h a l f b a k e r yCaution! Contents may be not!
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Talk at your phone without actually saying anything, so the general public can't hear you.
You could use this to activate functions like, "Open unread emails" and "New email to Bubba tab tab Bubba what do you think about Lipreading Phone"....
The issues of background noise would go away because
it would use images rather than sound, granted the technology may struggle a little but facial recognition is getting better and better, and the smile detection is being built into cameras everywhere so why not extend this to read lips? I think Intel did some software on this a while back.
While listening to a program about typewriters & and a recently released mobile phone that uses a camera to watch your eyes to prevent it going to autokeylock mode, this would make mobile phones much faster at texting and emailing, and allow pretty much real time instant messaging. This could be used on more powerful tablets to replace the keyboard.
As a by product it would finally allow us all to look like mumbling weirdos, mouthing stories to our selves.
The reverse lipreading phone...
http://www.engadget...-lip-reading-phone/ Not exactly what I meant, here is the polar opposite of the Lipreading phone [PainOCommonSense, Jun 15 2012]
Please log in.
If you're not logged in,
you can see what this page
looks like, but you will
not be able to add anything.
Annotation:
|
|
A lot of lipreading depends on context to make
educated guesses about what is being said. The
concept might be useful, but likely only to improve the
quality of vocal dictation. |
|
|
I have corrected my original typo (something that wouldn't have happened on a lipreading phone). |
|
|
Oh alright it would have happened and yes it would probably be about +/-50% worse than typing. |
|
|
It would probably look like
"Baboon Tabular Baboon Why You La breeding". |
|
|
You could mouth your message into the telephones camera, and then the video clip would be sent as an attachment to the recipient, who would open their incoming message to hear nothing and see nothing but your lips moving. |
|
|
Anyone else with such a phone could simply point its camera at you. Its own lipreading app would then determine what you are saying, for that other person. |
|
|
Umm ... there are these things called SMS and IRC and email and stuff if you don't want to actually speak ... |
|
| |