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Input Devices Technology

Samsung Shows 'Eye Mouse' For People With Disabilities 17

Samsung today announced a project among a group of its engineers to build an input device that allows people with limited mobility to operate a computer through eye movement alone. The EYECAN+ is a rectangular box that needs to be situated roughly 60-70cm away from a user's face. Once calibrated, it will superimpose a multifunction UI and track a user's eye movements to move the cursor where they want. Samsung says they won't be commercializing this device, but they'll soon be making the design open source for any company or organization who wants to start building them.
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Samsung Shows 'Eye Mouse' For People With Disabilities

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  • goodwill (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mriswith ( 797850 ) on Tuesday November 25, 2014 @05:34PM (#48462793) Homepage
    Well that's one pretty decent way to get some good karma with the open source comunity and help people at the same time :)
    • Someone will come along and try to find some way to make it out to be an act of evil. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Yeah, I gotta say this is awfully decent of Samsung. So many other companies would have thought only to profit off of something like this.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    for open sourcing this potentially life changing technology. I am shure it will change the life thousands all over the world.

  • Combine the eye focus with the mouse to constrain the movements of the cursor for the best of both worlds!
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Eye tracking for computer control has been available commercially for decades (ASL, SMI, LC Technologies, etc) primarily as assistive technology for persons with disabilities (quadriplegics who are paralyzed and cannot move hands or other body parts).

    In the last couple years the price has come way down on the eye tracking devices, so they are now in the $100-$150 range (such as the Tobii EyeX). With that kind of a price on the hardware it would be difficult to build devices at home that had the same level o

    • Every research team who discovers the disability market seems to set out to build an affordable eye tracker. And they all fail. I should know I was on such a team :)

      • Eventually the technology will improve and bring the price down. You can get cameras for £5 now, and even cheap hardware can have the capability for real-time image processing. Eventually it'll probably be incorporated into the Google Glass v7 - not as a disability aid, but as a hands-free input device.

  • by sconeu ( 64226 ) on Tuesday November 25, 2014 @07:20PM (#48463469) Homepage Journal

    This is commercially available now, Dynavox [dynavoxtech.com] and Tobii [tobiiati.com] have offered it for a while.

    The BIG news here is the open sourcing. Well done, Samsung.

    • Also sounds like it may be much cheaper, which would be nice. I have repetitive strain injury from computer use and while it is manageable, I'd like a way to be able to not use the mouse when possible. An eye mouse would work well, but they are too much money. However this sounds like it might be in the range of something I could afford, and use as alternate input.

      • by sconeu ( 64226 )

        You'd be surprised at how *TIRING* using an eye mouse is. My late wife bitched about it all the time.

  • All i could think when seeing this, how will online FPS games detect this? :P And i thought ear hacks were good...
  • After doing quite a bit of work making it easier for my father, who had Parkinson's, to use a mouse via 3d accelerometers and firmware, this approach is wonderful news. The accelerometer approach worked at first, but as the tremors got worse, the signal to noise ratio became unmanageable. Personally, having MS along with hereditary peripheral neuropathy, I am reasonably certain that within the coming years it will be necessary for me to use this technology. I will definitely make use of this open source "gi

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