View allAll Photos Tagged touchscreen,
Lovely touch screen to find stuff in the CNIT. Rarely see anyone use it. Nobody seems bothered that it's crashed.
Sony Ericsson Mix Walkman (WT13i) Smartphone - green/black
7,6 cm (3,0" Display), 262.144 Colors, 400 x 240 Pixel (WVGA), Touchscreen, Camera 3,15 Megapixel)
95.8 × 52.8 × 14.3 mm, 88g
Mesh Hard Case Blue
Every two weeks, Ideum gathers the hardware and software teams together for an educational session about the many parts of our work that overlap. Visit our website to learn more about Ideum multitouch tables and touch walls and our Creative Services projects.
All the General Ticketing Machines (except the second from the left), are the new generation machines which are fully touchscreen capable.
7 Inch Tablet PC with GPS 3G Wifi Touchscreen
$185.20
www.happyshoppinglife.com/7-inch-tablet-pc-with-gps-3g-wi...
In the last two years, tablet computing has become the mainstream, with the iPad leading the charge. For the children of today, touchscreen technology is the blackboard of tomorrow.
Our Daily Challenge: Trend
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Here's my broken Sony (ebook) Reader - an opportunity to venture inside and find out how a touchscreen works! Unlike smartphones, which have capacitive touchscreens that sense electricity in your fingers, Sony Readers use somewhat simpler infrared touchscreens. They lay a criss-cross pattern of infrared beams over the surface that your fingers interrupt - a bit like Tom Cruise in Mission Impossible - signalling to the processor inside which bit of the screen you're pressing.
This photo is from our article on how touchscreens work.
Our images are published under a Creative Commons Licence (see opposite) and are free for noncommercial use. We also license our images for commercial use. Please contact us directly via our website for more details.
Who can blame them? That mobile device they're used to carry around everywhere is a simple do-it-all gadget. They connect with their (virtual) friends, play games, shop with the tips of their fingers and see the world they will probably never visit.
Besides, they seem to already miss the great view in front of them.
You think they care? They have a life to appreciate things that now take for granted or seem unimportant.
Don't we all?
Connect with me at jimmakos.com/photography
www.customgadz.com/ipad-touchscreen-splashback
19" touchscreen externally controlling iPod Touch. Seamless Integrated Mirror cabinet design for bathrooms. Integrates with Home automation apps, Control 4 & Push Controls. Watch TV, listen to music, read the news, check the weather as well as many other functions while you are in the bathroom.
Doubles as a Full HD LED TV. Custom display sizes can range from 19"-60" available in custom made to order cabinets or special conditions by request. Other installations can include full glass shower walls for a contemporary look, kitchen splashbacks as well as behind 2 way mirror glass for a full seamless and functional design. WATCH OUT FOR MORE EXAMPLES OF INSTALLATIONS COMMING SOON!
Here's a closeup of the main circuit board. The big hole at the top is where the battery normally goes. But of most interest are all those little yellow/white dots around the screen. Those are the light emitters and detectors that shoot infrared beams across the surface of the screen to detect your fingers.
This photo is from our article on how touchscreens work.
Our images are published under a Creative Commons Licence (see opposite) and are free for noncommercial use. We also license our images for commercial use. Please contact us directly via our website for more details.
Dell XPS 13 (2015) Infinity Display with Touchscreen at local Microsoft Store for $1,299.
Dell XPS 13 (2015) Infinity Display with Touchscreen at local Microsoft Store for $1,299.
I don't own the new XPS 13 (2015). I played with the touch display version for about 45 minutes in the Microsoft store. Also, I played with the non-touch, 1080p matted display for a couple of minutes. Reading web articles (using IE browser), this matted display showed jaggies on the letters and also was dimmer and the colors were less vibrant. The touch screen's high-resolution display was much better in every way (and no jaggies were visible in the web browser) except it had plenty of annoying glare.
Keyboard was only okay to type on. I wanted more downward travel on each keystroke for better confirmation of key press. There was some key wobble. The MacBook Air keys definitely feels better, sturdier, and more comfortable to type on than this XPS keyboard.
Speaker sound was loud enough for me to not have to strain to listen to YouTube's Adele music video playing in the Microsoft store's moderate background noise. But the sound quality was only so-so. I have definitely heard better sound from other laptops.
Cold start and shutdown times were very fast! I was impressed probably because I am accustomed to using Windows 8.1 on hard drives on my laptops.
Pros:
1. Small screen border enabling a form factor of a typical 11" laptop yet have a 13" screen (Wow and bravo to both Sharp and Dell!).
2. Very pleasing, high quality looking touch screen. Viewing angles seemed wide (both vertical and horizontal). Touch works good/responsive too!
3. Loud speakers positioned next to keyboard. But sound quality is only so-so (not the best, but not the worst I've heard from a laptop).
Cons:
1. The matted non-touch screen was average looking. Jaggies showed on the text; the colors were muted.
2. Trackpad: Sometimes I had to try multiple times to get the two finger scrolling to work on the trackpad. This was such annoyance that I just used the touch screen to scroll or I wished I had a mouse wheel to use!
3. Opening the closed lid required using two hands. I tried it with one hand and the lid would only open about one inch before it stopped opening and the bottom of the laptop then lifted up into the air. Also, I had to find the right spot on the edge of the lid in order to separate it from the bottom part. This definitely is not as quick in opening as say on the Macbook Air.
BTW, I never own one or use a Macbook Air regularly, only evaluated them hands-on at Best Buy. Same for the Dell XPS 13 (2015); I don't own one; only test drove it for 45 minutes in the store.
TheVerge article said "Dell's XPS 13 is a look at the future of laptops" and I would agree with that. Seeing and using this laptop, there's no going back to using laptops with bigger screen bezels. But, this laptop (with touch screen) is too pricey. One year from now, other brands will have these small bezel touchscreens too. I want this Dell now, but I can wait for a much lower price.
Photobooth continues to serve me very well as an ad-hoc project tool.
Resulting stencils available here: www.kickerstudio.com/blog/2008/12/touchscreen-stencils/
Join the Android family with this affordable new Android Smartphone. Featuring dual SIM slots, Android 2.2, and a clean beautiful design with tons of cool features, the Cocoa smartphone will make your first Android experience unforgettable.
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Froyo Android 2.2 operating system
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Wi-Fi internet support
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Dual Camera (0.3MP)
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LCD Digital Advertising Displays and Digital Signage More Affordable
Small businesses are recognizing the importance of communication with customers to improve product awareness and increase turnover
Sun Group has responded to market demand for affordable high quality Digital Advertising Display SUN-SG8 8Inch, 10.4Inch, 15Inch, 17Inch and 19Inch. The company has recently announced their new line of Digital Advertising Display and Digital Multimedia Players at new low prices that will get every one up and running. This digital advertising display will look good in any retail outlets, office or home, offering unprecedented customization with its interchangeable frames. It supports CFI, II/MD/SM/MS/MS pro/SD/MMC card formats, ensuring a wide blanket of compatibility. built-in real-time clock and calendar. Ideal for Digital Signs, POP Displays and Retail Advertising. Automatic power on/off time. also support USB host, which can read from USB memory stick and from external Hard disc directly
The Netherlands
Taiwan
Removing a few screws, we get three main components - the display surround (left), the touchscreen (right), and the PCB with the infrared touchscreen LEDs and light detectors dotted around it. Normally there's a battery in that big hole, but I've removed it already.
This photo is from our article on how touchscreens work.
Our images are published under a Creative Commons Licence (see opposite) and are free for noncommercial use. We also license our images for commercial use. Please contact us directly via our website for more details.
Mobility and business telecommunication technology concept: modern mobile devices with touchscreen interface - office tablet computer PC and black glossy smartphone or mobile phone isolated on white background with reflection effect
Mice, and now touchscreens, have become a daily part of our lives in the way we interact with computers. But what about people who lack the ability to use a mouse or touchscreen? Or situations where these would be impractical or outright dangerous?
My research addresses extreme human machine interaction ranging from investigating interaction issues for people with severe physical impairment to proposing new interaction techniques for combat aircraft pilots and automotive drivers, where the context itself imposes situational impairment. I have developed user model and investigated new modalities of interaction involving eye-gaze, head-movement and hand-gesture trackers. I have worked with Indian universities to improve quality of life of rural UK and Indian population as well as collaborated with a major defence company to exploit traditional 'accessibility features' for military combat aircrafts. I have invented new algorithms to simulate users’ interaction with an electronic screen and target prediction technology to facilitate human machine interaction.
This particular photo entry is a collage of our user survey, demonstration and exhibition. In the following paragraphs I have briefly described each photograph.
1: Picture Description
Picure 1: The top left photograph was taken at a rural old-age home at Mandi, India, where I conducted a survey on the exposure and limitation of modern interactive technologies of rural Indian population. Results from my survey was later published in a monograph published by Springer (www.springer.com/computer/hci/book/978-3-319-06165-8).
Picture 2: Picture from a user study from India, computer-novice users found our eye-gaze tracking based system easier and faster to use than conventional computer mouse.
Picture 3 to 5: We have demonstrated our technologies at many different conferences, exhibitions and user trial, where member of public and even children could use our system without any difficulty.
Pictures 6 & 7: These pictures are showing my colleagues using eye gaze tracking based devices while operating a flight simulator as part of a BAE Systems funded project.
Picture 8:The picture was taken at IIT, Mandi as part of a project to explore use of eye gaze tracking to operate a dashboard while driving, so that drivers need not to take their hands off from steering wheel. Presently I am working with Jaguar Land Rover to further explore utility of eye gaze tracking interface in automotive environment.
I had to mount it upside-down, so you can't see the connector itself, but the breakout board has a Spark Fun logo on the back :)
This is the Samsung Galaxy S, one of my first touchscreen phones. Doing what I do, it's bit surprising that my Project365 doesn't have more "technology" shots. Visiting museums and such, I'm finding that technology is one of those things that really allows us to date items. It's only in the last few years that touchscreen phones became popular, before that the sliders and flip phones were the norm and even earlier than that the giant Motorola bricks were common. A cell phone shot just had to be a part of my 365 of 2013/2014. A good benefit of touchscreen technology coupled with Internet access and fairly large local storage is that it's a very handy with-me-all-the-time photographer field notes book.
Sony Ericsson Mix Walkman (WT13i) Smartphone - green/black
7,6 cm (3,0" Display), 262.144 Colors, 400 x 240 Pixel (WVGA), Touchscreen, Camera 3,15 Megapixel)
95.8 × 52.8 × 14.3 mm, 88g
LAPD Pontiac/Holden G8 Technology Demonstrator @ LAPD West Valley Open House. The final version will have a 7 inch longer frame, maintain the Corvette C8 engine and much of the technology. The body will be changed and it will be known as the Chevy Caprice. It should be finalized and tested by 2012 and in production around 2013-2014. The Front panel is just a touchscreen, all of the computing power is in the rear trunk which has its own cooling sytem
Upgraded, touchscreen navigation is one of many new features onboard U.S. Customs and Border Protection Air and Marine Operations' newest vessel, a 41-foot SAFE boat on display this week near the Washington Navy Yard in Washington, D.C., Sept. 25, 2019. CBP photo by Glenn Fawcett
I booted it up to see what would happen and it looks like it should work fine. It has 128 MB of ram, and an older AMD CPU. I am not sure how fast it is, I seem to recall PlayerTwo saying that it was 1 Ghz
Fitted an external PSU from linitx.com/product_info.php?cPath=24_54&products_id=142 which has solved the heat problems. Added an extra 64MB RAM. Added connectors for USB and audio under the front flap. Tried to fit the insides of a £4 set of speakers, but managed to break the amp I think. The speakers were already glued in place by this time. I'll try again later with a better amp.
Look closely and you'll also spot that there are light diffusers in the screen surround, lined up exactly with the light emitters and detectors. So I'm assuming light beams fan up and out from the emitters along these little grooves, which turn them into fairly precise parallel lines of invisible light.
This photo is from our article on how touchscreens work.
Our images are published under a Creative Commons Licence (see opposite) and are free for noncommercial use. We also license our images for commercial use. Please contact us directly via our website for more details.