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10 cool futuristic technologies on the horizon now

10 cool futuristic technologies on the horizon now

By:  IT World Canada Staff  On: 22 Aug 2007 For: IT World Canada Creator

Check out these cutting-edge technologies that enable all manner of futuristic applications - and they're viable now (or very soon). They include wearable gadgetry that will form the foundation for a new generation of wash-and-wear computer control and display devices, localization technology that makes eye-gaze a viable alternative to the mouse for everyday pointing and selection tasks, like Web surfing, a free PC environment that can be accessed from any browser, with single online file system, single log-in and file sharing, and more.

"What is really exciting is that the processing power of today's computers is completely changing the kinds of things we can use for computer interfaces," says Ted Selker, associate professor at the MIT Media and Arts Technology Laboratory and director of the Context Aware Computing Lab. "Things like eye tracking are using channels of communication that literally were unavailable to interface designers even five years ago."

"[Kumar's] approach -- using eye movement in a subtle, lightweight way, rather than as a direct mouse substitute -- is exactly the right way to go," says Robert Jacob, a professor of computer science at Tufts University in Medford, Mass.

Selker says eye tracking might become a standard computer interface within the next five years. For now, the primary obstacle is the high cost of eye-tracking hardware, although mass adoption of the technology would drive those costs down.

Ghost Inc.’s Ghost: The Everywhere OS
Ghost is founded on the passionate belief that the Windows and Mac model of your operating system — with your precious applications and data all walled inside one physical computer — is obsolete,” says Ghost’s creator, Zvi Schreiber.

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IT World Canada Staff IT World Canada Staff is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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