Researchers are developing a new generation that uses hand gestures to perform commands on computer systems.
The prototype, known as "typealike," works thru a regular laptop webcam with a simple affixed reflect. The program acknowledges the user's hands beside or close to the keyboard and prompts operations based on one of a kind hand positions.
A person may want to, for example, vicinity their right hand with the thumb pointing up beside the keyboard, and the program would apprehend this as a signal to boom the extent. Distinctive gestures and one-of-a-kind combinations of gestures can be programmed to carry out a huge range of operations.
The prototype, known as "typealike," works thru a regular laptop webcam with a simple affixed reflect. The program acknowledges the user's hands beside or close to the keyboard and prompts operations based on one of a kind hand positions.
A person may want to, for example, vicinity their right hand with the thumb pointing up beside the keyboard, and the program would apprehend this as a signal to boom the extent. Distinctive gestures and one-of-a-kind combinations of gestures can be programmed to carry out a huge range of operations.
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