Just wave your hand to access music, web, your family and friends. You don´t even need to touch the surface. Gesture Cube uses 3D spatial movement tracking to detect your hand´s approach and movements. It´s a magical experience. Using natural gestures to control our electronics helps to draw them closer to human behaviour, making things easier and more fun. The result is an intuitive product concept with unlimited possibilities. LUNAR Europe designed Gesture Cube as a three-dimensional object without a clear front to allow a wider range of gestures for its interface, to show different levels of an application or to conveniently multitask between various applications. The Gesture Cube´s design is simple yet so beautiful it also acts as a sculptural icon in your living space. Gesture Cube is a joint development by three partnering companies: Product Design by LUNAR Europe, User Interface Design by ZINOSIGN and Technology by IDENT Technology AG.
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Comments
It feels overwrought. It's trying too hard to be cool and pack in too much. I'm not sure Donald Norman would approve. There's not much connecting the gesture and function together.
The guy has to pick up the cube and carry it to the living room? Really?! Besides that bit of silliness, it's form doesn't scream "please carry me around". I don't think the future is in discrete devices where interactions are localized, especially when it comes to using motion tracking and gesture. When gestures are involved, I think a larger space is needed. The future is in smart interactive environments not "interactive" cubes.
Still, very interesting...
It feels overwrought. It's trying too hard to be cool and pack in too much. I'm not sure Donald Norman would approve. There's not much connecting the gesture and function together.
The guy has to pick up the cube and carry it to the living room? Really?! Besides that bit of silliness, it's form doesn't scream "please carry me around". I don't think the future is in discrete devices where interactions are localized, especially when it comes to using motion tracking and gesture. When gestures are involved, I think a larger space is needed. The future is in smart interactive environments not "interactive" cubes.
Still, very interesting...