TI Plans Minority Report UI Using ARM SoC + Projector 72
siliconbits writes "Texas Instruments wants to deliver a Minority Report-like user interface by combining its just-announced OMAP 5 platform, which is based on two Cortex A15 cores, with one of its own DLP pico projectors and a camera. The US semiconductor giant wants to pioneer the use of so-called next generation natural user interfaces by adding hardware support for stereoscopic 3D, gesturing including proximity sensor and interactive projection. This is reminiscent of the SixthSense, a wearable device invented by Pranav Mistry, which was demoed back in March 2009 by the then-PhD student of MIT's Media Lab Fluid Interfaces Group at TED."
Why? (Score:1)
What's this obsession with Minority Report interfaces? They really don't look very ergonomic to me - I'd imagine all kind of law suits if people had to use these on a regular basis. Just because it's been in a (shitty) sci-fi film doesn't mean it's a great idea.
If you're going to make tech based on popular films you should really start with the Hoverboard and Mr Fussion first. Once you've got those sorted then you can make dumb arse UIs.
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one word : (Score:2)
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They also make using a computer more difficult for those with disabilities. Thats why I will never own a console.
I'd love to know what happened to all those neural interface devices that were supposed to come out a few years back. The OCZ one was a $300 waste of time.
Was the technology just abandoned?
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For the small number of patients so thoroughly paralyzed that any of the minimal-motion input mechanisms are impractical, they are still quite useful; but being stuck as a "medical device" that is only really relevant to a small number of seriously impaired patients is not a recipe for high speed development and
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Just because it's been in a (shitty) sci-fi film doesn't mean it's a great idea.
If you're going to make tech based on popular films you should really start with the Hoverboard and Mr Fussion first. Once you've got those sorted then you can make dumb arse UIs.
Forget that, my vote is either Cherry2000 (speaking of dumb UIs) or "Weird Science" (apparently robot UIs had improved by that movie)
Anything to get Americans to exercise (Score:2)
Just don't make it mobile. People look stupid enough with bluetooth head sets as it is.
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Bad design (Score:2)
Musicians are privy to a
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You can even assign different actions depending on what you moved your wrist for a fine control of something or your entire arm, etc.
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For ages I've been wondering why processor power has increased many times over but input devices have hardly changed at all.
Because for general purpose computer use, a keyboard and mouse are hard to beat.
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As for user interfaces, Starcraft players seem to manage very many actions per second.
So the challenge is to create a user interface that's friendly and usable to "noobs" but also able to augment pros/experts to their limits.
Most recent UIs seem to emphasize friendly and usable to "new users", but they neglect the case where some of those new users don't mind taking the trouble to learn to do things very very mu
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If someone really came up with better input devices, the pro computer gamers would be using them. As for user interfaces, Starcraft players seem to manage very many actions per second. So the challenge is to create a user interface that's friendly and usable to "noobs" but also able to augment pros/experts to their limits. Most recent UIs seem to emphasize friendly and usable to "new users", but they neglect the case where some of those new users don't mind taking the trouble to learn to do things very very much faster.
current games are designed around KB mouse input, the kinect stuff is programmed to take advantage of the hardware. give it time.
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Kinect adds a lag of about 200-250 milliseconds:
http://www.anandtech.com/print/4057 [anandtech.com]
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MF9b5UiVq-Q [youtube.com]
That's fine for casual use, crap for the pros.
You can react faster than kinect - just watch the video and move your hand up/down when the person in the video does it. You can do it before Kinect does.
If you were playing an FPS using a kinect against someone who was using a low lag controller, many times you would already be "dead" before kinect recognized your action.
As for work, whe
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So the challenge is to create a user interface that's friendly and usable to "noobs" but also able to augment pros/experts to their limits.
Why's that the challenge? Make one that's powerful for experts, and those worthy will adapt.
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For ages I've been wondering why processor power has increased many times over but input devices have hardly changed at all.
Apparently not many "ages", or your idea of an age is like my idea of a long coffee break.
Dectapes, punchcards, and a "programmers console" forever!
So.... (Score:3)
They're going to do the same as a Kinect, but for more expensive?
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And they'll sue people who try to write homebrew apps for it, like they do to owners of their calculators.
Oh good! (Score:5, Interesting)
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holding my hands up in the air and wildly waving my arms around. That would be a huge improvement.
Yeah, but just think of the benefits: if you walked down the street wildly waving your arms around ten years ago people thought you were a lunatic, if you do it ten years from now people will think you're a poser with the latest Apple iThing.
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I still get this with bluetooth headsets. See someone walking alone down the street arguing with them self for a few minutes. That little blue LED really needs to stay on during use instead of blink so we can more quickly identify the real schizophrenics.
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I still get this with bluetooth headsets. See someone walking alone down the street arguing with them self for a few minutes. That little blue LED really needs to stay on during use instead of blink so we can more quickly identify the real schizophrenics.
I'm not sure I get this - do all schizophrenics have blinking blue lights, or is it just you?
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You can do that now with touch screens (and have been able to for several decades). Adding a camera and projector into the mix really doesn't change anything except, maybe, make it cheaper.
This would be interesting if it was portable/wearable and allowed you to project an interface and screen on any convenient surface. Using it "Minority Report" style is pure Hollywood BS.
All this "next generation user interface" crap is just the new Virtual Reality. Until we get direct neural interfacing the mouse and keyb
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Cheaper is what you need. And removable. There's a reason nearly ever classroom at my university has a projector and screen rather than just replacing the chalkboard with a massive LCD monitor....
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>>>I've been too comfortable, sitting in a big desk chair all day, hardly moving a mouse a few inches
Precisely. My arms already hurt just imagining waving them around all day in my office. I prefer the current interface where I just lay my arm on the table, and barely move at all except to adjust the mouse & click. NON-labor rather than wearing myself-out like a factory worker doing repetitive motions.
Wrong, just wrong, and everyone always does it! (Score:1)
Minority Report was NOT a camera-based gesture recognition interface!
There is a control glove! 2 of them!
Every single time someone does this, it is always gesture-based camera systems and they completely forgot the hand-piece!
Quit that shit already and go back and see it.
Here, better yet, the video of the exact scene.
Minority Report viewscreen [youtube.com]
Someone e-mail EVERYONE, EVER.
Gesture-based recognition systems are terrible, they really are. They have absolutely no precision, at all.
I wish people would get away
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Not just the Italians. The Fuckyoutonians were very successful with theirs, too, to the point that it's been adopted by most major languages on Earth. Of course, their language only has one word...
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Every gesture system has failed.
That's because of a failure of haptics and resolution. It's not because the concept is invalid.
If you can create a system that actuates a virtual button right where it appears to be to the user, within a fraction of a millimeter, within a few milliseconds, it will work.
But you won't get that with the current stuff. Too slow and too chunky for anything other than demos.
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Try the following: Stand up. Stick your right hand out in front of you at shoulder level with your arm fully extended. Hold that pose for five minutes.
Now, reconsider your opinion of the validity of gesture interfaces.
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When do you ever lean on a key on your keyboard for five minutes?
I can't imagine any activity that requires such an act.
Oh, and FYI, I can probably do that with a 5-lb weight in my hand. But that's me.
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Ouch! (Score:2)
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>>>You must be a real tiger in the sack...
That's why man invented vibrators - so he wouldn't have to work as hard. Also dishwashers, laundry machines, self-cleaning ovens, .....
This is for WHAT exactly? (Score:3)
Sure, sure, not enough foresight but it still feels like a solution in search of a problem. Anything that impairs a person from using a computer will probably be an expensive enough procedure that they would have assistants anyway except for a car mechanic and even then, what would the benefit be over, say, voice recognition or designing rugged, water-proof and washable interface hardware?
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Repetitive stress injuries in... (Score:5, Funny)
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Will this interface also enforce a thirty minute rest period after every thirty seconds of "activity"?
Great (Score:2)
pfft, I want EFC (Score:2)
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I want the Lexx. And several of the crew...
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Ah, c'mon! (Score:2)
Gesture interfaces are all about looking cool and getting babes.
Medical uses (Score:2)
This makes sense in the medical sector.
Who wouldn't want a 3D holographic representation of their patient in real time to rotate, zoom and pan?
This in the cubicle (Score:2)
Yep, this'll really fly. Just wait till those cuties from graphics with their iMacs get sight of this. They'll be wanting the same, just to be like me.
Er, usability? (Score:2)
I don't know about you, but while I thought the Minority Report UI was *cool*, it would SUCK to work with. Enter text? Copy? Paste?
You basically can't sit at a desk, you'd have to stand so as to wave your arms about.
On the plus side, we couldn't all be stuffed into our little veal-fattening pens, there simply wouldn't be enough room.
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Enter text? Copy? Paste?
Text? You mean like "typing"? How quaint!
Why can't I just speak and have it enter the text? Why am I pounding away on this technology from the 1800s?
I say what I want. When I want to adjust it, the text of what I said will appear and I can select it and move it around as necessary.
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Dictation software has been around for about 15 years, so that's still an option for you. Here's why I'm not using it:
Stop Griping (Score:5, Insightful)
I fucking hate the typical cubicle set up. It makes my lower back hurt after 5 hours. My shoulders constantly ache from being crouched over a tiny POS keyboard. My right hand is significantly fatigued by the end of the day, whereas my left elbow is killing me from leaning my weight on it constantly. Sitting on my ass all day puts enough pressure on my prostate (okay, I have a bony ass) that I wonder if it might have negative effects on the libido. Squinting at monitors that blast my face with bright white backgrounds all day makes me hate the color white.
When it comes down to it, the typical cubie setup is a completely shit arrangement to be stuck in for 8 hours on end. So to fix it, we have to get up every hour and stretch or walk about for 5 minutes. We pay for massages and chiropractic adjustments to fix our strained backs. And don't even get me started on the amount of tension we hold in our jaws. What TI is proposing, here, is an interface that could let you stand up for a period, then sit down for a period. It could use an 'on-screen,' split keyboard for when you need to type in info. It would be capable of projecting onto a cubicle wall, so I wouldn't be tethered to a monitor on a desktop. It will be clunky and a PITA for the first generation or two, but give it some time and some prototypes and we could really be working our way towards a useful engineering interface that frees us from the ergonomic hell that is the cubicle lifestyle. Personally I'd like to see more research go into this field.
I know a lot of engineers that wet themselves when they watched the first Iron Man where Tony Stark designs an exoskeleton using a 3-D holographic touch interface. That was damn cool and you know it. If projects like the one TI is proposing get us closer to that kind of modeling interface little by little, I'm all for it. Bring it on TI!
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(Long story about poor management as the cause of poor ergonomics in the workspace) ... What TI is proposing, here, is an interface ...
(Long list of interesting technical possibilities)
Bring it on TI!
The problem is you (probably) don't work for TI, you work for the guys who simply don't care if they destroy your body. And a new technological way to do it, is just going to be a new technological way to destroy your body.
Your management will simply force you to wear extra heavy boxing gloves on your upraised hands. Maybe tie your work metrics to how many times you lift a weight using your back instead of your legs (yes I am well aware that is "wrong"). Maybe to make it sense you better, your boss will
Dammit! Other films did this too (Score:2)
Boring questions: Has anyone seen it? (Score:2)
I don't care at all about the interface.
OMAP 5 is scheduled for release in the second half of 2011. Has anyone seen one of these in action? Not minority report whatever, just dual A15 cores running anything?
And is this the first product to reach even early production with an A15 core or cores? Is there any A15 presence around other than this? I see NVidia is planning something, but it's still vapour, right?