The I-Tech Virtual Laser Keyboard 125
avtchillsboro writes, "The NY Times has a rather fluffy article (registration required) about stuff you can buy to 'accessorize' your smart phone & or cell phone (so passé!). What caught my eye was the I-Tech Virtual Laser Keyboard. From the vendor's website: 'The Virtual Laser Keyboard (VKB) uses both infrared and laser technology to generate an invisible field and project a full-size virtual QWERTY keyboard on any surface... The I-Tech VKB reacts exactly like a real keyboard. Direction technology based on optical recognition enables the user to tap the images of the keys, complete with realistic tapping sounds(!), which feeds into the compatible PDA, Smartphone, laptop, or PC. Note: The VKB is both PC and Macintosh compatible!'"
Hi, welcome to 2003 (Score:5, Informative)
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Not to worry (Score:5, Funny)
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Mod parent down (Score:1, Redundant)
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1) Slashdot readers are current enough with the latest technology to see this stuff when it comes to market
2) Slashdot is that premier for gadgets and geektech to surpass what the NYT is calling news two years later.
3) Ah, yes, always the possibility it may have been a slow year for the folks at Laser Key Board, so the NYT artcile is probably trying to drum up business for those boxes upon boxes of soon to be old thing
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Recent? It was on a CSI episode last year or the year before, the show where even recoilless RPGs have a recoil.;-)
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Live or Memorex...dupe...or memory loss?
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it is a support must gudget! (Score:1)
Re:This is very very VERY old news. (Score:4, Funny)
His computer went into standby at a critical moment and upon his release from gitmo powered up his laptop and allowed the submission to go through.
Please note that the poster or his dell laptop cannot be located, however there is a strong burning smell coming from his apartment.
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Old Tech (Score:3, Funny)
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Never underestimate... (Score:2)
The point is to have gear cool enough that the chicks come to you. Also likely to make every other guy in the area green with jealousy -- if they can't see you through the cloud of chicks, but they keep hearing "Can I touch it?" in sweet, feminine voices...
This would be pretty pathetic/depraved, pretty typical of Slashdot, except that I discovered it by accident in high school, when I went to fetch my laptop and found a girl... stroking it.
On the way to the ultimate in portable computers.. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:On the way to the ultimate in portable computer (Score:1)
You can get them... (Score:5, Informative)
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Or is my browser able to look into the future and see upcoming products at ThinkGeek? You never know with this new "Core Duo" mechanism.
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After all this time.... (Score:1)
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Only kinda cool... (Score:1)
Maybe ten. Blow money's a bit tight this paycheck.
Slow news day (Score:1, Redundant)
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&ite
Save the environment, recycle your old slashdot news here!
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They suck (Score:5, Informative)
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It looks cool, but if you think about the thing it's a fairly stupid idea. This keyboard enters data by looking at finger location, not by finger pressure. Among other things that means it may misread resting fingers and misread fingers approaching a target key. It also lacks tactile feedback.
That thing is about as useful as a steering wheal made out of dreams.
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Is that like the one they're steering this country with?
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First recall (Score:5, Funny)
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Magic Touch (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the reasons I type so much faster than I can talk is that I get so much tactile feedback from the physical keys on the keyboard. My hands know when I've mistyped usually before I can even see the difference on the display. A little lingering feeling in my hands that they've missed the pattern they were expected to type. Despite the simulated clicking sounds to my ear, I expect that I'll make a lot more mistakes on a keyboard which doesn't offer tactile feedback that I've hit a key, complete with a little "throw" through its unique 3D spatial path.
That kind of feedback is extremely important to using any device. It's why eliminating any grasped tool for purely gestural expression seems doomed inferior to actually touching something. Maybe just a dumb pad that gives just tactile feedback, without needing to deliver any sensory info back to the processor, is plenty to complete the loop. But just tapping my fingers on an unresponsive surface, or one different in shape/texture/response every time, will be much worse than typing on even a tiny crowded keyboard, or maybe even A9 keypad entry.
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Although this looks stupid (Score:2)
In fact, this is actually qui
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Then again, I'm having a hard time figuring out the real benefit beyond the space age factor. Are you really s
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There's surely some material that's stiff enough to resist deformation anywhere but locally, but flexible enough to compact, while yielding under a few grams fing
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Macs and the PC Keyboards that love them... (Score:2)
So why don't you use a PC keyboard on your Mac?
I have used PC keyboards exclusively since Apple switched to USB, because that coincidentally is when they introduced teh horrid mushy keyboards they have now. I actually get confused because teh CMD/Apple/Windows key is in the "wrong place" on a Mac keyboard.
The horrid Apple laptop keyboards are a bigger problem. I have found a decent Bluetooth keyboard by L
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True, I look at the keys once in a while when I first start typing, or I'm transferring a hand from the mouse to the keys, but aside from that, you don't actually require feeling them to type.
I tend to rely on the sound the keys make when they're depressed as substitute. If I've mistyped so
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But I wonder whether you're going to be better at giving up tactile feedback than someone like me, who's used to getting it all the time. Not just typing, but always using my hands that way. If I gave up all manual sensation, I'd connect differently to the world. I might not have the focus to compensate with hearing enough for the loss of t
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It's really not that big a deal. Once the learning curve has worn off, there is no real focus required. And the way you experence the world is largely
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I've actually used one for a short amount of time, and thought about buying one earlier this month. Typing on it was fine.
Why I didn't boils down to issues completly non-related to the fact I'd have to type on a flat surface. It was physically larger than any portable keyboard I had used in terms of depth, and would not be something I could stick in a back
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But it's not the newness. I'm talking about the fundamental lack of the important feedback to the tactile sense. All those other new methods actually increased tactile feedback with the act of writing, by eliminating distrac
I agree... (Score:2)
Indeed. Graffiti is good, but many of its workalikes are truly awful. Jot, which was used on the original Microsoft handhelds and has replaced Graffiti on the palm (under the nam
"Realistic tapping sounds"? (Score:1, Troll)
Slashdot FAQ (Score:1)
How do I submit stories to Slashdot?
Before you submit a story, please take a minute to make sure it's not a duplicate of a story we've posted already. Check the main Slashdot page and make sure it hasn't already been posted. If it's not breaking news, you might also run a search to see if it's something that might have been posted on a previous day. Roughly ten percent of all our story submissions are duplicates of stories we've already posted.
I wonder that slashdot of all doesn't have some
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This is stupid (Score:2)
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BREAKING NEWS! Intel invents microprocessor!!! (Score:1)
Intel 4004 - The World's First Single Chip Microprocessor . This technology is going to revolutionize the world!!! One day maybe 1 in 25 houses will have a 'computer'
Fuck Slashdot, get your ass together. I come here to feel special about my dorkdom and now I don't even have that!
Wierd (Score:1)
Old stuff new ... (Score:1)
No Tactile Response Aside... (Score:2)
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Other than that, I can't see why there would be any pressure at all. Infact, the sensor probably can be calibrated so you never ever TOUCH the surface, but just glide your fingers over it. "Gesture Typing" basically.
I'm not sure that's what I'd want, but I don't see myself going to your extreme either.
Videos (YouTube) (Score:4, Informative)
I hoped so, wished so, but the videos I've seen [techeblog.com] defy this.
You can see that you have to type slowly, and, it'll miss some keypresses.
Still, it's really cool, and portable: You don't have to carry a keyboard around with you.
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Even older than that... (Score:2)
Anyone Remember the CSI Miami Episode? (Score:1)
The episode features a secretary that used one of these keyboards to write a blog about the company without anyone knowing it. When I saw the episode, I was amazed at the writer's inguenuity in thinking up such a good gadget... I thought it was TV Drama. Little did I know that the gadget actually exists.
I guess the question i
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News... (Score:2)
Not bad.. (Score:1)
Tried one in an airport store (Score:2)
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But everyone seems to be missing the point that these aren't remotely *intended* as replacements for full scale desktop keyboards. They are replacements for the nasty little pads you have on your phone or PDA - and from the look of them, I can imagine for some purposes they'd be pretty handy. The problem of course is the price.... as much as your phone again by the look of it...
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NEC P-ISM Conceptual Computer (Score:2)
Imaging 4 pens in your extra coffee mug, (or pocket protector). One converts to a mini-projector, one to a laser keyboard, one is a wireless NIC, another is a Wireless USB drive?
Anyway...it seems a cool use for this technology, even if it's just a concept.
I swear there was a page with more details about the function of each pen, but the link above is the best I could find.
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I got one and it sucks (Score:4, Informative)
other layouts (Score:3, Insightful)
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Whoa! (Score:1)
Crowd here is missing a big thing in my book (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd say the neatest thing is in hospitals where a bit of disinfectant on smooth surface is all it takes to keep transmission of shared consoles down - hey, even sliding paper rolls for the purpose. Any way just thought 'gee that's appicable'..
no news like old news (Score:2)
I used one all weekend! (Score:2)
First, to the folks who are saying "It's teh suck compared to a full-sized keyboard 'cuz you don't get tactile feedback", thanks for the brilliant insight.
This isn't designed to compete with a full-sized keyboard except perhaps in geeky coolness. It's designed as an alternative to typing on the tiny keyboards built into PDAs or using t
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System Preferences -> Keyboard and Mouse -> Keyboard -> Modifier Keys
You can remap the Command, Option, Control, and Caps Lock keys as needed.
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The virtual keyboard does have a function key, but as it's used to send some commands to the device itself I don't know if it'd let me use it (for example) in place of the command key. That's actually what I'm hoping for.
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No Stereo Bluetooth for the Blackberry Pearl (Score:1)
The NYT writer didn't actually try the stuff he's 'advertising'. You can't listen to your tunes over bluetooth on the Pearl. I have one, and I tried. It supports A2DP but not the correct profile or something,
Project output as well? (Score:2)
That's so 2002 (Score:1)
Ha-Ha (Score:1)
invisible field of hovering light (Score:2)
An "invisible field? Well, I suppose that lasers, being light, are actually an electromagnetic field, but otherwise this is just trying to make it sound all Star-Trekky (or perhaps, Doctor-Evilish), complete with technobabble.
And looking at their site [virtual-la...yboard.com], there are some more gems:
"An infra-red plane of light is generated just above, and parallel to, the interface surface. This ligh
Even if the turbine was the size of the laptop (Score:2)
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