Microsoft's Transparent 3D screen
Using advanced 3D tracking technology and a Samsung transparent OLED display, Microsoft's Applied Sciences Group has created a science fiction-level desktop UI that shows a sample of what the future of computing could look like.
Spotted on BGR, intern Jinha Lee and researcher Cati Boulanger created a user interface that allows simultaneous use of physical input methods and hand gestures to navigate around a three dimensional space. The keyboard is oddly located behind the monitor, although this placement makes sense for quick switching between control options.
This tech likely won't reach consumers for quite some time, if ever, but as a demonstration it is a great example of where things can go if the proper resources are placed in the right hands.
Spotted on BGR, intern Jinha Lee and researcher Cati Boulanger created a user interface that allows simultaneous use of physical input methods and hand gestures to navigate around a three dimensional space. The keyboard is oddly located behind the monitor, although this placement makes sense for quick switching between control options.
This tech likely won't reach consumers for quite some time, if ever, but as a demonstration it is a great example of where things can go if the proper resources are placed in the right hands.