Eye-controlled Laptop Presented At CeBit 43
siliconbits writes "Microsoft is rumoured to be one of their partners; maybe they'll built it in the next Kinect. 'Computer manufacturer Lenovo has partnered with Swedish startup Tobii Technology to launch the world's first eye-controlled laptop, which will be on display as from today at CeBIT in Hannover.'"
Indeed (Score:3)
Cool interface. (Score:4, Insightful)
It seems the most innovative thing is not the actual eye-tracking, but coming up with an interface that is actually useful, and not just "the mouse follows your eye", which as the guy rightly says would be really annoying.
Does anyone know how the tech works? It looks like you can see two infra-red emitters in the sensor area...
Re: (Score:2)
That's from a different, albeit shorter article. That being said, I can't confirm it from Tobii's actual website.
here's the link, just in case. [reghardware.com]
http://www.tobii.com/en/eye-tracking-integration/global/ [slashdot.org]">and of course, Tobii themselves.
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You usually generate a "heat map" of where the user is focusing, then tweak your layout/visual cues so that the test users find that their eyes are "guided" naturally around your layout. Turning that into a UI that would be attractive to somebody with a functioning lower body, though, is an interesting challenge...
Hmmph (Score:5, Funny)
Silly idea (rolls eyes) dsf(^*7w35487z wait, what happened?
Tobii a startup? (Score:2)
Tobii is not necessarily considered a startup. It's been around for a while now and has been selling eye tracking solutions to the scientific community. Hopefully the 'general market' will drive prices down on these suckers though. 8k for what is basically a 120fps camera is a bit much. Where I work, we do gaze and eye tracking with a single IR camera.
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Yeah. Tobii has been shipping some really sweet tablet communication devices for people with disabilities with eye tracking for a couple years now. I've played with a few of them and they work pretty well (though operating Windows with it is tiring).
The price tag on that eye-tracker add-on is jaw-dropping. I'm hoping that this tech can go mainstream, making it come down in price to make it more available to people with special needs who need it.
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this was an interesting reading, but I hope you understand that you will get downmodded since you are terribly off topic
No tooltips please! (Score:2)
I find that extremely annoying, even nowadays using the mouse, so I guess trying to read those pages using this tech will be next to impossible.
Please get rid of it, just like the infamous blinking text
The most important use of this technology: (Score:1)
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First Person Shooter games just got much, much easier. Maybe now I'll be able to k
*Maybe now I'll be able to kill people in Counter-Strike.
no this can be big for people with disability's to (Score:2)
no this can be big for people with disability's to be able to use laptops and more
Re: (Score:1)
whoosh!
Exclusionary? (Score:1)
What about the fairly large portion of the population that suffers from strabismus [wikipedia.org]?
How well can this tech work if the eyes are not only not-aligned, but that their degree of misalignment changes from hour to hour?
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I'm assuming a decent algorithm could compensate for this. After all, you really only need information from one eye to track eye movement. So the user chooses which eye they want tracked, and the computer tracks that eye and ignores the other.
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Tobii's devices have a really quick calibration process. If you find your eye convergence changes as you fatigue, it's easy to just recalibrate once in a while to adjust.
wouldnt work (Score:1)
the cursor would get in the way of any porn.
although, it would stop those stupid mouse over ads, just never look at them!
OS Wars (Score:2)
Adds a new meaning to... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
So, "Don't Blink"
You don't want to anyway, the weeping angels will get you.
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Can we get focus-follows-eyes? (Score:3)
I've wanted a "focus follows eyes" option for a long time. The place where I think I'm typing is usually what I'm looking at, which doesn't correspond to where my mouse is (for focus-follows-mouse), and occasionally (rarely) I'll forget to click the right place for click-to-focus
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what if you hold a button to track with your eyes?
As someone with mounting RSI problems, who has tried everything short of surgery, this will be a godsend if it is available within 5 years.
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Good point... maybe something to detect rapid eye movements to the keyboard and filter out the in-between points if such a rapid movement occurs (and just staying at the last area of the screen that was looked at before the rapid movement).
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Interesting. It wouldn't be very helpful for me because my use case is when I accidentally start typing thinking it's going to go where I'm looking. I can see the annoyance of focus always following eyes though... maybe it only switches when you type? Anyways, that's what options/settings are for... the really interesting part would be the technology to achieve any of these.
About damned time (Score:1)
Now, if they can only devise a less intrusive way to do subvocal recognition [wikipedia.org], UI's will be able to practically read our minds.
In the future (Score:1)
It's a trap!! (Score:2)
- Oh, really? (opens her new laptop, pulls up her Facebook profile picture, and a pic of Christina Hendricks at an award show, displays them on the left and right sides of the monitor. sits him in front of it.) OK, now stare at my picture ONLY for one full minute.(looks at her watch.) Aaaannnd GO!
(Two minutes later...)
- (picking his clothes up off the sidwalk) That wasn't frickin' fair! Can't we talk about this?
- And you can t
Startup? They have been around for 10 years! (Score:3)
Tobii is THE leader and defacto industry standard in eye tracking, they have offices in 4 countries. Other equipment requires that they keep their head still, with a Tobii, after a single calibration and a participant can not only move their head around, they can get out of the chair, come back, and keep on going.
Of course their research equipment goes for >$30,000. I know an HCI person who just happened to take some tracking equipment home at his last day of a bankrupt .com startup... No one will ever miss it!
Obscure uses only (Score:2)
I don't believe in eye tracking as a replacement for the mouse.
Using a mouse, I don't have to stare at the mouse pointer or the target. I can make quick glances at where the pointer and the target is, and then my brain can do the "computations" in the background that allow me to use my hand to move the mouse pointer to the target and do the action I want. This is called proprioception. The brain is trained to use the mouse as an extension of my arm.