hapticity » High-Fidelity Haptics http://hapticity.net Wed, 16 May 2012 14:41:50 +0000 en-US hourly 1 #/?v=3.5.1 Science Channel special /2010/03/01/my-demo-on-the-science-channel/ /2010/03/01/my-demo-on-the-science-channel/#comments Tue, 02 Mar 2010 00:18:37 +0000 Dave /?p=3995 High Fidelity Haptics, a demonstration I created that was shown at Fortune Magazine’s Brainstorm Tech conference, was also featured on the Science Channel. In this clip, High-Fidelity Haptics appears at 3’58.

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High-Fidelity Haptics added to the Projects page /2009/10/27/high-fidelity-haptics-added-to-the-projects-page/ /2009/10/27/high-fidelity-haptics-added-to-the-projects-page/#comments Wed, 28 Oct 2009 00:06:36 +0000 Dave /?p=1864 I’ve updated my Projects page with an article detailing High-Fidelity Haptics. I blogged about that demo previously here.

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Immersion presents “breathtaking” demonstration of new user experience /2009/07/24/immersion-presents-breathtaking-demonstration-of-new-user-experience/ /2009/07/24/immersion-presents-breathtaking-demonstration-of-new-user-experience/#comments Fri, 24 Jul 2009 22:49:44 +0000 David Birnbaum http://tactilicio.us/?p=778 This morning at the Fortune Brainstorm: TECH conference, our CTO presented another technology demonstration I designed as a part of Immersion’s user experience research program. The demo consists of two tablet PCs that have been modified to include high-fidelity touch feedback. A two-player pinball game allows players to pass a ball back and forth between their tablets over a network. Touch feedback is felt by both users at once, which creates the illusion that the tablets themselves are somehow physically connected together. When you shoot the ball off of your screen and onto the other one, even though you can no longer see it, you can still feel it bouncing off the various objects in the game.

Here’s a screenshot:


Immersion-HapticPinball_highres

All of the elements in the game—walls, bumpers, vortex, etc.—are “haptified” (in other words, when the ball hits them, you feel it). We call it “high-fidelity haptics” because the touch feedback is incredibly nuanced and varied. The chute on the top right feels like a hollow tube. The ball hitting the metal walls feels sharp and solid. When the ball goes up the xylophone, you hear and feel the pitch of every note. And the vortex feels like—well, it feels like a vortex, even though I’ve never felt a real one before.

This kind of tactile PC game is entirely new, and so is the possibility of high-fidelity haptics inside a notebook screen. As our CTO (who is also my boss) is fond of saying, I believe we have just “taken it to the next level.”

Here’s Immersion’s press release about the technology.

UPDATE: Computerworld has published an article about the demo called “Haptics: The feel-good technology of the year”:

Immersion CTO Christophe Ramstein demonstrated today at Fortune’s Brainstorm Tech conference a breathtaking new generation of haptic technologies he calls “high-fidelity haptics.”

Ramstein called a volunteer onto the stage and invited her to play a pinball game on a specially configured Hewlett-Packard tablet PC. She immediately responded to the haptics, and said that she could actually “feel a metal ball rolling on a hard surface.” She could feel all the motion of the game, the vibration of the whole machine and detailed, super-realistic but subtle tactile cues of the kind that you would feel with a real, physical pinball machine.

After playing for a minute or two, Ramstein threw a switch to turn off the haptics. The volunteer reported, essentially, that the game suddenly became cold and dead, even though all the graphics and sound were still in play.

Read the whole thing.

ANOTHER UPDATE: On CNNMoney, The Touchscreen Goes Ultratactile:

At Fortune’s Brainstorm Tech conference, Immersion’s chief executive officer, Clent Richardson, and chief technology officer Christophe Ramstein, let me play with the company’s latest innovation: a two-player game prototype that offers touch feedback as a pinball moves between two computer screens.

The game did indeed feel like an old-school pinball machine. The tablet vibrated under my fingers, and there was a tangible change in pressure when the paddle made contact with the ball.

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