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Published in Nature Electronics, Carnegie Mellon University has introduced flexible wearables to augment human senses in both ...
This supposedly creates the physical sensations of an object sliding through fingertips and syncs them with what the user’s virtual hands are doing in a VR world.
For all the amazing experiences virtual reality enables (the illusion of flight, the exhaustion of exercise and even the emotional fatigue of trauma), it still has one major flaw: Virtual objects ...
Touch screens become impractical when that screen is next to your eye in something like 'Apple Glass,' so Apple is investigating how you could manipulate virtual controls in the real world.
British company Ultrahaptics has developed a unique technology that enables users to receive tactile sensations from invisible three dimension objects floating in mid-air. Using ultrasound to ...
You can't usually spin, stretch and otherwise manipulate virtual objects all that easily. You're often relegated to clicking and dragging on a mouse, and even exotic approaches like HoloLens or VR ...
In particular, it involves merging the virtual object with an image of the real environment generated by a recording device. The recording device would be Apple Glasses, the rumored virtual ...
Apple's proposed solution is described in "Manipulation of Virtual Objects using a Tracked Physical Object," a patent application filed in January 2020 but only revealed this week.
Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University want to make virtual reality a little less virtual and a lot more physical with a device that puts the feel of solid objects at your fingertips. Wireality ...
Recorded on February 13, 2012. Metaio uses Kinect to create occlusion effect on virtual objects using a Kintect and their own AR software.
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