$5 Sensor Turns LCD Monitors Into Touchscreens 98
An anonymous reader writes with this snippet from ExtremeTech: "Researchers at the University of Washington's aptly named Ubiquitous Computing Lab can turn any LCD monitor in your house into a touchscreen, with nothing more than a $5 sensor that plugs into the wall and some clever software." The system works by measuring changes that your hand creates in the electromagnetic signature of the monitor. Surprisingly, it offers some pretty fine-grained detection, too: "full-hand touch, five-finger touch, hovering above the screen, pushing, and pulling." The "$5 sensor" part is mostly theoretical for now to those of us who don't live in a lab, though; on the other hand, "co-author Sidhant Gupta tells Technology Review that the $5 sensor uses off-the-shelf parts, and the algorithms are included in the paper, so it would be fairly easy for you — or a commercial entity — to recreate the uTouch system."
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
No but it does come with uncomfortable silences.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:i prefer (Score:5, Funny)
I just touched my 27 inch LCD monitor and it was a bad experience. The screen looked like it deformed and pushing liquid to the side. Plus it left a greasy fingerprint. I wouldn't buy this thing for $5 or 5 cents.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
I can see it being useful though it shouldn't be the primary means of input. I'd not say that it doesn't belong on the desktop but I'd say that it is not the best method for long term data input and data manipulation. An example where this could be valuable would be someone walking over to your computer and wanting to show you something to ask you a question. They could reach out, "grab" something, and drag it to another area of the screen for example. So, in a limited example where you sometimes have more
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I think some people just have oily skin. I can wash my hands like a surgeon but if I touch a glass 15 minutes later ... greasy fingerprint.
Re: (Score:2)
You should get the device. It'll help you practice for that mythical future when a woman might allow you to 'touch' her.
chance for microsoft (Score:4, Interesting)
Because otherwise nobody would pay extra for a touch screen PC with Windows 8
Re: (Score:3)
Because otherwise nobody would pay extra for a touch screen PC with Windows 8
Actually you are quite right and the product may be very practical for monitors or even HD TV's that don't have touch/gesture capability. The problem I have had with all touch screens is actually the finger marks left on them and for larger screen monitors cleaning becomes an annoyance. A friend of mine recently purchased a Samsung 15.6 in notebook and no surprises it came with MS Windows 8, however this notebook does not have a touch screen and using the display with a mouse IMHO is odd since the main disp
It's good to know (Score:1)
They looked at all options before selling touchscreens for massive amounts of money. Oh wait...
Re: (Score:3)
The resolution of this is actually pretty low, it can detect gestures and proximity but the authors say not enough accuracy to type an email. Of course, being able to do some basic gestures for $5 sounds like a pretty neat hack, especially considering they've posted their COTs parts and algorithms.
Re: (Score:2)
The LCD monitor will make a lousy touchscreen (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not really designed to have your finger smashing against it. It better have a hard surface.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Some of things can be responsive to having a finger mashed against them and not sustain damage, even if they are soft and unprotected with a hard shell.
Just ask your girlfriend.
Re:The LCD monitor will make a lousy touchscreen (Score:5, Funny)
Some of things can be responsive to having a finger mashed against them and not sustain damage, even if they are soft and unprotected with a hard shell.
Just ask your girlfriend.
Think again about where you're posting this.
Re: (Score:2)
Maybe the guy has access to a prototype RealDoll with a voice recognition and AI module.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
There are LCD monitors with a hard surface. I'm using one right now.
Very Cool (Score:2)
why not? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
But if you don't mind having buttons on it, check this out:
http://www.u-hid.com/home/index.php [u-hid.com]
Looks great. I just googled it based on seeing your comment and lo and behold, it does exist.
Two words (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Gorilla Arm ...
Well, more ...
Why people still believe that desktop computers are good as a touch device? That makes no sense for me, specially because the ugly fingerprints hehe. I love to *work* on my dual head desktop because the speed of keyboard and big resolution. If I have to use a touch device, it's not for work and not on a desktop, really.
Anyway, nice research, I have to say.
The first thing that popped into my head was more effective TV controls. Standard IR remotes can only do so much (being low power, needing hard/durable buttons, etc) and are great for vol-up/dn or pause/play, but if there were a way to do some of the more complex interaction on screen it would make the experience overall a lot better (at least until the TV can just know what i am thinking about watching). I use a variety of media devices and being able to just tap on the content i want to see, or type out
Re: (Score:2)
why do you need a TV control? You already have a smartphone.
Re: (Score:2)
What if I don't want information about my television habits inadvertantly leaking into other parts of my life?
Easy: just use software you can trust on your smartphone.
Re: (Score:1)
That makes no sense for me, specially because the ugly fingerprints hehe..
"full-hand touch, five-finger touch, hovering above the screen, pushing, and pulling."
The part that intrigues me is that it can be used in a touchless manner. This has excellent potential for cheap kiosks, LCD windows, etc.
My question is: they appear to be giving away the information for free... so is it patented?
Re: (Score:2)
First to file - go for it! Maybe they haven't filed any paperwork yet.
Re: (Score:2)
Stop spreading this shit, you idiot.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I recall a student from, I believe Texas A&M (not sure at all) that designed what sounds to be like a very similar device. I think I came across the video from something he had listed on Kickstarter... or maybe it was a TED video... I really can't remember.
Point is, this has already been done before.
Re: (Score:1)
A monitor that can incline about 70 or 80 degrees would make it a lot easier to use as a touch screen.
Re: (Score:1)
My large monitor is at the back of the desk, and I can't even reach it without leaning over the keyboard, which would make for an enormously awkward touchscreen. I also hate having any fingerprints or smudges on my screen. I also hat having a screen that doubles as a mirror. I also hate gorilla arm. (And I helped develop a touchscreen-based point-of-sale system, so I have plenty of experience with them, so my dislike of them is not based on a lack of experience.)
Re: (Score:2)
I don't know. When I use my tablet with keyboard in class I don't have a mouse, I just touch a screen location and continue on. It actually feels very natural. It takes a little getting used to again to use a mouse with my laptop. I mean, what's more intuitive that pointing at where you want to go?
Now, sometimes I want a mouse for certain tasks, like navigating around in apps or games, but having more options available is always awesome. Even better would be a 3-D touch display with Kinect on a tablet with
Touch screen or big button? (Score:3)
Re: (Score:1)
Don't know but I can imagine hw manufacturers adding some kind of sensitivity multipliers or other cheap hardware to a flatscreen's elecrical feed during construction to do detailed proximity analysis, thus doing away with a proper touchscreen altogether.
Re:Touch screen or big button? (Score:4, Informative)
Fun fact though, they've used the same technology to monitor the fields generated by the lights in a room, so you can actually gain a picture of movement in the room based off of only the flux in the lights' power draws. Again, this is very low resolution, but you don't always need every system to be high res.
Re: (Score:2)
Being able to get good info from changes in light bulbs, for instance, means among other things a great boost for doing some interesting surveillance. Spike a building with a few of the sensors, see where people are; combine that with the short-wave stuff we have, a few other off-the-shelf items, one could gain a complete "picture" of the interior. This could help in hostage situations I imagine. Or big brother.
These Ubiqitous Computing Lab folks and others are doing some fascinating work. True geeks.
Re: (Score:2)
This is NOT a REAL touchscreen (Score:1)
This only detects 5 gestures and is not a full touch screen where it detects touches at different parts of the screen...
It can still be usefully for some applications but it is not a replacement for a touchscreen...
Battery (Score:2)
Espionage? (Score:1)
Backwards (Score:2)
I won't buy one of these until it PAYS me $5 every time I touch it. I really have no desire to touch my monitor.
Re: (Score:2)
Cost (Score:4, Informative)
Cost (Score:2, Funny)
Good bomb trigger (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Making two bombs with the same equipment is too many traceable parts as well as testing your bombs in an area that can be tied to yourself.
That's what I have learned from watching television. I haven't any real desire to build bombs. As a kid we used to make explosives and I don't think it was illegal then. These days even those soda bottle, aluminum foil, and toilet bowl cleaner "bombs" are considered illegal. Now that I am an adult and the laws have changed - I can buy fireworks. However, as a kid I'd hav
Gorilla arm is bad! (Score:2, Insightful)
This is bad, who wants gorilla arm from using their monitor? Monitors weren't designed to be touch interfaces for very good reasons. Unless your at a kiosk or a tablet, it's just not practical to use your arms that way. Leave gorilla arm to the 800 pound gorilla that is Steve Ballmer and Microsoft.
Re: (Score:2)
As you said, kiosk...conference rooms, presentations, monitors embedded in a desk, designer-style monitor stands (the low, bent ones that let you look at the monitor from overhead), to quickly check your emails in the morning without sitting down...
Basically, to recycle older monitors and give them new purpose, or any situation where touch would be nice, but you wouldnt be willing to pay more than 10 bucks for it. There's a lot of these scenarios.
Re: (Score:3)
It has just dawned on me why - most of you people use an actual mouse. I use a trackball.
When I see "mouse" in instructions or in these discussions I subconciously translate to "trackball" for my own situation. But here the difference really matters. With a flick of my thumb I can spin my trackball and move across the screen much faster and with far less effort than
Re: (Score:2)
Clearly, your mental conception of "mouse" hasn't changed from the offerings of the 90s optical wheel with rolling ball kind. The kind that required picking the mouse up, and repositioning it (several times) to get across the desktop.
You can turn a modern optical mouse's sensitivity up to the point where a simple twitch of the wrist is able to achieve this same result. I know, because I set the sensitivity up that high for just that reason. I hate trackballs, because I can't achieve the same degrees of int
Re: (Score:2)
Even on the old ball mice you could adjust the mouse properties in the speed section and not have to pick up the mouse to traverse the screen. I thought everybody did this? That's what the speed adjusted in the control panel applets/settings even on ball mice. LOL One of my first moves in setting up a PC was to turn the mouse speed up a couple of notches.
I'm not sure if the default speed has changed or if the advent of more refined mice changed it but I know that, today, I don't HAVE to make any adjustments
Re: (Score:2)
Not everyone likes it like that. I tend to set the sensitivity pretty high - a couple of inches on the mouse for the full width of the screen. I hate acceleration, flick and all that garbage and turn it off as soon as I can find how to.
A few times I've had people go "Whoooah" when they're using my machine; they lose the cursor, it moves much faster than they expect.
Re: (Score:2)
Absolutely and that's one of the benefits of having the applet to start with. It can be adjusted quite a bit and I've never met anyone who wasn't eventually able to find a setting where they were pretty well satisfied.
Re: (Score:2)
Sure. But if you are badly coordinated - or you have some kind of disability - you're going to have to set the gain low (to reduce the noise) in which case you might have to do the "across, up and back" thing to reach the whole screen. Unless you have an A3 mouse mat. And long arms.
Re: (Score:2)
Fortunately there are a lot of setting and options for pointing devices for those who suffer various handicaps though I suspect that, no matter what, we can not possibly have settings and equipment enough for the rarer cases. I'm reminded of the clit mouse. I used to crank the speed up on those and, after a while, got really adept at them to the point where those were faster for me than a touch pad would have been. (I used to buy only Toshiba laptops back then.)
Re: (Score:2)
Clearly, your mental conception of "mouse" hasn't changed from the offerings of the 90s ... You can turn a modern optical mouse's sensitivity up to the point where a simple twitch of the wrist is able to achieve this same result
I am well aware that mouse sensitivity can be changed. I do have to use a mouse sometimes, and of course I adjust the sensitivity of my trackball in exactly the same way. But you still need to move your forearm to move the mouse (not just wrist in my experince). I would compare a trackball vs mouse as like a bicycle vs tricycle (respectively). The mouse/trike is deceptively easier to use first time (it took me a couple of weeks to first "learn" a trackball - like learning to ride a bike), but once your
Re: (Score:2)
I use a trackball on my linux machine, mainly because when I was setting it up it was the first USB pointing device I could find that "just worked". For a while it drove me mad, in particular I had problems holding the button down when dragging. I realised that I was holding it wrong [did I violate any patents there?]; I was having to spread my thumb and little finger round the base unit to stop it sliding around - occasionally triggering the side buttons accidentally, and this was exacerbated by the fact
Re: (Score:2)
What are you talking about? . Even if I leave the game at x1.0 mouse speed I hardly have to move my hand. ..... any decent mouse should move across the screen with a very small movement.
Not sure who you are replying to, or which side you are on in "touch" vs "mouse/trackball", but your comment underlines that waving an arm around a screen cannot be possibly be faster or more convenient than using either a mouse or a trackball.
I believe that the move of touchscreen tech out of the realm of small portable devices and kiosks to larger displays is part of the general dumbing down in human affairs. Retro-evolution cannot have occurred in just a generation, but it is an
Re: (Score:1)
Honestly, if using a touchscreen is enough to make a significant visible change in the muscle density of your arm, you really need to go outside. On the other hand, get the touchscreen, build up some arm muscles, and maybe a girl will actually look at you for once.
No spatial information (Score:1)
Keep your greasy fingers off my matte screen... (Score:4, Funny)
The big question is... (Score:1)
...do you need fingers to operate it?
You see, I'm a parrot, and though touch screens are ok (if a little bothersome), I'm seriously annoyed at the Kinect on my new Xbox, which refuses to recognize my beak and toe movements. I wish people would just stick to keyboards; their wholesome nibblyness is superior to any other input device.
I don't get this (Score:2)
Why on earth would people want to jam their fingers into their screens? If it is to have some gesture based control, a much better solution is a decent trackpad, which in effect works as a proxy for the screen but in a more ergonomic location.
Re: (Score:2)
First, it's called 'touch'screen. This is not some new immersive technology where you jam your fingers into the screen.
As a simple use scenario, more than one person around a monitor.
Re: (Score:2)
Me too. Just now, in fact.
Some people appear to be trying, though.
Three cack-handed idiots all dabbing in total uncoordination. That wouldn't be irritating at all.
Re: (Score:2)
Where can I buy the sensor ? (Score:1)
sensor and apple (Score:2)
don't let apple get a hold of it, it would turn into a 200 dollar sensor.
Too much lag (Score:1)
desk as a mouse (Score:1)
HF signals (Score:2)
It works by looking at HF signal on power lines. I though FCC regulations prevented devices from sending HF signals on power lines, but obviously it tolerates some remains.
I wonder how it can be used to extract informations from the computer: what is displayed, what key are pressed, what data is computed?
$5 or parts (Score:2)
the $5 sensor uses off-the-shelf parts, and the algorithms are included in the paper, so it would be fairly easy for you — or a commercial entity — to recreate the uTouch system and then pay a nice fat royalty to the patent owners for the next 20 years who won't surface until your product is successful.
Add an extra $5 straightaway (Score:4, Funny)
...for the screen cleaner & cloth that comes with it.