Intelligent Machines Get a Virtual-Reality Punch, Feel Real Impact Researchers in Germany have developed technology for an armband that lets you feel impact from virtual interactions. by John Pavlus 2015-11-11T00:00:00-05:00
Intelligent Machines How People Will Use the Apple Watch Developers and designers debate whether the Apple Watch will find its purpose. by John Pavlus 2015-02-17T07:45:00-05:00
Intelligent Machines Something Lost in Skype Translation Skype’s real-time translation software highlights remarkable progress in machine learning—but it still struggles with the subtleties of human communication. by John Pavlus 2015-01-15T12:00:00-05:00
Intelligent Machines Could “Force Illusions” Help Wearables Catch On? Researchers have made haptic interfaces that create the sensation of being pushed or pulled by an invisible force. by John Pavlus 2014-07-21T16:21:00-04:00
Intelligent Machines Twitter Tests a Toolkit That Puts the Internet in Things Platforms that combine networking with user interfaces will help companies test post-PC ideas. by John Pavlus 2013-05-03T10:58:00-04:00
Intelligent Machines Ghost’s Blogging Dashboard Doesn’t Need to Exist Are dashboards really the best way to deliver analytics to people who want to “just blog”? by John Pavlus 2013-04-30T11:08:18-04:00
Intelligent Machines What Will Terms-of-Service Agreements Look Like in the Age of Brain-Computer Interfaces? As consumer tech companies bring brain interfaces ever closer to the mainstream, human-friendly legalese could become a crucial part of the user experience. by John Pavlus 2013-04-29T17:27:21-04:00
Intelligent Machines Yahoo’s Weather App Has No “Cool” Interactions–And That’s Amazing It’s pretty, yes. But more importantly, it doesn’t force you to interact with it. by John Pavlus 2013-04-26T17:07:46-04:00
Intelligent Machines Think Gestural Interactions Suck? Design Your Own Creating your own gestural patterns could make these interactions easier to remember, researchers say. by John Pavlus 2013-04-26T15:32:12-04:00
Humans and Technology Two Ways to Fix the Typing-on-Touch-Screens Problem One solution to the typing-on-a-screen problem asks us to change our behavior; the other changes its behavior to fit us. by John Pavlus 2013-04-26T11:17:36-04:00