The
software, called SoundWave, emits an inaudible sound from your laptop's
speakers. At 20kHz, it's high-pitched enough that most people can't hear it --
but your laptop's microphone can.
When
you move your hand toward and away from the laptop, the sound bounces off your
hand and changes pitch. That's the Doppler Effect in action: It's like when a
police siren appears to change pitch as it races past you on the street.
SoundWave
is designed to detect the changing pitches bouncing off your hand. The effect
is almost as if a Kinect were sitting on top of the screen.
Waving your hand to and from the laptop can make the computer scroll a page up
and down, cycle through photos, or flip through a list.
A
Kinect costs $150, but SoundWave uses hardware that's already built in. It
doesn't allow for the full range of motion that a Kinect can track, but more
could be coming soon: Laptops increasingly are being shipped with two voice changing microphone, one on the left and one on
the right. That means SoundWave could soon track side-to-side hand motions in
addition to forward and back.
SoundWave
will never replace touchscreen technology, but it could be used in tandem with
it. The software could be useful in a group setting. Meeting participants could
control a display screen from the audience, for instance.
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