BNET Video

Best Practices

Now Playing:

The Future of...Remote Controls

A Hands-on Approach to Channel Surfing

How often do you lose the TV remote? BNET correspondent Sumi Das explains why the days of digging under couch cushions may be numbered thanks to sensors and chips that can "see" and "understand" hand gestures.

Comment

See Full Transcript

Tags: Correspondent, Cushion, TVs, Tv & Home Theater, Semiconductors, Network Technology, Personal Technology, Home Entertainment, Hardware, Networking, SmartPlanet, Television, Remote Control, Gesture Control, Canesta, Channels

 

BNET TalkbackShare your ideas and expertise on this topic

Please add your comment:

  1. You are currently: a Guest |
  2.  

Basic HTML tags that work in comments are: bold (<b></b>), italic (<i></i>), underline (<u></u>), and hyperlink (<a href></a)

advertisement
advertisement
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
  • Click Here
advertisement
The Future of...Remote Controls

How often do you lose the TV remote? BNET correspondent Sumi Das explains why the days of digging under couch cushions may be numbered thanks to sensors and chips that can "see" and "understand" hand gestures.

>>

Sumi Das: What would we do without our remote controls? For some of us they're practically glued to our hands. They do have their faults though.

Background music

>> Sumi Das: They're easy to misplace. They can run out of batteries and crammed with so many buttons they can be hard to navigate but in the future switching channels may be as easy as waving your hand.

Music

Background music

>> Sumi Das: How will the way we watch TV change in the coming years?

>> Jim Spare: Imagine being able to turn your TV on by pointing at it and going like this or turn it off by going like that?

>> Sumi Das: Jim Spare CEO of Bay Area Bass Canesta wants to equip consumer electronics with chips that allow them to see.

>> Jim Spare: What's unique about our approach is it's very very low cost and high volume which enables us to literally site enable any type of electronic device.

Background music

>> Sumi Das: Using sensors devices could also track movement, gesture specifically and understand then signaling the possible beginning of the end for remote controls.

>> Jim Spare: Our chip has an array of pixels similar to a digital camera but unlike a digital camera each of our pixels measure distance or measure the time it takes light to travel from an optical source off the object and into the pixel and each pixel does this distance measurement for us independently and in real time. So it looks very much similar in concept to these old pin art diagrams that we all used to have on our coffee tables where each pixel is a distance value thus creating a 3-Dimensional image but then moves in real time.

>> Sumi Das: Instead of fishing for the remote control behind couch cushions you'd wave your hand to activate the system, a menu pops up and by swiping and pointing you control the TV and it's not only for TV displays. For mouse wary business execs who spend a lot of time reading long documents or viewing images on their PCs, the technology could create a touch less user interface, just swipe.

Background music

>> Sumi Das: Ask Jim Spare what else the technology is capable of and his imagination wanders.

>> Jim Spare: Imagine you're a professional business user teleconferencing from home but you don't want images of your children playing in the background or your messy house included in a professional setting. You can simply point and click yourself out of that scene and in front of a corporate logo. Imagine what can happen when you sight enable something as simple as an alarm clock. Beeps Instead of having to roll over out of bed and hit the buzzer button imagine that the alarm clock simply turns itself off when it notices that you get out of bed beep.

>> Sumi Das: It'll likely be several years before those applications are available to consumers but the first television's that you can control with gestures should be in stores by 2010.

Background music

>> Sumi Das: The future of remote controls could lie in a flick of your wrist or a point of your finger. For BNET I'm Sumi Das

Music

==== Transcribed by Automatic Sync Technologies ====