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Mobile Phones: Synaptics introduces "Onyx" buttonless concept phone
Posted on Aug 22, 2006 - 11:19 AM by zmcnulty
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Posted on Aug 22, 2006 - 11:19 AM by zmcnulty
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We'll start our day with an announcement from Synaptics, an American company that manufactures touchpads used in notebook PCs. In collaboration with Germany's PilotFish, they've developed a buttonless mobile phone called the "Onyx." It takes advantage of Synaptic's "ClearPad" capacitance touchscreen technology.
Traditionally, transparent touchscreens have been clear membranes placed over standard LCDs, requiring the user to use something like a stylus to register input on them. ClearPad however is similar to the touchpad of your laptop computer, meaning it can recognize complicated gestures and such drawn with just a finger.
This approach opens a number of new avenues for mobile phones -- ITmedia gives examples of drawing an "X" on the screen to close an application, sending messages by dragging them outside the window, and answering a phone call just by touching the phone.
Since Synaptics is an American company, they have an English press release and product site already available. The ITmedia article is here.
Traditionally, transparent touchscreens have been clear membranes placed over standard LCDs, requiring the user to use something like a stylus to register input on them. ClearPad however is similar to the touchpad of your laptop computer, meaning it can recognize complicated gestures and such drawn with just a finger.
This approach opens a number of new avenues for mobile phones -- ITmedia gives examples of drawing an "X" on the screen to close an application, sending messages by dragging them outside the window, and answering a phone call just by touching the phone.
Since Synaptics is an American company, they have an English press release and product site already available. The ITmedia article is here.

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