<p>Next time your phone rings in a meeting, just wave your hand to silence it!<br />Scientists have developed a new programme that allows your smartphone to recognise gestures, enabling you to control your device with the wave of a hand.<br /><br /></p>.<p>SideSwipe, developed by Matthew Reynolds and colleagues at the University of Washington, comprises an algorithm that recognises the unique reflections created when fingers interrupt a burst of the radio waves that send information between your phone and the cell phone mast.<br /><br />In tests with 10 volunteers, the programme recognised eight separate taps, four hovers and two sliding gestures with 87 per cent accuracy, 'New Scientist' reported.<br /><br />The idea behind the programme is to let people control their phones without having to touch them.<br /><br />"It enables interaction with the phone where touch-screens and camera-based sensors cannot work because they are occluded," said Reynolds.<br /><br />In case the phone in your pocket rings loudly in a meeting, a wave of your fingers silences it, sending the call to the voice-mail, the report said.</p>
<p>Next time your phone rings in a meeting, just wave your hand to silence it!<br />Scientists have developed a new programme that allows your smartphone to recognise gestures, enabling you to control your device with the wave of a hand.<br /><br /></p>.<p>SideSwipe, developed by Matthew Reynolds and colleagues at the University of Washington, comprises an algorithm that recognises the unique reflections created when fingers interrupt a burst of the radio waves that send information between your phone and the cell phone mast.<br /><br />In tests with 10 volunteers, the programme recognised eight separate taps, four hovers and two sliding gestures with 87 per cent accuracy, 'New Scientist' reported.<br /><br />The idea behind the programme is to let people control their phones without having to touch them.<br /><br />"It enables interaction with the phone where touch-screens and camera-based sensors cannot work because they are occluded," said Reynolds.<br /><br />In case the phone in your pocket rings loudly in a meeting, a wave of your fingers silences it, sending the call to the voice-mail, the report said.</p>