Sign the Air with New Hyper-Accurate Motion Control

Greg Tito

PR for Dungeons & Dragons
Sep 29, 2005
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Sign the Air with New Hyper-Accurate Motion Control


The new Leap 3D motion control boasts 200 times more accuracy than Kinect.

I've had a Kinect installed on my Xbox 360 for the past few weeks. My wife likes Dance Central 2, but trying to actually use Kinect to navigate the Xbox menus will quickly piss you right off as you frantically wave your hands in gestures the thing never seems to grok. The Leap 3D motion control system blows Kinect out of the water, if the demonstration video is to be believed. Using a simple sensor connected by USB to your PC, and proprietary software, the Leap can detect movements as small as a hundredth of a millimeter. That level of accuracy opens the door for touch gestures like pinch-to-zoom, aiming a gun in shooters, or even using a stylus in the air to sign your name.

As a startup company, Leap Motion has raised a ton of money, and the plan is to release the Leap 3D next summer for consumers at a price point around $70. To make sure there's an abundance of applications ready to use Leap when it debuts, the company is Microsoft later released its SDK [http://live.leapmotion.com/developer-kit-application/] in response to the Kinect hacking phenomenon.)

Leap is doing something different. "We believe that ultimately, the sheer number of use cases for this technology are so great that the value can only be realized by making it open," CEO Michael Buckwald said. "So think what would have happened if the mouse had been initially been released as a closed technology. The impact would have been a tiny, tiny percentage of what the impact was because it was an open system that anyone could develop for."

With this level of accurate control, Buckwald's goals for the Leap are nothing short of a revolution. "The goal is to fundamentally transform how people interact with computers and to do so in the same way that the mouse did, which means that the transformation affects everyone, both from the most basic use case all the way up to the most advanced use cases you can imagine for computing technology," he said.

The bullet points of what the Leap is capable of are encouraging, and herald a new age of PC control:

Navigating an operating system or browsing Web pages with the flick of a finger
Finger-pinching to zoom in on maps
Letting engineers interact with a 3D model of clay
Precision drawing in either two- or three-dimensions
Manipulating complex 3D data visualizations
Playing games, including those that require very "fast-twitch" control
Signing digital documents by writing in air

Screw Minority Report and Tom Cruise's lame glove. The Leap is more like Tony Stark's hologram computer system. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wKyQhriOrD0]

Source: Cnet [http://news.cnet.com/8301-11386_3-57437404-76/leap-motion-3d-hands-free-motion-control-unbound/]

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Richardplex

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Jun 22, 2011
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Caramel Frappe said:
Why do I get the feeling this will be a big opportunity for adult themed games to...

OT: I really like this idea, if somewhat questionable. Might be a pain if you don't know what your doing or some hand movements you made cause an event to happen that you didn't want happening- I think this will be better then the kinect depending if this thing is as accurate and advanced as I would hope for it to be.

Got to love the way you can use your hands to shoot a gun though. Also hilarious that having your fingers rub together like your feeling for salt in the kitchen is the sign of you shooting a machine gun during gameplay lol.
I have a feeling the limited amount of arms we have will hold back that ide-
NO Richard, bad thought train, stop it!

OT: I'm cautiously optimistic, the cautiousness depending purely on whether this actually performs as advertised. If it does, there may be drooling. The obvious problem about the lack of range this appears to has is countered by my hands already being that close to my monitor, so at least I'm sorted in those regards.
 

Vaishnav Reddy

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Jul 23, 2011
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As a great man once said and I paraphrase " It always makes more sense to be pessimistic .".
Besides if something sounds too good to be true it probably is.
 

Roccondil

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Mar 17, 2011
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The only problem I foresee is the inability to rest... mice today ally you to just rest your hands on the desk as you're doing things. This requires you to wave your hands in the air every time you need to do something. It's great for the novelty of it, for presentations, and some games, but for the more routine and mundane stuff, I don't see this catching on.

I will be excited to know, though, whether this will perform as expected, and at the $70 price point mentioned above. Definitely will be checking it out!
 

Daemascus

WAAAAAAAAAGHHH!!!!
Mar 6, 2010
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I would have to see this work in real life to believe it. But... I hope it does. I also like that its half the price of the Kinect.
 

Daemascus

WAAAAAAAAAGHHH!!!!
Mar 6, 2010
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Roccondil said:
The only problem I foresee is the inability to rest... mice today ally you to just rest your hands on the desk as you're doing things. This requires you to wave your hands in the air every time you need to do something. It's great for the novelty of it, for presentations, and some games, but for the more routine and mundane stuff, I don't see this catching on.

I will be excited to know, though, whether this will perform as expected, and at the $70 price point mentioned above. Definitely will be checking it out!
What about using both? Use a mouse like normal with your right hand, and making gestures as needed with your left? It might not work in a game were you need WASD, but it may be useful for other programs,
 

Wicky_42

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Sep 15, 2008
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arhgadkjfhsdkfn might have gotten slightly too happy at that sight... Holy crap, if the resolution it was showing of that hand mirroring its real version is anything like realistic then this thing's gonna be far too cool for me to not buy. And the complete lack of noticeable input lag! It's selling itself as everything I hoped the Kinect would be! I even like that it doesn't bother doing full-body analysis, rather focussing on doing something really well than a whole load of stuff pretty craply ^_^

Of course, it's VERY likely it won't pan out anything like as well as that promo vid, but if it's even close...... hello future :D
 

NvrPhazed

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Dec 8, 2010
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Roccondil said:
The only problem I foresee is the inability to rest... mice today ally you to just rest your hands on the desk as you're doing things. This requires you to wave your hands in the air every time you need to do something. It's great for the novelty of it, for presentations, and some games, but for the more routine and mundane stuff, I don't see this catching on.
Well God forbid anyone cant move their hands around a screen for a few hours. Anyone can do this for hours on end as long as they a somewhat healthy lifestyle. I'm fat, but I already have to move my arms a lot when I work for hours on end and this is no different. People overestimate how much this will affect your arms and I think it will be the next step too if people will take the time to try it out.
 

LavaLampBamboo

King of Okay
Jun 27, 2008
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And now may the race begin to see whether Sony or Microsoft can buy the technology out first =)

Seriously, this looks incredible. It's a vast improvement on the motion sensing we've seen so far.

HAH. And you all said it had no future. PSHAW.
 

johnnnny guitar

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Jul 16, 2010
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wow ok you've got my attention I need to see a live demo of course this could be really good then again I thought sony would support Playstation move when I bought one and (sigh) I was really really naive to think so.
 

Hawk eye1466

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May 31, 2010
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If this is as accurate as advertised then I'm on board but since the Kinect was allegedly going to do that I'm going to not get carried away with my excitement.
 

s_h_a_d_o

Mr Propellerhead
Jun 15, 2010
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In your lens, Kinect!

I love that these guys are keeping things open from the get-go.
 

redisforever

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Oct 5, 2009
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Awesomesauce. I shall be waiting for release. Now, if the range is increased, this could be excellent for motion capture. Seems it only senses above the unit, and it has a short range. I hope this could be increased at some point soon.
 

ThePS1Fan

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Dec 22, 2011
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Looks cool. I still have no interest in motion gaming. Or at least core gaming. Little iOS/Android games would be a lot better IMO.
 

DanDeFool

Elite Member
Aug 19, 2009
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And you can use it while sitting down? IN YO FACE, MICROSOFT!

But no, this seriously looks like it might actually be useful. If not for games, then certainly for things like 3D modeling.
 

weirdee

Swamp Weather Balloon Gas
Apr 11, 2011
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and nobody heard from the kinect ever again...

it really sucks for microsoft that they sank millions into developing kinect, fight hard for it to gain validation for its existence, and then some smaller company comes up with a cheaper, smaller, much better product that works on pretty much every computer, and isn't being abused as another form of advertising

there's really no way it will be able to compete with it outside of the xbox
 

Idlemessiah

Zombie Steve Irwin
Feb 22, 2009
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Usage of HL:Loast Coast was cool. Also Angry Birds with chopsticks was like "Bwuh?!"

Not sure how it works tho. Are there a set of recognisable gestures? I can understand using something pointed and making 'pinch' motions. Also with it being open source, will all devs use a standard set of gestures. As awesome as it is, this could get confusing.
 

weirdee

Swamp Weather Balloon Gas
Apr 11, 2011
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judging by how they're already taking preorders of the product, if a buyout is going to happen, it's going to have to be a really big price, if at all, judging by how the people who are running this want it to be open source and compatible with as many things as possible

and big companies generally don't go multiplatform if they've got a hot technology that can convince people to stick with their chosen system