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Ian Fitzpatrick writes, collects and shares things here.

Some of these things have to do with brands, some of them have to do with buildings and places or machines or computers (which are, you know, machines, too). Each of them has to do with people, and the ways in which we respond to the stimuli around us.
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Tactile Holograms



Tactile interfaces are about to get very interesting. Combining this technology with something like Surface could open up all manner of intriguing options, particularly at retail outlets.

Researchers from The University of Tokyo have demoed a touchable hologram at Siggraph 2009. The project, called Touchable Holography, involves the use of Wiimotes placed above the display to track hand motion, and an airborne ultrasound tactile display created in the university’s lab to create the sensation of touch. The result is a holographic image that produces tactile feedback without any actual touching, and without degrading the image itself.

Related posts:

  1. Project Natal vs. Tactile Response
  2. Eyeball Gestures and Connecting with Strangers via Proximity
  3. Skins
  4. The Optimist Conspectus: Alexander Chen
  5. Amphibious Architecture

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Published:
Oct 12.09

Author:
ian

Categories:
Links, People and Devices

Tags:
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Source Material:
StillOutandAboutTown on YouTube