The Flutter app uses gesture recognition technology over a built-in webcam in a user's computer, enabling th
Google and Flutter signed the deal and announced it last week. The purchase price and other terms were not disclosed, nor did Google say it plans to use the technology in its products.
However, there are some fairly clear products that could benefit from new gesture control technology.
Yet another input option
Google is a company that would like to have its finger on a wide range of aspects of the user experience—hardware, software, and user services. That also includes control interfaces, such as touch, speech, and gesture.Google Glass, for instance, is controlled by voice, touch, and gesture control. Improving its gesture control feature would only help users once the computerized eyewear is officially released.
About 8000 early testers having been using Glass for several months but the device is expected to ship in 2014.
Bring Android to the party
Flutter's technology also could be used to add gesture recognition control to Android devices, which are in a hot competition with Apple's iPhone and iPad. If Google could make the Android platform the clear leader in gesture control, it would have a solid leg up on rival Apple.For example, consider how many keystrokes it takes for an airline reservation agent to book or change a flight, Olds said. With better gesture recognition technology, there would be less typing and possibly faster work to get a passenger a window seat on his next trip.
Gesture recognition looms as a key technology in the future for simplifying and speeding common tasks. The technology is expected to evolve from novel uses today to more useful tasks, even in the enterpise, in the next five years or so.
"It's not the best input method for everything, but best when used from a distance from what the user is trying to control, when manipulating a complex object, with large display surfaces, or where speech control or direct touch isn't appropriate," Moore said.
Google also could use Flutter's gesture control technology in products like Google TV, Chromebooks and even automobiles.
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