When the Leap Motion controller was revealed to the world, it brought with it the promise of a new and unique computer user experience. And, ever since we first got to see what the Leap Motion ...
Before you draw midair masterpieces, or flick bricks with your finger, find out which settings and best-practices optimize the Leap Motion Controller for speed, accuracy, and ergonomics. Sharon Profis ...
Following on from September’s HP Envy 17 Leap Motion special edition release HP has announced that a further 11 PCs are going to come equipped with Leap’s eponymous built-in motion controller. Many of ...
We have a habit of filling new technologies with old ideas. Television borrowed from vaudeville in its early days. Personal computers were built around familiar pre-digital concepts like inboxes, file ...
A new device brings motion control to your computer. May 21, 2012— -- The distance between you and the virtual world is about to get even smaller. David Holz and Michael Buckwald, co-founders of ...
For the past couple days, I’ve been gesticulating even more than normal—at times, subtly, at other times, wildly—while getting to know the latest in gesture-control technology: the Leap Motion ...
Ever since Leap Motionteased its small, high-resolution motion controller over a year ago, we’ve all been itching to get our hands on it, so to speak, in more detail. And here’s the deal folks: It is ...
Leap Motion’s motion control technology may not have blown us away, but the intriguing hardware impressed somebody at HP. After being featured in the HP Envy 17 notebook earlier this fall, Leap Motion ...
VR has an input problem. Companies have tried using game controllers, joysticks, and other hardware to let people interact with virtual objects, but none of these feel as comfortable as just reaching ...
Leap Motion debuted in June 2012 with an impressively polished demo, but after its attention-getting debut, the company’s path to market got quite a bit rockier. It had to woo partners on both the ...
The Leap Motion Controller is a touch-free motion controller for your Mac or PC. While I really like it, the Leap Motion is more of a curiosity than a necessity. At $80, it might be worth it to you.
Leap Motion isn't convinced that a touchscreen is enough: instead, it wants you to start waving. While gesturing wildly at your electronics may bring to mind Jean Michel Jarre or trying to play a ...