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Thought the touchscreen was innovative? Get ready for user interface complete revamp

Touchscreen technology has been in use for many years, but when the first iPhone came out some six years ago, it totally changed front end design and user interface, because it brought the technology to the people, the common folk. You didn’t have to be a scientist to own or use a touchscreen device – […]

Tibi Puiu
July 30, 2012 @ 12:01 pm

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Leap Motion

Touchscreen technology has been in use for many years, but when the first iPhone came out some six years ago, it totally changed front end design and user interface, because it brought the technology to the people, the common folk. You didn’t have to be a scientist to own or use a touchscreen device – it’s dead simple and fun. Just a few years later, everything is touch interface, and i’m not exclusively talking about smartphones or tablets here; even washing machines or electric shavers have been included. Touch interface incorporated in technology has definitely risen the bar for interactivity. Has it really revolutionized UI design, turning it upside down, however? Well, absolutely not, if you’re to compare it with what’s just around the corner – the Leap Motion system.

Image a device which only costs $70, can be plugged in via USB, and turns your notebook, tablet or TV into a virtual playground, in six degrees of freedom. Minority Report? No, this is better! If you haven’t watched the company’s presentation demos, do it now and prepare to be amazed. This might just be the biggest thing for user interface since the mouse!

Sure, you might cry that this is extremely similar to the Kinect, but believe me, after scouring the web through hundreds of blogs for more information on this piece of gold, the Leap is a lot more powerful. It’s 200 times more accurate than the Kinect, to the point that it can distinguish all ten of your fingers individually and track your movements to a 1/100th of a millimeter.

The device’s working principle is fairly simple in nature, if you choose to ignore the complex, yet beautiful development work that went into the back-end.  A number of camera sensors map out a workspace – a 3D space in which you operate as you normally would, with almost none of the Kinect’s angle and distance restrictions. For the current prototype, the workspace is about three cubic feet, but the only restriction here are the sensors – what a bigger workspace? Just choose bigger sensors.

UI Revolution

Yes, you can become a FruitNinja master with this incredible motion sensor system, but trust me this is meant for something a lot deeper. The possibilities at stake are virtually limitless. Imagine browsing websites or organizing your files in the most natural of manners. You don’t need to learn to place two fingers apart, then drag to zoom and such. The system ensures that everything you’d want to do naturally in the real world can be transferred virtually. If you want to draw, you just use your finger or put out a pencil and start drawing. Want to pick up a ball in a video game, just mimic the grabbing action. Everything can be manipulated. Imagine a special app based on the Leap for remote surgery. Amazing!

Along the past few years, thousands of developers tried their best and some have released some incredibly useful and creative apps and releasing them to the public via Apple’s AppStore or the Android Market. Leap Motion officials stated that their system’s SDK will be able to do much more, however, and the possibilities appear to be limited only by your imagination.

The Leap is slated for release sometime between December and February. So, what do you guys think?

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