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Monday, March 7, 2011

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Tobii's Eye-Tracking Laptop Technology: Eyes-On!

Tobii Prototype Laptop

I looked at the laptop, and the laptop looked back. Tobii Technology, the company behind technology that allows users to control their laptop's interface with their eyes, came into the PCMag offices today, giving us a chance to look over one of its proof-of-concept prototypes. The eye-tracking technology isn't quite ready for mass-market use, but the ingredients are definitely there to bring a new level of interaction to your computer within the next few years.
The prototype laptop is the result of a partnership with Lenovo, and puts Tobii's proprietary sensor technology into a fairly conventional looking package. It uses infrared lights to track "corneal reflection," or the glint off of the eye. Our video footage shows the two sensors flickering at high speed, which only our video camera could detect (the human eye can't see the flickering). These specialized sensors capture corneal reflections at 30 to 40 Hertz (or 30-40 images per second), determining not only where your eyes are looking, but their position in 3D space as well. After a brief calibration process, which involves looking at 9 points on the laptop screen, the sensor follows your eyes for as long as they are turned on.
The "eye-gaze data," as Tobii calls it, is vital, as it provides a new level of input that accompanying software can use in any number of ways. At its most basic, the eye-tracking can take over cursor control from the mouse, letting you move the cursor with your eyes.
More refined uses, as Tobii demonstrated for us, included such tasks as automatic scrolling as you read further down the page in a document. The sensors can also track gaze points, where, for instance, gazing at an image for a few seconds brings it to the forefront. In an image slideshow, you can pan through images by looking left and right, and control lighting by staring away and then back at the menu. Point-and-shoot games become glance and shoot, and menus can be rapidly navigated with ease.
Using the new device is at once simple and difficult, if only because you're forced to focus on where your eyes go. Stray glances pull up unwanted menus, and using your eyes to control familiar functions, like using a touchpad, did take some getting used to. It's not a hands-free experience either. You'll have to use keys on the keyboard to execute many of the commands. For instance, image zoom is a two-step process: Focus your eyes on a particular part of the image, then hit a key to zoom. The same applies to opening applications and documents. What the eye-tracking technology is supposed to do, as Tobii explains it, is minimize hand involvement in computing tasks, not eliminate it altogether.
What form the technology will take when it reaches consumers is yet to be seen. This prototype is one of the first steps in bringing eye-tracking technology from the realm of academic research and into the mass market. It needs some work before that happens—the technology seemed to have trouble tracking the eyes of one of our team who was wearing powerful prescription glasses. Much of the fine tuning will occur on the software side, as developers find new ways to get your eyes involved in whatever you're doing. One thing is for sure: You'll want to keep an eye on where this new technology is heading.

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Blatter hints at technology for 2014 World Cup

NEWPORT, Wales (Reuters) – Goal-line technology could be used at the 2014 World Cup finals in Brazil if a suitable system can be found following further tests, FIFA president Sepp Blatter said on Saturday.
Blatter, speaking at a news conference following the annual meeting of the law-making International FootballAssociation Board, confirmed that tests would continue for another year.
"On goal-line technology, we will go on with the technical experiments and then bring this item back to the IFAB meeting next year in London when a final decision will be taken.
"If it works definitely, the board will say yes to the technology. And if the board says yes then there should be no problem to have it in 2014 in Brazil."
But he ruled out any system being in place for the 2012 European championship in Poland and Ukraine, although IFAB did sanction UEFA's experiment of a five-man refereeing system to be used at the finals.
At the same meeting, IFAB decided not to allow the continued use of neck-warming snoods after July 1 and also ruled that if players wear tights under their shorts to keep warm, the tights must be the same color as their shorts.
They also ruled that the use of "vanishing spray" used by referees to measure the distance a defensive wall must stand from a free-kick, can continue to be trialed in South America. The referee uses the spray 10 yards from the free-kick to mark out a white line which disappears after about 30 seconds.
ON AND OFF
However, the main issue concerned goal-line technology which has been on and off IFAB's agenda for the last five years, and was brought back to the table after being "finally" dismissed last year.
However, FIFA, and Blatter's attitude, changed after the failure of the officials to award a goal to England when a shot from Frank Lampard clearly crossed the goal-line against Germany at last year's World Cup in South Africa.
Blatter said: "That was a "blatant, immense error and the time came to re-open the discussion on technology again."
He added: "However, I have to restrict my natural optimism and come a little bit back because the tests we have had so far are not conclusive."
FIFA conducted private testing for 10 systems in February but all 10 failed to meet FIFA's exacting requirements. Further tests will continue in match conditions, but not necessarily in any official matches, over the next 12 months.
Blatter had previously expressed his dislike for goal-line technology preaching the "universitality" of the laws of the game so that the same conditions apply at both the highest and lowest standards.
The English FA, one of the eight voting members of the board, was slightly unhappy that the testing was only extended, because they would have preferred the concept to be agreed in principle.
FA Chairman David Bernstein said: "We are encouraged by what we've heard today and the developments on technology are very positive.
"We might have liked to have gone a little further because we would have liked the principle of goal-line technology adopted.
Alex Horne, the FA general secretary, added: "Given where we were last year, when it got thrown out, that was my worst fear that it would happen again."
The IFAB also approved the use of two additional referee's assistants behind each goal at Euro 2012 -- and that system could also be extended to the World Cup, Blatter said.
"It is with a lot of optimism that we will have additional referees for 2014," Blatter said.
But snoods were outlawed.
"There was not even a discussion because this is not part of the equipment and it can be dangerous, you could risk hanging yourself" Blatter said.
IFAB, formed in 1886 is celebrating its 125th anniversary and is the game's ultimate, famously conservative law-making body comprising officials from England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales, plus four FIFA officials representing the other 204 football nations.

 
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