A smartphone that allows users to browse the web by
hovering a finger above links they would normally touch has been unveiled by
the Japanese electronics giant Sony. The firm describes the
technology as a "floating touch" user-interface. The Xperia Sola
handset is due to go on sale in the second half of 2012. But some mobile phone
analysts question whether the feature will be practical or popular.
Touchless world
A
number of firms around the world have been exploring gesture control possibilities for
quite some time. Giants such as Apple, Microsoft and US mobile phone chip maker
Qualcomm, as well as several small start-ups, are currently developing
camera-based touchless technology. Their aim is to let users perform tasks such
as answering the phone, navigating the web and flicking through photos using
gestures - for instance, snapping fingers in front of the screen. Sony's new
"floating interface" is different. A user's finger will essentially
act as a mouse cursor, highlighting a link. Once selected, it can be activated
it with a single tap. Calum MacDougall of Sony Mobile Communications called the
phone's technology "a sense of magic".
But not
everyone is that optimistic. Chris Barraclough, devices editor at Mobile Choice
magazine, said that it was unclear how popular and practical the feature would
be. "It is certainly an original piece of technology, and may be useful,
for instance, when your hands are wet, but we still need to see other practical
implications of it," he said. Although it may seem that the feature could
help users eliminate fingerprint smudges that inevitably cover any smartphone
screen, Mr Barraclough thinks otherwise. "I don't think it will really
help - just pulling your phone out of your pocket already leaves lots of
smudges," he said.
Awesome invention by Sony
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