@@yoan4152 no, better. Like these wristbands - reading signals from forearms muscles. When you move your fingers, they are activating, reading electric signals from them it's possible to know what finger what movements is doing, precisely. So, you will be moving your fingers as usually you do typing on the keyboard, but in the air
for intensive tasks like gaming this would suck, yeah. but for light menu navigation especially for AR? it should work quite well. but the one problem looms over mobile and that's the keyboard and there's no really good alternative. the industry seems kind of hellbent on using voice but it isn't going to fly ever as a viable method of input.
@@DopeyFish Same with voice, it depends what you're doing. If you're gaming or writing dozens of words a keyboard is more useful. If you want to see some info like a message or the news, a cameras feed etc or action something in your home like setting an alarm or changing the temperature, voice is a lot easier.
@@DopeyFish Like these wristbands - reading signals from forearms muscles. When you move your fingers, they are activated, reading electric signals from them it's possible to know what finger what movements is doing, precisely. So, you will be moving your fingers as usually you do typing on the keyboard, but in the air
@darcos-i6s it's not that simple unfortunately. This wrist band is limited to only a few gestures as far as I know. So like tap, tap and hold, pinch and move, twist. So you can combine actions into a recipe of sorts but I don't think they are able to differentiate between individual fingers. So it'd be quite difficult to reach the multi hundred gestures that keyboards would require (26 letters, 10 numbers, cases, special characters and all the function keys) and be very tiresome and memory straining to remember the sequences if you could. This device is more of a mouse than a keyboard. There's a couple one hand keyboards out there like the tap strap and twiddler which both rely on chording like a musical instrument but it's not very intuitive for the average person.
at the beginning of the video I thought it was another robot
@ 0:02, Lisa looked like an other version of Realbotix robots with pink hairstyle
😁🤭😂🤣
You should test the Padrone Ring.
That's awesome technology for us who teach/present. I'm in! Thank you.
The Apple Watch would be better as it has motion sensors.
Ok this looks intresting
I want wristbands keyboard
you mean around the hand like a mini curved keyboard ?
As i would rotate my wrist i could reach and touch every keys with the thumbs. Cool
@@yoan4152 no, better. Like these wristbands - reading signals from forearms muscles. When you move your fingers, they are activating, reading electric signals from them it's possible to know what finger what movements is doing, precisely. So, you will be moving your fingers as usually you do typing on the keyboard, but in the air
Android watch can do this
Mouse Is meant to be hardware. It feels horrible when you move the mouse without touching or holding something that'll interpret your actions
for intensive tasks like gaming this would suck, yeah. but for light menu navigation especially for AR? it should work quite well. but the one problem looms over mobile and that's the keyboard and there's no really good alternative.
the industry seems kind of hellbent on using voice but it isn't going to fly ever as a viable method of input.
@@DopeyFish Same with voice, it depends what you're doing. If you're gaming or writing dozens of words a keyboard is more useful.
If you want to see some info like a message or the news, a cameras feed etc or action something in your home like setting an alarm or changing the temperature, voice is a lot easier.
@@DopeyFish Like these wristbands - reading signals from forearms muscles. When you move your fingers, they are activated, reading electric signals from them it's possible to know what finger what movements is doing, precisely. So, you will be moving your fingers as usually you do typing on the keyboard, but in the air
@darcos-i6s it's not that simple unfortunately. This wrist band is limited to only a few gestures as far as I know. So like tap, tap and hold, pinch and move, twist. So you can combine actions into a recipe of sorts but I don't think they are able to differentiate between individual fingers. So it'd be quite difficult to reach the multi hundred gestures that keyboards would require (26 letters, 10 numbers, cases, special characters and all the function keys) and be very tiresome and memory straining to remember the sequences if you could. This device is more of a mouse than a keyboard. There's a couple one hand keyboards out there like the tap strap and twiddler which both rely on chording like a musical instrument but it's not very intuitive for the average person.
You all are going to regret this stuff in another 5 years.
Hi. How do you choose the right shots to illustrate your ideas in the video? 😻👅