Credits: European Patent Office
Roberto Catania
Gesture gesture or not? This is the problem. Whether it is nobler to control a smartphone with fingers rather than with gestures flying or even “visual”?
Onnew models of human-machine interaction, those Samsung we could build a treaty. The rest just pick up one of his current “jewels” from Galaxy S4 Galaxy Note 3 , to understand that the future of the Korean house, or rather the present, is right in the contactless control menu you browse waving hands in the air, Web pages that follow gaze, interrupt or resume video playback depending on where the eye rests user.
Normal, then, that a few weeks after the announcement of the new top of the range – the S5 Galaxy , waiting for the start of spring – all eyes will be on the next feature to effect developed from the Korean giant. The most anticipated is undoubtedly that which concerns the ability to lock or unlock your phone with a simple glance, a ploy that would be made possible implantation of a real scanner for the iris able to recognize all the information peculiar to the ‘eye of the master. But there is more than one reason to believe that this will not be the only special effect on the Galaxy S5.
In recent months, in fact, Samsung has filed a series of patents designed precisely to facilitate interaction with its gestural mobile devices. One of these, for example, is based on using the front-facing camera for tracking the movements of the head, a solution that would allow future terminals of the house (starting right from the Galaxy S5) to perform some tasks – such as open or close applications, rather than an ebook or browse a Web page – simply on the basis of nods .
now difficult to establish whether the resources of this type – if they get really – will actually be usable or whether, as happened with the Galaxy S4 will only be eye-popping special effects to show off to friends and family but to take off in the experience use everyday.
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