SAN FRANCISCO - Imagine being able to control your computer and manipulate on-screen objects not with a mouse, keyboard or even your voice, but with a wave of your hand. Now meet what makes it ...
10 years after the launch of Leap Motion—which garnered praise for offering some of the best hand-tracking in the industry—the company has announced a next-generation version of the device which now ...
Anyone who’s ever stood in front of a Kinect-equipped Xbox knows the fun of virtual control, of using your hands to manipulate what you see on the screen without touching anything but air. The Leap ...
Imagine being able to control your computer and manipulate on-screen objects not with a mouse, keyboard or even your voice, but with a wave of your hand. Now meet what makes it possible: the Leap ...
Leap Motion said Thursday that it will be delaying shipments of its device, which allows users to control their PCs with gestures. The company had originally planned to ship its accessories the week ...
With a wave of a hand or lift of a finger, you're about to use your computer in a whole new way. The Leap Motion Controller senses how you move your hands the way you naturally move them. So you can ...
Leap Motion co-founder David Holz is flying through Google Earth by waving his fingers in thin air. Controlling computers with gestures -- you've seen it in movies and maybe even heard experts predict ...
You'll sacrifice speed and precision, but this virtual keyboard has predictive word selection and lets you surf the Web sans mouse. Crave freelancer Tim Hornyak is the author of "Loving the Machine: ...
[url=http://arstechnica.com/civis/viewtopic.php?p=26739961#p26739961:1k718jzv said: Overdriven[/url]":1k718jzv]Waving your hands in the air is neither efficient nor ...