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Canesta launches virtual keyboard technology

Canesta has announced the availability of a virtual keyboard system which uses an array of lights and sensors to project a full-size keyboard onto flat surfaces. The technology is aimed at handheld device manufacturers which want to provide keyboard input capabilities without impacting form-factor.

Canesta has developed an invisible IR light source, image projection unit and a sensor to record hand movements in 3D. When combined, these components result in a projected keyboard which can be overlayed on a flat surface and then used as a standard keyboard, relaying strokes to the handheld device. The chipset is relatively smaller, about the size of a pea, and can be easily integrated using standard serial keyboard interfaces. It can be rapidly customised to project keyboards in any format or language. The company, which has received about USD 20m in venture funding from a consortium of high profile investors, did not announce pricing or initial customers.

“Mobile and wireless devices have untethered business professionals from their offices, yet so much about mobile technology remains the legacy of desktop computing,” said Chris Shipley, executive producer of DEMOmobile, the conference where Canesta has been demonstrating its technology. “For example, for real data input, such substantive correspondence, the use of analytical tools, or tasks requiring a high degree of interactivity, nothing has surpassed a traditional, full sized keyboard. With important, new wireless applications emerging, a projection keyboard and mouse, fully Integrated into a pocket-sized mobile device, means that mobile professionals will finally be able to use these devices as easily as they would a desktop computer, and perhaps leave their laptops at home.”

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