Wearing a Computer at Work 92
Roland Piquepaille writes "The European Union has funded an ambitious project related to wearable technology. The project, named WearIT@work, will end in one year and invested funds are expected to exceed 23 million euros. The goal is to replace traditional interfaces, such as screen, keyboard or computer unit, by speech control or gesture control without modifying the applications. This wearable system is currently being tested in four different fields including aircraft maintenance, emergency response, car production and healthcare."
While this might be badass... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
However on a serious note, it seems to me that other than than the point blank screens these appear to be pretty safe. They're are apparently made for use in some pretty electronics hostile environments (the upper atmosphere) which I would assume they ar
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
In a lot of the applications listed, it wouldn't be relevant.
Underground mine rescuers already use equipment like BG4s [draeger.com], gas detectors, leaky feeder radios and more. Being able to combine the current half-dozen displays into a single HUD would be a godsend.
There's nothing like dangling from a belay in pitch darkness with an armfull of gear, and having your SCBA's fault alarm go off,
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
There are a lot of "futuristic" things we can do today, people just don't want to pay for them.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm not trying to slam you nor am I trolling -- this is a serious question. How often do you have to move your mouse hand back and forth between keyboard and mouse, and do you take that time into account in your evaluation of "quick and effective"?
I absolutely agree that there are applications for which a mouse can't be beat. I'm know people that use other interface devices say the same about those, for the appropriate app. I can't agree more abo
Re:While this might be badass... (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
PDAs and Smart Phones (Score:1)
Why should the EU be funding research for the corporate world?
Read Rainbows End! (Vernor Vinge) (Score:5, Insightful)
He's a math & computer science professor, and writes technically savvy sci-fi that wins Hugo awards.
Just one example: give people the ability to invisibly send and read text messages, and you get something that looks just like Mental Telepathy. And this is just the surface! What if those invisible gestures and heads-up display contact lenses also let you Google something almost as fast and effortlessly as you can say the word? And for you nay-sayers, search existed before Google -- why did Google make things so much better? Research existed before the web & web search, why did the web make things so much better? Because if you cross certain thresholds in speed and accessibility, the quantitative difference becomes qualitative! Once searching for something becomes as easy as saying it, the very concept of *knowing* something changes. (Books already take us part way there. I "know" how to build a compiler. But if I couldn't reach for my copy of the "Dragon Book" I'd be awful lost!)
Re: (Score:1)
Just one example: give people the ability to invisibly send and read text messages, and you get something that looks just like Mental Telepathy.
Which won't do anything a blackberry (or high end cell phone) does already except kill you when it goes off while you're driving (and no, you won't remember to turn the thing off every time you're in the car).
And this is just the surface!
Well hopefully as seems absurdly pointless so far.
What if those invisible gestures and heads-up display contact lenses also let you Google something almost as fast and effortlessly as you can say the word?
Have you ever googled anything? It doesn't matter if I can search as fast as I can say it, it still take me 200 times as long to parse the results as to say the query. If the query is complex it can take much longer, sometimes requiring multiple quer
Re: (Score:2)
Being able to instantly satisfy curiosity instantly and effortlessly is what Google is about. That can be idle, or that can be a great time saver for research.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Vinge also talks about this in Rainbows End. His main character notes that there are lots of kids who can instantly access information, but many of them seem to be unable to demonstrate a deep understandin
Re: (Score:2)
The general problem is that right now the result is not a shallow understanding but rather an
Re: (Score:2)
Ah, another one who *thinks* he's clever but posts before thinking ahead one or two steps. It's different for one key reason: they can't see you using it, so you can use it in *any* conversation - This means that you can conspire in ways that a blackberry won't allow you.
Have you ever googled anything
Re: (Score:1, Troll)
Re: (Score:2)
Insults? You got me started at: "Well hopefully as seems absurdly pointless so far." I just hate it when people try to paint their lack of imagination and inability to make connections as some sort of stupidity on my part. (see below)
You're a small minded nit wit who thinks that because google is the hot shit right now everything must in turn directly tie to it
Uh, no. Google is just a concrete example I can use to talk about a whole c
Re: (Score:2)
I actually I find it amusing that you weren
Re: (Score:2)
I'll answer you here rather than your original as I was going to pick up the same point with you. Although I wasn't going to insult you the same way as the other guy who comes off as some sort of troll.
Although it is a small change from what we have now, it has large social implications (rather than technological ones), which is what Vinge was get
Re: (Score:1)
Re: What's another word for thesaurus? (Score:2)
--
What's another word for thesaurus?
Re: (Score:2)
Did it? I've seen less scientific progress in the last decade than in the decades before the web.
Re: (Score:2)
Did it? I've seen less scientific progress in the last decade than in the decades before the web.
Re: (Score:2)
Computer science/engineering in particular have made very little progress over the last decade; most of what is touted as progress now is research results from the 70's and 80's finally being implemented, combined with faster machines. That has had a lot of impact on daily life, but research has stagnated.
As for biology, there has been an explosion of new data, but little in terms of fundamentally new
Re: (Score:2)
True, but the way the implementation is going, and the dissemination of technology know-how is what I'm talking about. The ease with which I can cobble-together pieces of software technology is truly amaz
Re: (Score:1)
This would be true if what one receives in response to ones query is valid information and not the noise on gets in response to search q
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Somebody somewhere decided that Science Doesn't Happen if a gov't isn't engaged in it. Then they tried to sell that idea to everybody else and used stem cell research to "prove it". They were, unfortunately, very successful.
A close corollary is the idea that Charity Doesn't Happen if it doesn't come from a gov't. Such an idea is what people use to "prove" that European countries give more than the US in international charity.
Re: (Score:1)
Put simply - it shouldn't. The EU isn't capable of administering this kind of project and the money is typically wasted. I was the lead technical architect for a similar EU project that delivered jack shit in the end in spite of my best efforts. About 10-15 million euros spent on that one. The majority of the money spent on "project managers" and "business analysts" who were in fact neither.
Imagine a _very_ expensive restaurant in Venice with
mmm tumors (Score:1)
it's ironic isn't it, how the MIT girl who did this same thing, sans functionality, was arrested on the terrorist hoax device clause.
Re: (Score:1)
and the MIT girl was arrested because she's a social handycap who can't answer a simple question. honestly what tard doesn't realise that walking into an airport with an unknown object glued to your chest doesn't warrant questions? if she had of just said "Oh this is just some funky thing on my shirt, here see?" she'd had no problems.
Maybe I'll accept it when... (Score:5, Funny)
Gestures, eh? (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Gestures, eh? (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Just a | dream? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Speech recognition is the recognition of words and sentences. Voice recognition is the recognition of who's voice it is.
We can rebuild him, (Score:1)
why? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:why? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes. And US history shows that they are correct: most high tech companies and inventions start out as university research; the private sector merely commercializes it.
Without lots of government funding, there would be no hightech industry.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
More Piquepaille? (Score:1, Insightful)
US Security (Score:2, Redundant)
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
Seriously, get a life.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Intern:"And this button I rigged to pop my trunk. And this one I have fire-up my mp3 player wired to a 500GBHD mounted in the floor. This one turns the ignition."
Me: "Very cool dude. And you will never show this to any woman whose pants you might remotely want to get into."
[no pun on "remotely"]
Re: (Score:1)
The Douglas Adams Prediction (Score:1, Funny)
Interesting that airport maintenance is mentioned, (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Interesting that airport maintenance is mention (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Sure we'll have a bunch of dead people in airports for a few years, but it is a small price for the
The holders of the @Home and @Work trademark... (Score:2)
Who did buy them anyways? Comcast? it's a hard name to google.
Re: (Score:2)
too funny (Score:1)
I can't believe it hasn't been said yet... (Score:1)
23 million euros? That's like what, $100M? (Score:2)
Why do we have to keep doing this? (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to have a touchscreen monitor and it was fun to touch the screen to scroll and 'click' on web links by literally touching them but holding your arms out in front of you for any period of time is not easy. I had a tablet PC and holding it, even casually while walking around doing inventory with it and a barcode scanner, was a huge PITA. (Ha--"A" could stand for "arm" in this case.) Looking at the tablet-holding guy brought back all the bad memories: all the fun of walking around with a clipboard, but it's five pounds or so instead of a few ounces. Yeah. Super. Sign me up.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
If you take a closer look at the project goals you'll see that there are areas of work where computers (Desktop, PDA, Smartphone,etc.) are more hindering than helpful in their current form because you need your hands to work.
When your work consists of typing at the keyboard and pushing mice then there is no need to wear a computer. If you need your hands for o
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
To inflict awkward equipment on innoncent users?
A major drawback of wearable computing is interference with manual tasks along with damage to the wearable equipment.
The aircraft maintenance world (one of their target groups) is under great pressure to have portable data access and easy-to-use test equipment. Networked maintainers can produce the data management want much quicker if they do it on the spot.
A rugged notebook (REALLY rugged) works well
Snow Crash (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Love it
Old ..., but evolving .... (Score:2)
Telemaintenance (I think) post ~1996 becomes the wearable wireless computer diagnostic tool-set for telemaintence.
http://www.media.mit.edu/ [mit.edu]
http://www.media.mit.edu/wearables/mithril/ [mit.edu]
http://www.cacr.caltech.edu/ [caltech.edu]
http://e-science.caltech.edu/ [caltech.edu]
I am an old guy
In ~1996 (I think, I remember) the telemaintenance acronym APES [
Tecktonik (Score:2)
The goal is to replace traditional interfaces [...] by speech control or gesture control without modifying the applications.
If you can administrate your company's infrastructure by performing Tecktonik [youtube.com] dance moves then count me in!
I guess we'd call this ... (Score:2)
seriously though, this might work for office apps or web browsing or whatnot, but until neural interfaces surface, I can't see anything replacing the keyboard for programming or command-line interface tasks.
European tax-payers' money at work (Score:2)