What Will Apple Do With Swedish Eye-Tracking Technology? 170
andylim writes "An article on recombu.com explores the possibility that Apple is gearing up to launch eye-tracking technology soon. Citing a patent filed in 2008 that mentions 'gaze vectors' and a recent purchase of units from a Swedish eye-tracking company, the author suggests that the inclusion of eye-tracking tech in the company's forthcoming tablet would be Jobs's magnum opus. 'What better flourish to a career that began with the popularization of windows, icons, mouse and pointer than to usurp them all?'"
the Eye-pod? (Score:5, Funny)
Too soon?
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Too soon?
iConcur
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My eyes are up here!
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Eye-tracking tech could be incorporated in places where you want to see what people really are looking at.
I imagine that the "nature film" industry would be interested to figure out how to maximize their outcome.
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Not only too soon but too expensive.
Tobii (the Swedish company in question) has products that start at $7500 bucks per unit.
http://www.tobii.com/corporate/eye_tracking/our_technology.aspx [tobii.com]
Further, all of their devices require custom installations.
http://www.tobii.com/market_research_usability/products_services/eye_tracking_hardware/tobii_x120_eye_tracker.aspx [tobii.com]
Although they claim it works with eyeglasses in the real world that does not work due to the narrow range of tints and prescriptions that can be handled
Shall we buy these gadgets at Eye-Kea? (Score:4, Funny)
Eye-eye, sir!
Swedish Eye-Tracking (Score:4, Funny)
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Eye tracking has been used for useability studies for quite some time. http://www.useit.com/alertbox/ [useit.com]
don't woosh me, bro...
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Give me my computer glasses? (Score:3, Insightful)
Though with multi-touch coming these days you could have multiple mouse icons and use eye movement and mouse movement on the same computer or instead eliminate the mouse and never have to take your hands off the keyboard to navigate (yes some of us use computers for more than porn).
Just my $0.02
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wired to a set of LCD glasses
Are you still young enough to focus on things less than an inch from your eye? I suggest that you actually try it. You'll probably be surprised that you can't. This technology would have been here a decade ago if there was a mass market for it. There isn't.
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Then you could navigate with voice commands, gestures and eye movements.
Psssh. That's nothing new. New Yorkers have been navigating that way for decades.
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Certainly you wouldn't use it while driving, and even walking might take some practice. But if you're not moving, having the display on glasses is a huge improvement over both laptops and phone displays.
Nobody can, but my understanding is that they can create an image that appears clearly even though you aren't directly focused on it.
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But of course people would.
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I don't think he gets it (Score:5, Insightful)
'What better flourish to a career that began with the popularisation of windows, icons, mouse and pointer than to usurp them all?'"
Eye tracking technology doesn't usurp ANY of that. If anything, eyetracking technology makes windows and icons more useful, since those are designed to hold your attention for the short span that you need them.
And don't think that this technology would ever replace the mouse. You need a mouse for gaming, amongst many things. One such annoying technology around today is rollover ads. Our eyes often make tiny glances at colours and items that grab our attention.
Point is, they aren't changing the existing system, merely adding onto it.
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And don't think that this technology would ever replace the mouse. You need a mouse for gaming, amongst many things
But touch screens are, in some markets. And aren't there better input devices for gaming? Accelerometers work pretty well for some things.
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No, no they don't. Accelerometers don't work well for anything gaming related.
Re:I don't think he gets it (Score:4, Insightful)
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Absolutes and ignorance are not a good mix. There are plenty of iPhone and Wii games that make very effective use of accelerometers.
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'One such annoying technology around today is rollover ads. Our eyes often make tiny glances at colours and items that grab our attention.
Maybe they plan to take AdSense to the next level. You can now set ad billing based on how long someone is actually looking at an ad.
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And don't think that this technology would ever replace the mouse.
You never played Doom did you? I believe the quote was that no one would use a mouse because using the keyboard is so much better. Games adapt to the input devices available to them, and the mouse, at some point will be history. Don't say never. It's never true. :-)
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I don't disagree the mouse will disappear, just that Eye-tracking won't be the thing to do it. I believe Multi-touch will be, go google some of Jeff Hans videos (or look it up on TED.com) and you will see some amazing applicatons he's made with Touch Screens, or even sophistaced smart boards and projection techniques using relatively affordable hardware.
I just watched this [ted.com] and I agree - even the keyboard will probably be phased out once accurate Touch screen technology gets better amongst the big players. T
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I think ultimately by the time I reach 80, some of the tech in Minority Report should be existant.
Hell, most of it is here now. Unless you're in your 70s, I'd expect it to be obsolete by the time you're 80.
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Those screens are great, but they depend on having an IR camera pointed at the whole back of the screen, which means that they aren't getting thin very fast.
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You don't HAVE to touch the same surface you are seeing though.
You can have a touch sensative surface and the image projected onto a monitor, same way you don't look at your mouse or keyboard when you type, you intuitively use a touch interface.
It removes the need for a keyboard, and allows you to make customizable keyboards, for lefthanded people (numpad on the left side) or people who prefer DVORAK (lol) - without the purchase of additional hardware.
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I just had a terrible thought... (Score:2)
They're going to have flashy, blinkey, animated ads that follow your eye movements, making sure you can't take your eyes off of them without looking away from the screen.
I hope the make it so you can shut the eye tracking down. As to the mouse, I can see an eye-controlled cursor in the future. I, for one, would be happy to have the mouse replaced; I get "mouse elbow" if I'm at the computer too long.
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Yes but the mouse does offer some things that an eye-controlled cursor would not, for example, if I'm playing Duke Nukem Forever and I want to be able to turn left (usually just moving my mouse left) WHILE looking at my health (bottom right of the screen).
But I could easily see a look and blink interface replacing the mouse for simple things like Web Browsing. But if I'm working on a spreadsheet, I need to be able to objectively look at the entire entire table. If I want to highlight the entire table, I don
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Well, yes, different applications require different input devices. I wish word application developers would realize this; in word processors you're primarily using the keyboard. In a spreadsheet you're primarily using the numeric keypad. In a game or drawing program you're using the mouse. I get "mouse elbow" from moving my right hand back and forth from the mouse to the keyboard. I wish they'd make better use of the function keys; with many apps, F1 is the only function key that does anything. I also wish
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Exactly, if nothing else this becomes an accessibility option for people who can't use traditional devices. There are numerous conditions that would prevent people from using a mouse and/or keyboard, where accurate useable eyetracking could help out a lot. As a father of two boys with Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy, anything that can help them remain interactive longer is great.
2 meanings of "eye tracking" (Score:1)
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You need a mouse for gaming, amongst many things.
Because obviously there are no games that don't require a mouse.
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*Roll my eyes*
(Pun intended)
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Point is, they aren't changing the existing system, merely adding onto it.
Right, I think I've posted here before wishing for a system that allows you to switch window focus with eye tracking - especially useful in a multi-monitor setup (I always get hosed up with that).
But $7500 gear isn't the way to do this. Stereo cheap-ass CMOS 'webcam' sensors on the sides of the monitor and a whole bunch of GPU number crunching should do the work just fine (and also get us video conferencing where you can look at the
Two words: (Score:1)
Bikini Team.
Not Apple-like (Score:3, Insightful)
That has never stopped them (Score:2, Informative)
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Not tons, but the OP didn't claim that.
There were tons of digital media players that used high capacity microdrives rather than the then low capacity flash drives.
"Less space than a nomad" - I thought there were pre-existing mp3 players that had the same capacity or more?
And of course toms of phones that were connected to app stores and music not controlled by the telco.
I'm not sure how controlled by Apple is any better, especially when you can only download from that store, where as every other platform yo
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I just like the rant someone posted on Huff Post, complaining how Apple's going on and on about how they invented the tablet computer and then he was complaining how expensive it is and how his HP tablet is much better value for the money.
Dude! Apple hasn't announced jack shit, other than they couldn't see a way to make a sub $500 computer that was up to their standards. And that was 2 years ago.
Another innovation of course (Score:1, Funny)
Eye-tracking is a tricky subject (Score:5, Interesting)
There are two main problems with eye tracking. First, your eyes are always moving. Second, they’re attracted to motion.
Eye tracking, done correctly, would have to avoid both of these pitfalls. It would be possible, but tricky. It would have to differentiate between the constant motion of your eyes and deliberate motions that you wanted to make, or at least not be adversely affected by all of their unconscious movements. It would also need to avoid causing movement or changes on the screen that would draw your attention away from what you intended to look at.
For instance, if a normal cursor was displayed at the detected position of your gaze, it would (A) obscure, (B) distract, and (C) float irritatingly away from your gaze if its positioning was even slightly miscalibrated.
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the size of each cell would be in proportion to the time spent gazing at it... and as cell size increases different components/layers of information for each cell becomes visible
So basically, a glorified Dock (zoom the focus)...
or the Ribbon (drill-down the selection)...
Although in theory that sounds neat and useful, in practice it might just end up being annoying. It’s hard to say. It hasn’t really been a highlight of either the Dock or the Ribbon.
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To respond to your second point, and to agree with it...
SQUIRREL!
(If you don't get it, see the movie "Up!")
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Where?!
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Man, I HATE squirrels!
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"Clicking" could be done by blinking twice, or blinking slowly.
Calibration could be fine-tuned on-the-fly by assuming the user is looking at the center of buttons or links he's "clicking" (for ones with large hit areas, it could skip adjustment). I wouldn't be surprised if this idea were patented already, given that it's obvious.
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I wouldn't be surprised if this idea were patented already, given that it's obvious.
Given that it’s obvious, it can’t be patented... not that this would stop anyone.
Even so, the concept of the mouse pointer would have to be completely rethought. Anything opaque would be in the way, and anything transparent would gradually fade away [ggpht.com]... a pulsating glow might work, but there would be a fine line between noticeable and annoying.
Just see it off by a little bit... (Score:2, Funny)
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It would be possible, but tricky.
Maybe they could hire back some of the control hysteresis experts they fired from the ATG group before writing OSX. System 7 really got these things right.
Why not autofocus applications (Score:2, Interesting)
You know what I've always wanted? (Score:5, Insightful)
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I don't see how it would fix that (for most anyway) when if anything it's more likely to mess up as your eyes end up distracted elsewhere, anyone that can touch type won't necessarily be staring at the box as they type, and anyone that can't will be staring at the keys.
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Re:You know what I've always wanted? (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, clearly something stole the focus and changed your font to retarded.
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Mind if I steal this and use it elsewhere on the site?
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You *always* look at the text box while you're typing?
Man, my text would be flying all over the place with that setup. IM pops up, I keep typing in Word while I read the IM, suddenly I'm confusing my friend with big words and my dissertation contains the phrase "'sup bud?"
The answer is obvious, really... (Score:5, Funny)
I mean, what else would you do with Swedish Eye-Tracking technology? Track Swedish Eyes, obviously...
augmented reality? (Score:2)
apple + tablet + eye tracking = !(kindle) (Score:2, Interesting)
They're going to build an ebook reader app for their rumored tablet to kill the kindle & dominate the market. as Ramanujan once said for a famous one line proof, "Behold."
Videoconferencing (Score:4, Insightful)
A "gaze vector" is exactly the kind of information software would need to "correct" the illusion, to make it seem like the subject does have eye contact. I bet Apple is going to incorporate eye contact correction tech for videoconferencing in its products.
Hardware solution patented too...by Apple (Score:4, Interesting)
There was a story some time ago about Apple patenting small, "hidden" in the screen cameras as a means of correcting eye contact issue that exists currently in videoconferences.
Which really strikes me as another example of why patent system is badly broken in the US. Even I toyed some time ago with an idea of using small sensor / optical arrangement that minimizes size of the "camera", visible obstruction, so it can be placed in front of the screen without being too irritating. Hiding it between the pixels of LCD screen, when you have good enough manufacturing, seems to be just...a straightforward progression.
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Hiding it between the pixels of LCD screen, when you have good enough manufacturing, seems to be
just...a straightforward progression.
Well, yeah, if you over-simplify any given proposal ("Make a camera small enough to fit between the pixels on a screen!") anything can seem like a straightforward progression. "Once a CPU is powerful enough, making an android is a straightforward progression!"
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optics axial correction? (Score:2)
Can't you solve this just with an optics dealigned wrt the camera CCD?
This is the way used, for instance, to get buildings straight while they are imaged from a point where obviously the perspetive would deform them entierely...
I think it is called 'axial correction' or something alike in ordinary photo, see for instance http://www.mir.com.my/rb/photography/hardwares/classics/olympusom1n2/shared/zuiko/htmls/35mmSHIFT.htm [mir.com.my] , by the middle of the page you get impressive examples...
(of course this is an hardwar
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You can correct perspective with a shift lens -- that is, you can keep parallel lines from converging. But it doesn't change the angle of observation; since the camera is still not in-line with a person's face they still won't be looking into the captured image.
Hm. Their eyetrackers are not that good. (Score:5, Interesting)
Full disclosure: I am a vision researcher who has worked with most of the available eyetracking systems on the market.
I had not heard of the company, and a quick look at their product line tells me why not: their standalone systems are limited to 60hz/120hz depending on the model - this was good several years ago, but has been considerably eclipsed by other companies' designs (e.g. S-R Research's Eyelink hardware, which happily does 2000hz monocular tracking). It looks on par with ASL's Eye-trac gear, which has similar limitations.
I would bet that Apple just bought a few of their systems to use in internal testing - I sincerely doubt that anyone there is using such slow gear for major research.
Canon A2E/EOS 5 (Score:2)
I guess you could say it would be... (Score:2, Funny)
insensitive clods! (Score:2, Insightful)
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well, I'm sure the person with a lame hand will find it a boon.
Get that pointer out of the way!! (Score:1)
Aggro phone? (Score:2)
What the fuck are YOU looking at?
Damn! Steve Jobs marketing tactic seems to. . . (Score:2)
So these days, in order for Steve Jobs to to market effectively, he needs to. . .
1. Sit down and really think before jumping.
2. Repackage old technology with sensible user interfaces and thus change the world.
3. Do nothing new for a few years.
4. Announce nothing.
5. Let the world speculate with wet-dream anticipation until it infects even a decidedly biased anti-Mac forum like Slashdot.
6. Do nothing.
7. Do more nothing.
8. Release some more old technology with a sensible user interface and make everybody orgas
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Maybe if your definition of pod-people means non-technologists, or even technologists who stick within a realm of expertise.
The "sensible user interface" of your post is what allows people to see what the technology can do; those people who don't have the time and/or inclination to spend so much time with technology that could be made to do something cool if you first (a) figured out what that is and (b) made it a reality.
What took phones so long? If the iPhone simply represents a "sensible user interface"
A Better Auto-scroll... (Score:2)
This interface will make me disabled. (Score:2)
I have nystagmus [wikipedia.org], which means that my eyes constantly wiggle though I perceive an unmoving image. I bet that an onscreen pointer calculated by my gaze vector would be in constant motion and therefore unusable or at least very difficult for me.
I say this not in complaint, merely in observation. I'm sure this won't be adopted in the near future, and who knows if it will catch on once it's developed? But as someone who never before had to concern himself with being physically able to access things, it is an
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Everybody's eyes wiggle. Yours just wiggle more than most. It's why nobody who's done serious research on the subject expects eye tracking to replace the mouse.
it's too soon, BUT (Score:2)
Just that a. Apple doesn't really know how to do it right (they may have an idea, but will fail), and the hardware is still not there...
Oh, great, just what we need... (Score:2)
A purchase of UNITS? (Score:2)
eye tracking enables a 3D desktop (Score:2)
I'm sure we all remember this demonstration from a couple of years ago using Wiimote hacking:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jd3-eiid-Uw [youtube.com]
Get rid of the clunky IR hardware, track eye movement directly, and you've got the kind of potential for desktop sexiness that only The Steve could bring us.
Jobs' career didn't start or end with WIMP (Score:2)
Jobs' was selling personal computers for 6-7 years before WIMP, for 5-6 years before the IBM PC. And since WIMP the object-oriented NeXT tools were used by Tim Berners-Lee to create the World Wide Web, and there was this thing called the iPod which had a whole generation named after it. And after that came a multitouch phone you might have heard of, with both an iPod and a Mac in it. Jobs doesn't need to look for a follow-up to bringing WIMP to consumers.
And the Apple tablet doesn't need eye-tracking to be
There may be privacy issues (Score:2)
Even if the technology is perfected, there are some interesting privacy issues. People don't have complete conscious control of their eyes, and where someone looks at an image can reveal information that they might wish kept private. Are you looking at the cute girl in the picture- or the cute guy? Are you looking at the image of the fancy car - maybe you should get a targeted add. Related technology may be able to read something about your facial expression.
I'm not necessarily opposed to the technology, bu
I can see the benefits of this (Score:2)
I can see this being useful in addition to a mouse/trackpad. Quite often I'll be working with a lot of windows or clickable content on the screen and I can look at the widget I want to click on faster than I can get my cursor over to it. I'd want to be able to turn it off quickly though.
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Have a sense of humor, mods. That's a decent pun playing off the Apple trolls.
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Or you wrote it and you're STILL the only person that thought it funny.
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Or you wrote it and you're STILL the only person that thought it funny.
Well, you might have a point if the post I replied to were an AC post. Hey, you're posting as AC... maybe I'm replying to myself!
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