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At one point during a “Minority Report” style demonstration the system froze for a moment, but it recovered fairly quickly and appeared to work smoothly after that.
Underkoffler is co-founder and CEO of Oblong, which is designing commercial versions of a similar computer interface you saw in "Minority Report." ...
At the big-think, big-demo TED conference in Long Beach last week, MIT Media Lab alumnus John Underkoffler demonstrated a real working version of the memorable grab-it-and-throw-it computer ...
NEWS ANALYSIS: The computer user interface as seen in the movie "Minority Report"—the ultimate in collaborative environments—is available now, actually, from a company called Oblong Industries.
So despite an interesting approach, it looks as if eigengestures may have only limited use in developing the next generation of Minority Report-style interfaces.
If you've ever watched "Minority Report" and wished that you could interact with your computer just by waving your hands around, then you might want to take a look at the Leap. It's a tiny little ...
Mid-2012, Leap Motion unveiled the most accurate motion sensing technology on the market to date. The Leap detects every subtle finger flick and hand gesture with up to 1/100 th of a millimeter ...
The movie Minority Report features one of the most discussed and influential user interfaces ever shown on the silver screen. Using a pair of special gloves, Tom Cruise's character can navigate and ...
In this video, Robert Scoble visits the lab at Oblong Industries to get a tour of next-generation gesture-based computer interfaces. John Underkoffler, chief scientist, Oblong Industries, was the tech ...
"Jeff Han demonstrates his intuitive, "interface-free," touch-driven computer screen. Working all but alone from his hardware-strewn office, Jeff Han is about to change the face of computing. Not ...
Prepare to be amazed. A group of visionaries has created a real-world, working version of the big-screen gestural interface that nerds everywhere drooled over in the 2002 Tom Cruise film.
We'll Have "Minority Report" Human-Computer Interactions in 5 Years Motion and gesture tracking is predicted to grow by 280 percent.