the Visualizer, Windows 8 Start Screen
The Leap Motion experience at SXSW 2013
One app I really like is Adam Somer's AirHarp, featured in the video clip below: AirHarp is the result of a weekend hacking session with a Leap Motion dev board. Leap Motion is a highly precise and responsive motion tracking device, making it a perfect tool for expressive musical interactions. AirHarp is being developed in C++ using my audio processing toolkit, MusKit. The source code for both projects is available at http://github.com/adamsomers.
Here is a preview of our work with the Leap Motion controller. In the same spirit as our support for Microsoft Kinect, we have encoded true gesture support, not just mouse emulation, for the creation of interactive applications by non-programmers. The goal is to hide complexity from designers using IntuiFace Presentation (IP). Through the use of IP’s trigger/action syntax, designers simply select a gesture as a trigger - Swipe Left, Swipe Right, Point, etc. - and associate that gesture with an action like “turn the page” or “rotate the carousel”. As you can see in this video, it works quite well. :-) We will offer Leap support as soon as it ships.
The Leap Motion experience at SXSW 2013
One app I really like is Adam Somer's AirHarp, featured in the video clip below: AirHarp is the result of a weekend hacking session with a Leap Motion dev board. Leap Motion is a highly precise and responsive motion tracking device, making it a perfect tool for expressive musical interactions. AirHarp is being developed in C++ using my audio processing toolkit, MusKit. The source code for both projects is available at http://github.com/adamsomers.
Here is a preview of our work with the Leap Motion controller. In the same spirit as our support for Microsoft Kinect, we have encoded true gesture support, not just mouse emulation, for the creation of interactive applications by non-programmers. The goal is to hide complexity from designers using IntuiFace Presentation (IP). Through the use of IP’s trigger/action syntax, designers simply select a gesture as a trigger - Swipe Left, Swipe Right, Point, etc. - and associate that gesture with an action like “turn the page” or “rotate the carousel”. As you can see in this video, it works quite well. :-) We will offer Leap support as soon as it ships.
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