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Touch down: PhoneTouch lets manipulate onscreen photos with their phone.
University of Lancaster
A new system identifies users by their mobile phones.
Tabletop touch screens such as Microsoft's Surface are designed for sharing and collaboration, but it's difficult for them to tell one person from another. Researchers in the U.K. have developed a new way to identify different users: via mobile phones.
The prototype system, called PhoneTouch, lets users manipulate onscreen objects, such as photos, or select buttons, by touching any part of their phone to the screen. This also makes it possible to personalize interactions, says Hans Gellersen, a professor of interactive systems at the University of Lancaster, who developed the system with his student Dominik Schmidt.
PhoneTouch also makes it possible to transfer files between the phone and the surface. "Surfaces in general are good for working together in parallel," says Gellersen. "But when people work together they also want to bring information into the group."
PhoneTouch uses a camera positioned beneath the surface to recognize finger contact. The system can also discern the pattern made when the edge of a phone touches the surface. "The phone gives a different visual blob than the finger," says Gellersen.
To identify which phone is in contact with the surface, the PhoneTouch interrogates the accelerometers built into connected phones to see which of them experienced a slight bump at precisely the moment of contact. "These two events are correlated in time," he says. This is an approach known as separate event detection.
"It's very clever," says Eva Hornecker, who studies the usability of touch surfaces at Strathclyde University. "Normally surfaces don't know who's who." PhoneTouch could, perhaps, ensure that files taken from a phone can be shared with others, but without allowing anyone else to alter or save them, Hornecker notes.
Voltage is the difference of electrical potential between two points of an electrical or electronic circuit, expressed in volts. It measures the potential energy of an electric field to cause an electric current in an electrical conductor.
Most measurement devices can measure voltage. Two common voltage measurements are direct current (DC) and alternating current (AC).
Learn the fundamentals of creating an AC or DC voltage measurement system. See how to properly connect the signals to your data acquisition system for accurate acquisition.
This document is part of the How-To Guide for Most Common Measurements centralized resource portal.
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