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Researchers Turn Tables and Walls Into "Scratch Input" Surfaces

An anonymous reader writes "Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's HCI Institute have developed a new input technology that allows mobile devices to use surfaces they rest on, like tables, for gestural finger input. This is achieved with some clever acoustic tricks — basically taking advantage of high frequency sound propagation through dense materials. Their video highlights some neat applications, such as controlling an MP3 player by scratching on a wall and muting a cell phone by scratching on a table. Further details are available in the academic paper (PDF)."

2 of 54 comments (clear)

  1. Not new... by alexhs · · Score: 2, Informative

    It seems they basically reinvented what Sensitive Objects (and probably others) already does...

    It seems hard to find on their site a specific mention of gestures, but I had an interview there and specifically asked if they were able to track "drags" and not only "clicks" and they said they were able to follow a finger on the surface.

    Also, look for Tai-Chi (Tangible Acoustic Interfaces for Computer-Human Interaction).

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  2. Re:So now PDAs... by Orbijx · · Score: 2, Informative

    Except that this has already been accomplished, which already scratches that particular itch, man. Sorry. :)

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