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Touch-based Handhelds Turned Inside Out
Posted by
CowboyNeal
on Friday October 12, @02:27AM
from the good-touch-bad-touch dept.
from the good-touch-bad-touch dept.
holy_calamity writes "Mitsubishi and Microsoft have made a prototype PSP-like handheld operated using a touch interface on the back
— the idea is to give a firmer hold, prevent obscuring the screen and
allow greater accuracy than the iPhone and others. The users fingers
are shown as shadows on the screen so they can see what they're doing,
making the device look transparent. As a video shows, it's far from market ready, but the design principle seems sound."
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Playing to the market
(Score:3, Interesting)(http://home.primus.ca/~ronsharp/tororg.html)
Re:
(Score:3, Insightful)Re:Mod parent down. Well-known religious bigot.
(Score:2, Funny)Re:Mod parent down. Well-known religious bigot.
(Score:2)Oh, so you'd mod Hitler up if he posted here?
Hear that everyone? ukemike would mod Hitler up even though he killed 6 million people following the Jewish faith [ushmm.org].
Your parents would be proud, I'm sure. By all means, continue to positively moderate destructive leaders of hate groups. Let logic rule you like a robot and ignore all emotion. Being human is overrated in your opinion, apparently.
Re:Mod parent down. Well-known religious bigot.
(Score:2)Re:Mod parent down. Well-known religious bigot.
(Score:2, Funny)Re:Mod parent down. Well-known religious bigot.
(Score:4, Funny)(http://home.primus.ca/~ronsharp/tororg.html)
Re:Mod parent down. Well-known religious bigot.
(Score:2, Insightful)Re:Mod parent down. Complete idiot.
(Score:2)Re:Mod parent down. Complete idiot.
(Score:2)Re:Mod parent down. Complete idiot.
(Score:2)*clicks AndroidCat's homepage link to try to get some idea of what you're on about*
Scientology.
nevermind. Let me know when your "religion" stops charging huge piles of cash for enlightenment, why don't you?
Re:Mod parent down. Complete idiot.
(Score:2)But as far as most people are concerned... It's not the religious beliefs themselves that are a problem (it's no worse than most), it's the organization.
Re:Mod parent down. Complete idiot.
(Score:2)The organization in question here has previously been accused of assigning members to hound those it considers to be unfriendly to itself, both legally and, as in this case, socially. I'd also heard they more or less stopped doing it years ago, but oh well.
I personally suggest android cat make a copy of this thread to use in any legal matters they may need to take (such as a restraining order) at a later date.
Re:Mod parent down. Complete Scientology
(Score:2)A restraining order against an anonymous coward on Slashdot? Heh. Almost always, the people assigned to these sorts of duties are doing an "ammends project" to be allowed back "onlines" with the Cthurch of Scientology. They seem to get picked for the nasty jobs because (a) they're deniable as working for Scientology, (b) they're frequently judgment-proof because they have no assets or they're so dubious in sanity that no one would believe any liable and no damages could be proven. (There's also the danger that Scientology would help out in the legal fight in order to make it as time-consuming and expensive for a critic as possible. "The purpose of a lawsuit is to harass", in the words of L. Ron Hubbard.)
It's not worth my time because I can do more to help expose the organization in an hour of working on my media references page [primus.ca] than wasting months in court.
It's no accident that he Godwin'ed himself immediately. When Scientology starts flinging poo at anyone who dares criticize the "most ethical organization on the planet" (their words), they always reach for Hitler and the Nazis first: Germany [cnn.com] (which is why Cruise had recent troubles there), psychologists and psychiatrists [canada.com], newspapers [lermanet.com], journalists [thesun.co.uk], Germany again [solitarytrees.net] (Bringing your kids along to a Nazi uniformed protest is weird by anyone's standard yes?), and probably a lot more. It's no wonder that some people occasionally fling it back, where it seems to sit better (and when the poo sits...):
Re:"Godwin" -- the last cry of religious bigots.
(Score:2)Re:Playing to the market
(Score:2, Funny)Re:
(Score:3, Funny)Layne
Because...
(Score:2, Insightful)Only con I can think of is being
Re:
(Score:3, Interesting)Re:
(Score:2)Re:
(Score:2, Interesting)I understand what you're saying about the fact that eventually you can just "know" where different points are on the control scheme, and I guess that's true to an extent. I just think t
Re:Because...
(Score:1)Re:
(Score:2)Re:Because...
(Score:2)Seriously. Palms and fingertips don't sweat or contain oil glands. It's only by touching your face, nose, or other parts of your body that oils begin to accumulate on the fingertips.
And you might going to the bathroom and washing your hands after you eat.
Re:Because...
(Score:2)Anyway, when can we get "thought macro" controlled devices? We already wired up monkeys, rats, humans to control devices by thought. Now lets come up with something that can be safe for long term that achieves something similar.
Re:Because...
(Score:2)Re:Because...
(Score:2)Re:Because...
(Score:2)Layne
Re:Because...
(Score:1)Fingers and hands are both covered in skin, therefore they sweat.
Re:Because...
(Score:1)Re:Because...
(Score:2)Re:Because...
(Score:2)"That is... FUCKING GENIOUS"
I have a Nintendo DS, and one of the things I note about it frequently is that it is hard for me to use the touch screen because of having to put my fingers there, and how close I have to have my eyes to the screen to see. At least in my case, that would make such things useful for me.
they
Even a normal person, not having their hands not block part of the screen when using it, should be nice.
Re:Because...
(Score:2)Re:Because...
(Score:2)That's why it shows finger silhouettes, not just dots for fingertips.
Good idea but...
(Score:5, Insightful)While this looks like a great idea and all, I can't help but wonder how this will translate into smaller mobile devices. Something thie size of the iPhone (just to pick a random example ;) doesn't
really have space for two hands. If you pick up your own mobile phone
and drag your fingers around the back of it, you'll find it a bit more
cumbersome than holding your phone in the palm of your hand and
touching the front of the device.
That said, this could be an important development for tablet PC's. From my perspective, it seems tablets suffer from a lack of keyboard input. Sure you can plug in a keyboard, but that kinda defeats the purpose. This looks like it could be the solution to that problem.
Go these guys!
Re:Good idea but...
(Score:2)Single handed operation wasn't quite as comfortable, but it involved cupping the device in a vertical fashion holding it with my thumb and middle finger on the sides and using my index finger to point. It wasn't quite as "natural", but it wasn't impossible, either.
Layne
typing
(Score:5, Interesting)(http://cs.byuh.edu/~andrew | Last Journal: Friday October 12, @01:12AM)
But the webcam on the back is great. I love it. It's like headgear for handhelds. Want to be the master of geekiness? Look no further my friend: the handheld that neither fits in your hand NOR your pocket! Useless you say? Yes, but it's cool!!
Re:
(Score:2)I bet the only reason there is no products on the market like this is because of patents.
Re:typing
(Score:2)The buttons would need to have enough resistance so that they can support the weight of the device without registering accidental presses.
Re:typing
(Score:2)Re:typing
(Score:2)I have one of those - and yes, I can write with it (it does still work, which isn't bad for a twenty-year-old hand held device). Some people used to be pretty fast with them. With modern technology it could be made pretty small and light (the 1980s version is a bit of a brick. But I don't think it's the answer to the problem. I prefer handwriting recognition, which these days is getting pretty good - and we're not that far from talk-to-text being usably effective on handheld devices.
Re:typing
(Score:1)The GKOS Sixback [gkos.com] is similar to what you describe. Their version actually goes a step further, and puts a two-button trackpoint mouse under your thumbs.
Re:typing
(Score:2)Typing would be quite difficult, especially since the lay out of the keyboard would be different, and the fact that different fingers would have to take turns holding the device up.
Another thing - why is this under "Slashdot games"? This technology is definitely not limited to games.
Re:typing
(Score:2)Re:typing
(Score:2)Re:typing
(Score:1)So you either learn to type all over again or use all ten fingers and drop it
Microsoft reinventing what Apple have already invented and then implementing it badly
Re:typing
(Score:2)Re:typing
(Score:1)and it does seem that Microsoft are shouting about a technology that is not yet usable (with the camera) and claim it is the technology that is holding it back
Re:typing
(Score:1, Troll)Apple puts the touchscreen on the front, MS on the back. Which one ist more intuitive?
Apple puts the help on Apple-?, MS on F1.
So, a touchscreen at the back of the device only makes sense if your design of the GUI is horribly wrong.
Aaam wait
Ahh, makes sense after all.
Bye egghat.
Apple patent
(Score:2, Interesting)In any case, I don't see this going anywhere; it
Re:Apple patent
(Score:4, Insightful)(http://www.last.fm/)
I don't know about the Apple patent but I'd be happy to see a technology like this make it into handheld devices where screen space is limited and dragging hands or fingers constantly over your workspace is less then optimal.
Re:Apple patent
(Score:2)Re:Apple patent
(Score:1)Re:
(Score:2)touch AND pressure sensitive
(Score:2)Re:touch AND pressure sensitive
(Score:2)Re:touch AND pressure sensitive
(Score:2)Re:touch AND pressure sensitive
(Score:2)Or perhaps use 'where are the fingers at' as a visual cue/aid to help your accuracy, but that operating the device wouldn't depend on it.
MS still copying apple
(Score:4, Informative)http://www.macrumors.com/2007/05/10/patent-multisided-and-touch-screen-ipod/ [macrumors.com]
and the actual patent
http://appft1.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO2&Sect2=HITOFF&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsearch-bool.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&co1=AND&d=PG01&s1=20070103454&OS=20070103454&RS=20070103454 [uspto.gov]
Re:
(Score:2)Re:
(Score:3, Insightful)The basic idea is so obvious, even I came up with it few times when holding a touchscreen portable ("hmmm if the touch was o
Re:MS still copying apple
(Score:2)I call lemming law on you, oh mac fanboi!
Re:MS still copying apple
(Score:4, Insightful)The Apple device doesn't do anything like that.
Bill
Re:
(Score:3, Informative)...[snip]...
Publications:
Wigdor, D.
Don't know how they'll get it to be a slim device
(Score:3, Insightful)(Last Journal: Sunday October 17 2004, @03:33AM)
Re:Don't know how they'll get it to be a slim devi
(Score:2)Re:Don't know how they'll get it to be a slim devi
(Score:2)Re:Don't know how they'll get it to be a slim devi
(Score:2)The field of view for the cameras can easily be widened with a simple fish eye lens.
Bill
Re:Don't know how they'll get it to be a slim devi
(Score:1)This looks promising
(Score:5, Funny)Polka hero
(Score:2)Interesting idea but...
(Score:3, Funny)(http://www.crazysquirrel.com/index.jspx)
Re:Interesting idea but...
(Score:2)Re:Interesting idea but...
(Score:1)If the front and back..
(Score:1)Re:
(Score:3, Insightful)On that note, how do you hold it when you are actively using it? Telekineticly hover it between your hands so that they aren't touching? Or more realistically, very carefully balance it on your thumbs? I can't come up with a way to hold the thing as demons
Palms man,,
(Score:5, Interesting)(http://www.last.fm/)
Really? Try it
(Score:2)Have you tried holding a device the size of a PDA or iPhone between two palms?
For the size of device the researchers are using, it's fine. Both the thickness and the separation due to the large screen allow for comfortable holding with the palms of either hand.
But try holding an iPhone or PDA between both hands using only your palms. The device slips all over because the edge is not wide enough to preset a good grip. You could possibly solve this with better coatings or flared edges, but the remaining problem is much harder to overcome - your fingers are simply too close to touch the back of the device comfortably.
The idea as presented is really cool and unique, but I think is locked into a form factor of the size presented in terms of screen space just for that reason (need to be able to keep fingers from both hands from crossing). That size (UMPC/small tablet) has typically not done well in the market...
For the niche uses of tablets that remain, this is probably a much better input mechanism.
Re:Really? Try it
(Score:2)Controls on the back...
(Score:2)When I read the blurb, I immediately thought of this:
http://www.commodore-gravel.com/gravel/Homepage.aspx [commodore-gravel.com]
http://www.commodore-gravel.com/gravel/Products/Gravel+in+Pocket.aspx [commodore-gravel.com] -- Commodore media player, controls on back.
I don't know how novel it would be to just put a 3" trackpad behind a 3" LCD and use it as a pointing device. You might even be able to do this as a 'garage project' with off the shelf stuff for cheap.
Anyhow, touch interfaces "on both sides" are probably on the way to ubiquity.
Re:If the front and back..
(Score:2)I can seem to hold my guitar just fine while tapping strings with my left hand even without the belt. And my guitar isn't one of the lightest ones... So I don't see any problem here.
In fact you can try with CD container. Hold it between your palms and drum it with your fingers :)
Re:If the front and back..
(Score:2)And the researchers are talking about using the light blocking properties of your fingers to track 'fat finger movement' or some similar idea. Which means they haven't done any real homework. I don't know a lot about this stuff, and for what's on the market right now it sounds like these guys have a neat idea, but are going about it in a most amateur way.
Haven't people been using IR sensors for touch in tables [touchtable.com] and the like since the mid-90s? (maybe not these guys, but I remember reading the tech has been around for that long)
Re:Worthy of a Patent
(Score:2)Re:That sorta looks like...
(Score:2)What about pens?
(Score:1)Re:What about pens?
(Score:2)That's quite different from a touch interface where you finger must obscure the thing you are aiming at.
Re:What about pens?
(Score:1)1) I cannot stand pens that smear.
2) What I've written is obscured, but the space that I intend to write into is not.
But really, since when has the obstruction of the paper/touchscreen ever been an issue? In addition to dead trees, I use a Dell x50v handheld. I use it a _lot_. I've never felt that I'm obscuring the screen with my nice fat Ph.D stylus. I place it where I want to write/drag/whatever, and remove it when I'm done. I can operate the thing with my fat ugly fingers as well.
clamshell, keyboard, trackball, please
(Score:2)The only things I want from a mobile device's physical interface are: Clamshell format, a full QWERTY (or preferably Dvorak) matrix/block keyboard (with the keys exactly under one another), and a pointing trackball-style device. A touchscreen with a stylus is an optional advantage, as well as an interface for easy scrolling (and if the device is x86, in which case I will surely change the OS, it should have three mouse buttons as well, left, middle, and right, as the middle button is useful in GNU/Linux). My HTC Universal PDA offers a clamshell design, has a QWERTY matrix/block keyboard, and a touchscreen, but no pointing device and no scrolling interface, but I still prefer it over any kind of touch-only interface. No real buttons, no buy for me.
What's with all the touch screens lately?
(Score:2)Other pages disagree
(Score:2)Decent idea but...
(Score:2)Neuromancer Already
(Score:2)Now we're finally stepping off the old "see your fingers" path, and into a future where the eye/hand feedback is mediated by the machine.
When this new device ships with a 3D network dogfight game, we'll have arrived.
Touch Feedback
(Score:2)The problem with those bumps is that they are hard to make optically transparent, or to mount on a graphic display at all without being counterproductively distracting. But if they're on the back of the device, the optical problems disappear (pun intended
What this device is actually pulling off is also making the display act like a small volume that can be interactively manipulated from front and back. Just as our 3D vision is mostly constrained to fairly close objects in a relatively narrow field and an extremely short height, this device could bring real 3D manipulation into our reach (pun intended
Giant Synatics on the back
(Score:2)Have it divided into 'key-like' segments that conduct uniformly, but have a unique 'keyboard' mode?
HP put out a PDA for a short time that had a super high-res, mini trackpad on it. There were little nubs to define "buttons" for Home, Calendar, etc. Move these nubs to the back of the device, define a home row, and implement a 'soft keyboard' button?
You'd effectively be holding a mini-Optimus keyboard with one giant LCD vs. lots of mini OLEDs, and with a re-configurable layout?
Why? Why?
Toshiba even had a Synaptics trackpad in some of their high-end laptop models that had a mini monochrome LCD under the translucent surface of the trackpad.
Make the back out of ePaper with a synaptics-type conductive layer behind it.. Put a color LCD on the front, and do it now!
Also, why mess with a camera? Because of Apple's patent on a video/display device? Hooey. That idea died when Engelbart still had brown hair.
Re:Ooops ?
(Score:1)Original and interesting
(Score:1)What a piece of $#17
(Score:1)interactive goat.cx
(Score:1)Is it just me?
(Score:1)But it will work backwards! I mean, upside-down!
(Score:1)Wait, wait, that's wrong. If you turn it upside down you'll be touching the front of the screen instead of the back. The orientation will be correct, but you won't be able to see the screen, unless they can make the electronics transparent. To select objects, instead of pushing down, you'll have to push up, I mean lift down, I mean pull your finger away from the screen.
And what happens if you rotate it ninety degrees? Clockwise?
Or counterclockwise, if you're in the southern hemisphere?
Note, smiley below
----->
Stop!
(Score:1)FINALLY!
(Score:1)Daniel Wigdor
(Score:1)I'm quite excited to read this article, as Daniel Wigdor was one of my instructors in first-year Engineering Science at the University of Toronto about 4 years ago. He taught me CSC181, which was the advanced option of the first-year computer-science course. Back then he was working with developing a system for cell-phones where you could type text by wobbling the cell-phone aroud in your hand instead of pressing keys.
I'm really glad to see his research going well, it seems he's doing very well for himself =)
Aikon-
From the late, great MERL.
(Score:1)hands
(Score:1)you hear me jeff han?
Good so far...
(Score:1)Thanks for telling me how to think as always,
Clearly this isn't "ready for prime time" yet, but I like the idea. Just think - if the PSP did this, you could blow through menus without even repositioning your hands or even interrupting button presses. On the DS it's so annoying when a game is made for "press a few buttons, dig out the stylus, tap something, put it away, press more buttons, take out the stylus..." etc. I also had a problem with occlusion playing Ouendan / Elite Beat Agents on DS - you get a fraction of a second to hit a marker that shows up anywhere on screen, but if you're not holding the pen at the top, your fingers will block the screen and you'll miss unless you've memorized the level beforehand.