<p> This would sure delight the couch potatoes! Engineers have developed a TV which can monitor your eyes and change the channel if you give it the nod.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The Eye Control Television comes with a bulky device that you place in front of your TV, and with a determined blink of your eyes you can change channels, change the volume, or power your television off, the Daily Mail reported.<br /><br />The eye-sensing technology relies on a Kinect-style sensor sat on your table, and your standard blinks will not interrupt your scheduled viewing, the Chinese manufacturer claimed.<br /><br />The sensor sits in front of you and needs calibration the first time you run it, which involves chasing a circle around the screen with your eyes.<br /><br />After that, long blinks activate the sensor, bringing up an on-screen display. Looking downwards brings up the volume controls, which you can then adjust by looking at the plus and minus signs.<br /><br />Meanwhile, other menus allow you to switch channels and glide between still images.<br />The equipment was tested at the IFA technology conference in Berlin this week. <br /></p>
<p> This would sure delight the couch potatoes! Engineers have developed a TV which can monitor your eyes and change the channel if you give it the nod.<br /><br /></p>.<p>The Eye Control Television comes with a bulky device that you place in front of your TV, and with a determined blink of your eyes you can change channels, change the volume, or power your television off, the Daily Mail reported.<br /><br />The eye-sensing technology relies on a Kinect-style sensor sat on your table, and your standard blinks will not interrupt your scheduled viewing, the Chinese manufacturer claimed.<br /><br />The sensor sits in front of you and needs calibration the first time you run it, which involves chasing a circle around the screen with your eyes.<br /><br />After that, long blinks activate the sensor, bringing up an on-screen display. Looking downwards brings up the volume controls, which you can then adjust by looking at the plus and minus signs.<br /><br />Meanwhile, other menus allow you to switch channels and glide between still images.<br />The equipment was tested at the IFA technology conference in Berlin this week. <br /></p>