|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Tech: Screens That Touch You Back
Screens on everything from ATMs to TV remotes have got touchy. Rather than push real buttons, you touch onscreen icons. Such screens can present difficulties for the visually impaired, however, and can be a danger when mounted in cars. To address those problems, Alpine Electronics developed PulseTouch, a screen that vibrates under your finger, changing the sensation with low-voltage impulses under the screen's plastic skin as you move. The result is virtual topography. Since the sensations vary, depending on whether you're touching an icon or a blank area, you can finger through options without taking your eyes off the road. Alpine's first PulseTouch product is the IVA-D300 in-dash DVD player and receiver ($1,500), left, whose 7-in. screen can display navigation, music options or DVDs. The videos won't play unless the car is parked. --By Wilson Rothman
Most Popular »
- Rattled by Iran, Arab Regimes Draw Closer
- America's Most Wanted Teenage Bandit
- Israel vs. Hizballah: Drumbeats of War
- Church Group Attacks Christmas Commercialism
- Why Home Churches are Filling Up
- Citi's Dubai Mistake: A Sign of More Bad Things to Come?
- Death of a Faith Healer: Oral Roberts
- Brief History: The War on Christmas
- Going to Church on Christmas: A Vanishing Tradition
- Study: European Muslims Feel Shut Out
- Church Group Attacks Christmas Commercialism
- America's Most Wanted Teenage Bandit
- Rattled by Iran, Arab Regimes Draw Closer
- Brief History: The War on Christmas
- Ecuador Officials Linked to Colombia Rebels
- Citi's Dubai Mistake: A Sign of More Bad Things to Come?
- Missing Corpse Clouds Cyprus Peace Process
- Most Domestic 'Jihadists' Are Educated, Well-Off
- Going to Church on Christmas: A Vanishing Tradition
- Study: European Muslims Feel Shut Out




RSS