No one knows the magic of hands like Leap Motion. And that’s why the San Francisco company is introducing a new hand-tracking system so that you can use your mitts in the new virtual worlds that are ...
10 years after the launch of Leap Motion—which garnered praise for offering some of the best hand-tracking in the industry—the company has announced a next-generation version of the device which now ...
One of the first things people do when they put on a virtual reality headset is try to look down at their hands. One company has the technology to ensure that you’ll actually see them. Leap Motion has ...
Razer's OSVR (Open Source Virtual Reality) headset has always been open to collaboration with other complementing technologies, as is shown by the 13 tactical partners it signed up back in February.
A snap-on faceplate will add 3D hand-tracking capabilities to the open-source VR headset's design, but you'll have to pay extra. I started with CNET reviewing laptops in 2009. Now I explore wearable ...
Qualcomm and Ultraleap today announced a “multi-year co-operation agreement” that will bring Ultraleap’s controllerless hand-tracking tech (formerly of Leap Motion) to XR headsets based on the ...
BRISTOL, England, May 31, 2023 /PRNewswire/ -- Ultraleap announces the launch of the Leap Motion Controller 2, the second generation of the iconic hand tracking camera that allows you to use your own ...
Today is something of a milestone in VR history, or at least this era of VR history. Starting today (according to Engadget) you can walk into Best Buy and purchase a VR visor. In this case it’s ...
$70 device tracks fingers, objects with sub-millimeter accuracy. After digging a bit deeper I found some info on David Holz ... David previously worked for NASA research working on advanced LiDAR ...
Did watching "Minority Report" make you fall in love with the idea of interacting with a computer by waving your hands around? Once a small gadget starts shipping on May 13, can do just that. You'll ...
An interdisciplinary team of Princeton researchers created LEAP, a flexible motion-capture tool that can be trained in a matter of minutes to track body parts over millions of frames of video with ...