Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Control your smartphone with hand gestures

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Oct, 2014 06:47 AM
    With a new app developed by Swiss researchers, users can now control their smartphones with gestures resembling sign language.
     
    "Many movement-recognition programmes need plenty of processor and memory power. Our new algorithm uses a far smaller portion of computer memory and is ideal for smartphones," explained its developer Otmar Hilliges, professor of computer science from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich (ETHZ).
     
    The app's minimal processing footprint means it could also run on smart watches or in augmented-reality devices like Google Glass.
     
    The app currently recognises six different gestures and executes their corresponding commands.
     
    The programme uses the smartphone's built-in camera to register its environment.
     
    It does not evaluate depth or colour. The information it does register - the shape of the gesture, the parts of the hand - is reduced to a simple outline that is classified according to stored gestures.
     
    The programme then executes the command associated with the gesture it observes.
     
    It also recognises the hand's distance from the camera and warns the user when the hand is either too close or too far away.
     
    Gesture control will not replace touchscreen control but supplement it, Hilliges noted.
     
    "To expand its functionality, we are going to add further classification schemes to the programme", researchers added.
     
    The team presented the app to an audience of industry professionals at a symposium in Honolulu, Hawaii recently.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Facebook faces action over 'emotion contagion' study

    Facebook faces action over 'emotion contagion' study
    US privacy group Electronic Privacy Information Centre (EPIC) has filed a formal complaint with the Federate Trade Commission (FTC) over Facebook's use of user data in its "emotion contagion" study.

    Facebook faces action over 'emotion contagion' study

    Would you give up a friend for a smartphone?

    Would you give up a friend for a smartphone?
    Would you swap your close friend for a smartphone? For 17 percent of Americans, they would prefer losing a best friend rather having their devices taken away.

    Would you give up a friend for a smartphone?

    Journal defends Facebook 'emotion contagion' study

    Journal defends Facebook 'emotion contagion' study
    A scientific journal that published the Facebook study about how emotions spread across social networks has defended its decision to publish the research.

    Journal defends Facebook 'emotion contagion' study

    Twitter driving couples towards infidelity, break-ups: Study

    Twitter driving couples towards infidelity, break-ups: Study
    Have you noticed a drastic change in the behaviour of your hubby towards you since the day he joined Twitter? It is time to take cognizance of how much time he is spending on the micro-blogging site.

    Twitter driving couples towards infidelity, break-ups: Study

    Watch out! Your boss uses social media more than you

    Watch out! Your boss uses social media more than you
    If you log on to your Facebook account while at work, you have now less reason to be apprehensive as researchers have found that top managers are the ones who use private social media most for personal purposes during working hours.

    Watch out! Your boss uses social media more than you

    Why most Facebook users don't recommend products online?

    Why most Facebook users don't recommend products online?
    How often have you recommended a product to your friends and acquaintances on Facebook? Most likely, not very often. And what stopped you is a fear of social censorship, claims a new research.

    Why most Facebook users don't recommend products online?