Playing With a More Sensitive Wii

A small add-on makes Wii games feel even more realistic.

Canesta: The Full D7 Demo

The search for the perfect remote control continues, this time from Canesta, a San Jose-based company specializing in 3-D “natural interfaces.” That means controlling your television via a series of gestures–including a wave and more. Canesta demoed the new technology to control TV functions, from changing channels to navigating more complex menus, at the seventh D: All Things Digital.
548564316_4c8mb-mjpg

Canesta: The Full D7 Demo

The search for the perfect remote control continues, this time from Canesta, a San Jose-based company specializing in 3-D “natural interfaces.” That means controlling your television via a series of gestures–including a wave and more. Canesta demoed the new technology to control TV functions, from changing channels to navigating more complex menus, at the seventh D: All Things Digital.
548564316_4c8mb-mjpg

D7 Video Highlights: Canesta Demo

Canesta, a San Jose-based company specializing in 3-D “natural interfaces,” demo a new technology that allows a person to use gestures to control TV functions–everything from changing channels to navigating more complex menus. Apparently, it also enables you to Twitter from offstage while doing something completely different onstage.

D7 Tech Demo: Canesta

Say goodbye and good riddance to your clunky and obsolete remote control. At least, that’s what Canesta, a San Jose-based company specializing in 3-D “natural interfaces,” would like to see happen. Today the company will demonstrate new technology that allows a person to use gestures to control TV functions–everything from changing channels to navigating more complex menus.
Canesta