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January 9, 2012 02:23 am EDT

Tobii's Gaze interface lets you use your eyes to move a cursor, perform gestures in Windows 8 (video)

We've seen gesture control, but how about an input device that lets you stare your PC into submission? That's the basic gist of Tobii's Gaze UI, an early version of which is on display here at CES, and which will eventually help doctors and other professionals skim through data just by looking at it. When this becomes available, likely in a year or so, customers will need some requisite hardware (read: that conspicuous eye tracking strip you see up there) and, of course, software that can take advantage of it. Got it? Good. Here's the elevator pitch: using your eyes, you can move the cursor around the screen, select objects, scroll and pinch to zoom. But if you imagined looking at your Firefox shortcut and blinking twice to open it, you'd be sorely disappointed: though you can use your eyes to manipulate the cursor, you'll still need to keep a finger on your touchpad. For instance, once you direct your eyes to a certain part of a webpage, you'll need to use two fingers to zoom in, as you normally would. Really, then, this is saving you from having to bear down on your clickpad, meaning for now, at least, your fingers can keep their day job.

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Tobii's Gaze interface lets you use your eyes to move a cursor, perform gestures in Windows 8 (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 08 Jan 2012 21:23:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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