Tangible User Interfaces: High-impact Emerging Technology - What You Need to Know : Definitions, Adoptions, Impact, Benefits, Maturity, Vendors

ISBN
9781743042656
$39.95
Author Roebuck, Kevin
Format Paperback
Details
  • Active Record
  • Individual Title
  • 2011
  • 585
  • Yes
  • QA76.9.U83R6 2011
A tangible user interface (TUI) is a user interface in which a person interacts with digital information through the physical environment. The initial name was Graspable User Interface, which no longer is used. One of the pioneers in tangible user interfaces is Hiroshi Ishii, a professor in the MIT Media Laboratory who heads the Tangible Media Group. His particular vision for tangible UIs, called Tangible Bits, is to give physical form to digital information, making bits directly manipulable and perceptible. Tangible bits pursues seamless coupling between these two very different worlds of bits and atoms. This book is your ultimate resource for Tangible User Interfaces. Here you will find the most up-to-date information, analysis, background and everything you need to know. In easy to read chapters, with extensive references and links to get you to know all there is to know about Tangible User Interfaces right away, covering: Tangible User Interface, Surface computer, Surface computing, DiamondTouch, Microsoft Surface, MT-50 Multitouch Table, Multi-Touch Collaboration Wall, Philips Entertaible, Reactable, SixthSense, TouchLight, TouchTable, 3D Interaction, Accelerator (Internet Explorer), Accelerator table, Adjustment handles, Alt-Tab, Attentive user interface, Augmented reality, Balloon help, Bounce keys, Brace matching, Brain-computer interface, Breadcrumb (navigation), Canned response, Capacitive sensing, Caret navigation, Clipboard (software), Command-line completion, Command-line interface, Computer-mediated reality, Context awareness, Cover Flow, Crossing-based interface, Cursor (computers), Cut, copy, and paste, Dasher, Delimited search, Desktop metaphor, Digital puppetry, Direct manipulation interface, Direct Voice Input, Dock (computing), Dock (Mac OS X), Docky, Double-click, Drag-and-drop, Expose (Mac OS X), Flip page, Focus (computing), Form (web), Gesture recognition, Graffiti (Palm OS), Graffiti 2, Grayed out, Hands-free computing, Incremental search, Input method, Inspector window, Intelligent form, Interaction technique, Interactive voice response, IODD, Keyboard shortcut, List of dock applications, Location awareness, Lock key, Marching ants, Media space, Eric Michelman, Miller Columns, Mixed reality, Mnemonics (keyboard), Mode (computer interface), Modifier key, Moodbar, Mouse chording, Mouse keys, Multi-factor authentication, Multi-touch, Multi-touch gestures, MultiFinder, Multiple document interface, Multiple frames interface, Navigation controls, Optogenetics, Page zooming, Pen computing, Personalization, Pie menu, Point-and-click, Pointing device gesture, Post-WIMP, Progress indicator, Progressive disclosure, Projection augmented model, Publish and Subscribe, Query by Example, Responsiveness, Rhizome Navigation, Screen labeled function keys, Scroll lock, Scroll wheel, Scrolling, Selection (user interface), ShapeWriter, Silent speech interface, SlideIT, Slow keys, Smart tag (Microsoft), SmartAction, Spatial Contextual Awareness, Spatial file manager, Spatial navigation, Speech recognition, Split screen (computer graphics), Spoken dialog system, Stacks (software), State Bag, StickyKeys, Stylus (computing), Swiflet, Switch access, Swype, Syntax highlighting, T9 (predictive text), Tab (GUI), Tabbing navigation, Table of keyboard shortcuts, Taskbar, Telexistence, Text entry interface, Text-based (computing), Three-pane interface, Tiling window manager, Timed Text, Tip of the day, Tooltip, Treemapping, Triple-click, Typeahead, The Unfinished Revolution, Universal Scrolling, User interface, User persona, Virtual desktop, Virtual reality, Voice user interface, WIMP (computing)...and much more This book explains in-depth the real drivers and workings of Tangible User Interfaces. It reduces the risk of your technology, time and resources investment decisions by enabling you to compare your understanding of Tangible User Interfaces with the objectivity of experienced professionals.