InAiR turns your TV into a Minority Report-like experience, with layers of Web content, inline with the programs you're watching. What is InAiR?
InAiR brings you the world's first Augmented TV experience With InAir plugged in, your TV becomes an Augmented Television. You can turn any ordinary television into a new and wonderful medium, filled with rich and dynamic information from the Web. InAiR uses your TV screen and layers in additional content from the Web and social media. InAir works with any standard television. And InAir works with any 3D TV. When activated in 3D mode, the layers of Internet content appear to be positioned in front of the screen and can be dynamically manipulated by the viewer. These foreground layers of information appear to be holograms, and floating "in air" (and this is where our name came from). The following video can be watched from a 3D screen in side-by-side mode and you be able to experience the InAiR interface floating in front of the screen. Are you frequently using your laptop and television at the same time? Many of us are multi-tasking: watching TV, and at the same time surfing the Web for information, purchasing things online and communicating on social networks. By designing a centralized platform, InAiR creates a single viewing experience. We care a lot about quality. And we have high standards for creating a rich experience: smooth animation, layering, and clean simple graphics. Our interface is very simple to use, and is designed with gesture in mind, for touch gesture on smartphones and for hand gesture. The Aurora is a smart headband that plays personalized lights and sounds to help you have lucid dreams.
Firefighters Allegedly Refuse To Help Dying Man Across The Street From Fire Station Because They Didn't Call 911 First
My Mother Taught Me To Not Deny Even A Dog Food. Shameful: Utah Kids In Tears After School Seizes And Tosses Out 40 Lunches Over Debt
The Colorado High School Activities Association ruled that a student with two prosthetic legs could not play varsity basketball because he might be a safety risk to himself or other players. Jaclyn Allen reports.
This is the terrifying moment a skydiver was left plummeting 12,500ft to the ground after he was knocked out in a skydiving accident.
James Lee, 25 was taking part in a jump in Wiltshire when just seconds after leaping from the plane he was hit on the back of the head by another skydiver. The blow knocked him out and sent him hurtling towards the ground uncontrollably. Luckily two other skydivers noticed something was wrong and chased after their unconscious colleague. After realising he was unresponsive the two men managed to roll James into a more stable position and deploy his parachute for a safe landing. It wasn't until James was under the canopy that he began to regain consciousness, he landed safely on the ground with no memory of the drama that had unfolded seconds earlier. The mid-air drama was captured by a camera on James' helmet. Source: Caters/Newsflare Thalmic Labs has created an alternative to the mouse and keyboard. The new Myo device uses muscle sensors to understand your gestures, letting you use your hands to play video games, swipe through slides, or turn up your tunes. -cnet news
Infused with gold and diamond powder, a single bar of Qatar soap costs $2,800. A bar of soap produced by a family-run business in Lebanon might make you think twice about washing too often.
Six-year-old Didier has struggled with a rare condition, a giant mole that covered 40% of his body1/31/2014 Six-year-old Didier has struggled with a rare condition, a giant mole that covered 40% of his body
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