Texas Instruments, or TI, announced in Barcelona today its new Me-D experiences, which are interactions and gestures that TI boasts as capable of freeing users from the limitations of the physical mobile space. With TI’s new OMAP 4 platform, which we should be seeing in use later this year, the Me-D experience ought to be a pretty smooth one. So just what does it entail, exactly?
TI says that the Me-D experience includes “touchless gesturing in the ‘natural’ dimension, stereoscopic 3D (S3D) in the ‘third’ dimension, and interactive projection in the ‘projected’ dimension.”
Sounds like some futuristic stuff, but it looks like it’s just building on what smartphones are able to do now. The OMAP 4 is a dual-core processor that was admittedly beaten to market by NVIDIA’s Tegra 2, but as we saw earlier, it’s a pretty capable platform that will be used in devices like the LG Optimus 3D.
For more details on the Me-D experience and how OMAP 4 fits in, see the press release on the following page.
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