The Mouse Vanishes 292
countertrolling sends in a clip from Wired that begins "...researchers at MIT have found a method to let users click and scroll exactly the same way they would with a computer mouse, without the device actually being there. Cup your palm, move it around on a table and a cursor on the screen hovers. Tap on the table like you would click a real mouse, and the computer responds. It's one step beyond cordless. It's an invisible mouse. The project, called 'Mouseless,' uses an infrared laser beam and camera to track the movements of the palm and fingers and translate them into computer commands... A working prototype of the Mouseless system costs approximately $20 to build, says Pranav Mistry, who is leading the project."
Re:Interesting applications (Score:5, Informative)
You mean like the Minority Report interface. Well, guess what, Spielbergs science advisor for the movie, John Underkoffler of MIT's Media Lab actually further developed the idea.
The current state of technology is best seen in his practical presentation [youtube.com].
There is also an article about it [singularityhub.com].
The interesting thing is (besides the tech being real), that they also extended the concept of a network, so all the displays are connected by real space. But checkout the links yourself.
Re:Ergonomics hell. (Score:3, Informative)
Ah, I see, so humanity must have suffered constant foot pain before the last few centuries of shoe design.
There is actually some good evidence emerging that suggests shoes do a lot of harm to our posture and weaken the feet in general. Barefoot running, for example, is booming because once you develop the muscles that have been left unused for so long, injury rates plummet compared to standard running shoes.
The jarring heel-toe motion that cushy shoes promote is downright bad for your body.