Tag Archive | "Gesture"

Google: Gesture Search Updated with “Flipping”


Gesture search, an app from Google that allows the user to search by writing characters on your Android device’s screen, has gone through an update that now utilizes a new gesture. Basically, it’s what Google has dubbed the “double flip”, which simply entails flipping the phone away from you and then back towards you. This new gesture will open up the gesture search app from any place in the phone.

The feature can be turned off and on, and the sensitivity for the flip can also be adjusted. No more need for another shortcut clogging up your home screen. Other aspects of the latest update include general bug fixes and some new options for accessibility.  To download and rate the Google Gesture search, click here.

Click here to view the embedded video.

Google: Gesture Search Updated with “Flipping”

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Microsoft Announces Kinect – Gesture Control


The new Xbox 360 launched today, and is priced at $299. The older Elite model will stick around for $249 and the Arcade will drop to $149. ESPN and Microsoft said Xbox 360 owners will be able to stream live sporting events if they are also Xbox Live Gold subscribers. A new ESPN channel will feature more than 3,500 live sporting events during its first year.

Microsoft officially announced their full-body motion control system for the Xbox 360, now called Kinect on Sunday evening during the E3 2010 trade show. Microsoft says it will be available in November.

Microsoft director Alex Kipman, originally named it after the Brazilian city of Natal, as a tribute to his country of origin.

A 45-minute theatrical performance by Cirque du Soleil utilized Kinect with a 76-person cast of “dancers, musicians, acrobats and clowns,” with 25-foot high projection screens above the stage.

There are supposedly going to be around 12 titles available when Kinect launches later this year, according to USA Today. Current rumors suggest there will be two version of Natal with the more expensive version priced at $189.

So-called “gesture control” systems utilize camera sensors to detect radar-like beams that hit objects in the room. Such systems have a surprisingly fine level of detail, even able to recognize different hand signals or small movements — even incorporate facial recognition.

Kinect was first announced on June 1, 2009 at E3 2009 as “Project Natal”. Microsoft said that over one thousand software development kits began shipping to game developers that same day. It is scheduled to be released in time for Christmas 2010.

The technology utilizes Microsoft’s software research, with Microsoft adding software control to 3DV, an Israeli 3-D camera company it recently acquired.

A light source puts out a train of short light pulses. Each pulse becomes a “light wall” that moves forward and illuminates the field of view. The energy detected by each camera pixel corresponds inversely to the distance, so the light reflected from a near object is captured completely while the reflection from a distant object appears too late to be captured, explains Broadcast Engineering. The 3DV Zcam offered keying that’s based on range-mapping, allowing objects to be attached to layers, eliminating the need for chroma key.

At the Society for Information Display in Seattle last month, companies showed off 3-D displays that don’t require glasses. These sets often use lenticular lenses, which are integrated into the display and project different images in two fixed directions. But a viewer needs to stand in designated zones to experience a 3-D effect; otherwise the screen becomes an out-of-focus blur.

Microsoft’s prototype display can deliver 3-D video to two viewers at the same time (one video for each individual eye), regardless of where they are positioned. It incorporates Kinect technology to determine location. The market for 3-D-capable televisions is expected to grow from 2.5 million sets shipped in 2010 to 27 million in 2013, according to the research firm DisplaySearch.

Perhaps gesture recognition will be incorporated into public art projects. Experiential marketing — without the marketing.

The Wireless Association announced today a five day interactive event in the main hall of Washington, DC’s Union Station. From June 14th-18th, CTIA will host a 50-foot-wide “Wireless Freedom Dome”– a 360-degree interactive experience where visitors can submit photos and messages using their wireless devices.

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Gesture Search: An Open Letter To Google




By now many of you have discovered that Gesture Search is available to all Android 1.6+ devices from the Market. Now question is… is it useful? Most people I have spoken to have given me something along the lines of, “Sort of, but it’s not as accessible as I’d like”. So while this is a Google Labs product, meaning it’s in the famous “BETA” stage, I have something for Google to take into consideration.

The issue here is that the gesture search is just not quick enough to access. While many have told me to put it on my homescreen, it’s still not any more useful than using the universal Google Search widget. So now all of the enlightened people are thinking well maybe Google should build it into apps like the contact list, GMail, or even in a homescreen widget. That might be all fine and dandy but let’s go back to what Android is all about. Android is all about collaboration and improvement as can be seen from the Open Handset Alliance’s initiatives. So why not make Google Gesture Search a developer tool? Gestures have long since been available to developers since Android 1.6, but think of all the uses developers could get out of universal search within their applications? Today, Android developers have an abundance of tools at their fingertips to improve all aspects of applications. AdMob to improve profitability, JTwitter to make twitter clients, Google Maps integration, and even GUI design via DroidDraw. All of these tools distributed for free so that developer’s can take them and make applications that are better than those on any other mobile platform.

I imagine being in a twitter client and searching my followers by drawing their name so that I can send them a direct message. How about being  in the Android Guys App and searching articles with gesture search? So why not make gesture search open and let developers run with it. Let us integrate it into applications, widgets, and more. Give the people what they want!

Sincerely,

The Android Community

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View full post on AndroidGuys

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Google Labs Release Gesture Search App For Android


Google Labs AndroidGoogle have released a new Google Labs application that enables Android users to search their phones by drawing letters on their screens.

The new app known as Gesture Search searches the phones contacts, audio tracks, apps and bookmarks based on what letter is drawn on the handsets touchscreen.

Today we’re pleased to announce Gesture Search, a new Google Labs application for Android-powered devices running Android 2.0 or above in the US. Gesture Search lets you quickly find a contact, an installed application, a bookmark or a music track from hundreds or thousands of items, by simply drawing alphabet gestures on the touch screen.

The app is also capable of returning results for multiple interpretations should it be unsure if the letter drawn is a ‘H’ or an ‘A’ for example.

android gesture search app

The application is available to download from the Android Market from today, just search for ‘Gesture Search’.

Previous Google Labs app releases for Android include Listen, and Places Directory.

[via googlemobile.blogspot.com]

For more information on Android and the current Android mobile phones, check out our Android Guides

Google Labs Release Gesture Search App For Android

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