By Andrew KempPosted Tuesday 28th April 2009 11:35 GMT
They haven't developed the first "latex-based touchscreen" - they've developed a surface where pre-defined shapes can be raised or lowered, hardly a touchscreen. Hardly something that revolutionary either...
They use a projector and cameras for the touchscreen functionality - same as the home made touchscreens many have done across the net.
By James McGregorPosted Tuesday 28th April 2009 11:49 GMT
... there's a few things that would need to be addressed. The button layout doesn't appear to be flexible enough to offer different numbers, sizes or types of buttons, as it's limited to the location of the inflatable areas behind the screen. For example, how would you switch between a QWERTY keyboard and a numeric keypad?
It's also prone to vandelism - just imagine the wanton destruction an individual armed merely with a pin could inflict. One prick and it's all over, so to speak.
This sounds really good, then you watch the video and realise it can only create buttons that are built in to the screen there is no dynamic button creation really. Its like a screen which can hide its buttons and then display them again. What would be good if it could create buttons on a generic screen of any type and size decided by the application otherwise its just as limited as having actual buttons for example at the side of a cash machine.
Not quite the same admittedly but much more likely.
Not Worth It, Unless the Only Reason is For Braille #
By Alacrity FitzhughPosted Tuesday 28th April 2009 14:03 GMT
The clickable pad, like you see on the latest MacBooks from Apple, provide ample tactile feedback for sighted people.
Only blind people, or people with applications in which their dashboard needs to be used without direct visual cues, would find this useful, as it is bound to be both expensive and less-than-robust.
I suspect that blind people would want a denser information display, such as a braille strip, or braille keys.
By Anonymous CowardPosted Tuesday 28th April 2009 15:18 GMT
I invented that in my head last year sometime, except it had a finer resolution and also a reader so you could push body parts against it and they'd raise at another location - all tech has a sex application screaming to get out somewhere!
By John SmithPosted Tuesday 28th April 2009 15:58 GMT
OK you can dump the projector for a flat screen of some kind or even pre-printed backing. But how do you get rid of the need for a compressed air supply?
As a research tool for studying UI design and ergonomics OK. Cool toy OK. Actual usage IRl?
Tactile feedback could be attractive in some cases but I think the ideal would be some kind of electroactive gel that expands/contracts on small voltage levels (current pulses would have to diffuse through the gel. This is unlikely to be very fast). Done fast enough the whole face of your phone buzzes when your on vibrate, eliminating the buzzer and eliminating the buzzer parts. This sort of thing gets phone mfgs quite excited.
Comments on: Boffins pump out pop-up touchscreen
The early adopters? #
By The Gritter Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 11:28 GMT
So cool... #
By Robert Hill Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 11:31 GMT
Not a latex-based touchscreen... #
By Andrew Kemp Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 11:35 GMT
Apple #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 11:36 GMT
Boffins? #
By Joe K Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 11:38 GMT
Very nice, but ... #
By James McGregor Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 11:49 GMT
Not as good as it sounds #
By Ron Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 11:57 GMT
Great! #
By Anonymous Hero Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 11:58 GMT
Thumbs up.. #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 12:24 GMT
Dynamically Changeable? #
By Jerome Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 12:29 GMT
(untitled) #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 13:55 GMT
Not Worth It, Unless the Only Reason is For Braille #
By Alacrity Fitzhugh Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 14:03 GMT
PR0N!! #
By Luis Ogando Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 14:19 GMT
It uses set shapes? #
By Big Bear Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 14:54 GMT
There goes my patent #
By Anonymous Coward Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 15:18 GMT
@Andrew Kemp #
By DPWDC Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 15:22 GMT
re-definable tactile keys #
By John Smith Posted Tuesday 28th April 2009 15:58 GMT
Hay boffanz #
By Anonymous from Mars Posted Wednesday 29th April 2009 04:21 GMT