When the Luminae glass keyboard project concluded its campaign
on Kickstarter in early 2012, it was pretty much just a glimmer in its
creator's eye, more an idea than a product. That didn't stop it from nearly
tripling its funding goal. Move ahead to CES 2013 and the Luminae from TransluSense is very much a real thing, and it's a
thing of beauty.
A
light pipe, infrared LEDs, and visible LEDs feed signals into the artfully
curved glass. Three cameras look upward from below and see when your fingers
break the light pattern. That's how it recognizes what you're doing on the
glass. A smaller trackpad version will also be available.
So
what's the purpose of a glass keyboard, especially one that costs US$500? For
starters, you'll never have to shake, toothpick, or vacuum crumbs out from
under your keys ever again. Ultimately, the real answer is that it just plain
looks awesome.
Another
secret makes this keyboard appealing. Customers can design their own custom
overlays online and set the keyboard to recognize all the custom keys and
shortcuts. If you get tired of it, just peel it off and apply a new one. It
also offers multitouch. You can slap a trackpad area on the side if you want
to.
Luminae
creator Jason Giddings got the idea for the keyboard from watching sci-fi
movies, where so many future interfaces are see-through. He calls the concept
"eye candy". It took plenty of design and software development to
turn his sci-fi idea into a real device.

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