Leap Motion’s innovative gesture control technology lets you command your computer by waving your hands like you just don’t care, but the only way to partake in the finger-waggling action was to plop ...
I’ve spent about two days with the Leap Motion Controller, a Kinect-like PC accessory that uses infrared sensors to translate the motions of your hands into input for applications. The device I ...
Upon receiving the $80 little box, the packaging makes a good first impression. Inside the box you’ll find Leap Motion controller itself, and two USB cables (a shorter one and a longer one: usable ...
Imagine being able to control your computer and manipulate on-screen objects not with a mouse, keyboard or even your voice, but with a wave of your hand. Now meet what makes it possible: the Leap ...
While the venerable computer mouse pre-dates many of its users, the simplistic two-dimensional pointing device still remains the de facto method for translating input from users to computers. In the ...
Modern smartphones have helped shed a light on the power of user interfaces that are driven by gesture and touch. It’s increasingly clear that touch will play a prominent role in the future of ...
The Leap Motion releases today, promising to change the way we interact with the personal computer. It delivers on that promise, but change could mean for better or worse. On which side of the ...
Steven Spielberg’s 2002 production Minority Report was a pretty good movie. Its artistic worth, however, is nothing compared to its enduring significance as a convenient touchstone for anyone who’s ...
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