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The way you control your tablet could change dramatically over the next 24 months and while today’s tablets support multi-touch, the future of tablet interaction could lie with gesture control.
Already used for Microsoft’s Xbox Kinect game console accessory, some CAD systems and on innovative TV remote controls, gesture control systems often rely on infrared camera sensors to detect movement.
In theory, this technology could well open up for some of tablets to be controlled by virtually swiping up, down and across, without having to touch the screen.
Indeed, the technology will be big business with battery like dell Latitude D510 battery, dell Latitude D520 battery, dell Latitude D600 battery, dell Latitude D610 battery, dell 312-0068 battery, dell 6Y270 battery, dell 1X793 battery, dell C1295 battery, dell Inspiron 1100 battery, dell Inspiron 5100 battery, dell Vostro V130 battery, dell PRW6G battery further down the road – a report by Gartner suggests that half of consumers will wave more to their digital devices than to their friends by 2016.
Eye tracking & behaviour recognitionBoth of these emerging technologies remain incredibly niche but could come into public consciousness in late 2013.
Eye tracking and behaviour recognition have already been used for select public displays and Internet Connected TVs.
Behaviour recognition captures body movement and analyses this through software algorithms, meaning that tablet displays could (for example) lock if the user was looking away. Such technology is already used for Internet Connected TVs.
And while it may sound like something straight from Tom Cruise’s Minority Report, eye tracking looks like a real possibility for tablets in the future.
The technology essentially gauges where a user is looking on the tablet screen to adjust their content, a feature which could be a potential boon for digital advertisers.
Swedish company Tobii has a prototype Windows tablet with an eye-controlled user interface, while the Gaze Group eye research team from the IT University of Copenhagen has been looking to take its own technology, used by people with disabilities for some 20 years, to the masses via smartphones and tablets.
Perhaps it is a stretch of the imagination to think we’ll see many of these tablets coming to production in 2013, but it is something to look out for going forward.