Imagine yourself in sudden and desperate need of an ink cartridge. You might need it for your printer; you might be seeking a hitherto untested cocktail mixer.
You decide to visit your favourite ink & toner online retailer (hint hint) but an obstacle then confronts you – you’re handcuffed. Why are you handcuffed? That’s not the issue. But in most circumstances your thirst for toner would go unsated.
Unsated that is unless you’d been prescient enough to purchase the Zyxio SensaWaft. Then the loss of your hands would present no difficulties at all: you’d merely dispatch an expert puff of breath into the SensaWaft’s blow interface, and the much-desired ink cartridge would be ordered in a snap.
‘Ordering ink & toner with this company really is a breeze!’ you might declare and, because of the Zyxio SensaWaft, you really wouldn’t be wrong. Thanks SensaWaft!
But wait – what marvel of early 21st century engineering enables persons to purchase ink without their hands? Not only without their hands – but dispensing with language itself? For answers we must turn to Pierre Bonnat’s 13 January interview with Priya Ganapati of Wired.com.
The CEO of Zyxio believes the keyboard & mouse an antiquated means to interact with computers – with touch screens, voice recognition and the SensaWaft, we can check on Facebook au naturel.
The SensaWaft senses pressure variations in the air up to 7.8 inches from the Micro Electro-Mechanical (MEMS) chip into which the user exhales. Zyxio’s chipset interprets a variety of gestures (fortunately excepting the sneeze or cough) and can be integrated into hardware such as: mp3 players, phones and laptops.
Bonnat notes that “70 percent of the technology is in the software,” - so anyone using the MEMS without the SensaWaft program is wasting their breath.
Zyxio plan to launch the SensaWaft later this year, integrated with a gaming headset. Look forward to buying ink if you’re handcuffed then - but not when you’re out jogging!
You decide to visit your favourite ink & toner online retailer (hint hint) but an obstacle then confronts you – you’re handcuffed. Why are you handcuffed? That’s not the issue. But in most circumstances your thirst for toner would go unsated.
Unsated that is unless you’d been prescient enough to purchase the Zyxio SensaWaft. Then the loss of your hands would present no difficulties at all: you’d merely dispatch an expert puff of breath into the SensaWaft’s blow interface, and the much-desired ink cartridge would be ordered in a snap.
‘Ordering ink & toner with this company really is a breeze!’ you might declare and, because of the Zyxio SensaWaft, you really wouldn’t be wrong. Thanks SensaWaft!
But wait – what marvel of early 21st century engineering enables persons to purchase ink without their hands? Not only without their hands – but dispensing with language itself? For answers we must turn to Pierre Bonnat’s 13 January interview with Priya Ganapati of Wired.com.
The CEO of Zyxio believes the keyboard & mouse an antiquated means to interact with computers – with touch screens, voice recognition and the SensaWaft, we can check on Facebook au naturel.
The SensaWaft senses pressure variations in the air up to 7.8 inches from the Micro Electro-Mechanical (MEMS) chip into which the user exhales. Zyxio’s chipset interprets a variety of gestures (fortunately excepting the sneeze or cough) and can be integrated into hardware such as: mp3 players, phones and laptops.
Bonnat notes that “70 percent of the technology is in the software,” - so anyone using the MEMS without the SensaWaft program is wasting their breath.
Zyxio plan to launch the SensaWaft later this year, integrated with a gaming headset. Look forward to buying ink if you’re handcuffed then - but not when you’re out jogging!
1 comments:
This rocks, dude. Damn, well apparently you can't comment anomalously!
Post a Comment