TED
fellow Jinha Lee has been working on the SpaceTop 3D desktop in
collaboration with Microsoft.
Allowing
people to interact with machines in the same way they do with solid
objects could make computing much more intuitive, he told the BBC.
He
can see the system coming into general use within a decade.
The
system consists of a transparent LED display with built-in cameras,
which track the user's gestures and eye movements.
The
design was inspired by what he sees as a human need to interact with
things.
"Spatial
memory, where the body intuitively remembers where things are, is a
very human skill," he said.
Translating
this to the digital world will enable people to use computers more
easily as well as complete more complex tasks.
"If
you are working on a document you can pick it up and flip through it
like a book," he told the BBC.
For
more precise tasks, where hand gestures are not accurate, there is a
touchpad. It will allow, for example architects to manipulate 3Dmodels.
"The
gap between what the designer thinks and what the computer can do is
huge. If you can put your hands inside the computer and handle
digital content you can express ideas more completely," he said.
Not
everyone is convinced by the Minority Report-style future that will
see us interact with machine via touch.
In
an interview with The Awl website designer
Christian Brown said: "Human hands and fingers are good at
feeling texture and detail, and good at gripping things - neither of
which touch interfaces take advantage of.
"The
real future of interfaces will take advantage of our natural
abilities to tell the difference between textures, to use our hands
to do things without looking at them."
Mr
Lee, a graduate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, is
currently serving his military obligation in South Korea at Samsung
Electronics, where he is working on TV interfaces.
At
TED, which stands for Technology, Education and Design, he also
demonstrated other projects he is working on, including ZeroN, a
floating ball, which can literally be placed in midair.
It
utilises electromagnetism to stay afloat and when coupled with
software can be used for a variety of applications.
"It
could be used in schools," said Mr Lee.
"If
kids are learning about planetary movement they can pick up a model
of a planet and place it in orbit. That is tangible and makes the
learning experience so much more powerful."
He
is also working on an augmented reality shopping app, which combined
with a virtual reality handset would allow users to try on items such
as watches from online shops.
For
Mr Lee the ultimate goal is to unite the digital and physical worlds.
"I
don't want to look back on my life and find that I have just been
typing on a keyboard," he said.
"It
is one of our key human skills to be able to interact with 3D spaces
and I wanted to let people do the same with digital content."
Computers
are becoming more user-friendly as the gap between the real world and
technology closes.
"With
the first computers there was a huge gap but that gap is getting
smaller with things such as touchscreens," he said.
"The
only boundary left is our imagination."
Source:
bbc.co.uk
Bathroom
renovation?? Need some help? Just visit Bathmaster
0 comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.