How It Works
Hooked to the front of any typical head-mounted display (Samsung Gear, Google Cardboard, Oculus Rift, HTC Vive, you get the point), the Fingo module tracks one or both of the user’s hands, logging a total of 22 different joints per hand. In a demo, users were able to complete such intricate tasks as picking up a VR ring or throwing a VR dart at a VR dartboard. You could even trace your own name as if writing with an anti-gravity 3D pen.
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The Future
uSens’ Fingo tech can handle a 60fps frame rate with a 20 milisecond latency. The company has big plans for the rest of 2017: At CES Tuesday night, the company demoed their hand tracker using multiple headsets. Here’s a video look at the types of tricks and tasks the Fingo module can accomplish:
Just as the iPhone brought touchscreens into the mainstream, doing away with the stylus, uSens’ Fingo device seems well-poised to reshape how humans interact with and through the medium of virtual reality.