The chip is able to track users’ hand movements in three dimensions,
and these gestures can be saved for future use. Users can simply flash
these saved hand motions in front of the lock to deactivate it. With
the “invisible key” concept, Tsai and his school won the Gold Award at
the Taipei International Invention Show last weekend.
The invention does sound innovative on paper, but like physical keys, hand movements can be duplicated.
Source: Geek, via TechCrunch
The invention does sound innovative on paper, but like physical keys, hand movements can be duplicated.
Source: Geek, via TechCrunch
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