Shame. Tesla could probably use a guy who can get several years on a single charge.
Shame. Tesla could probably use a guy who can get several years on a single charge.
I think the answer to this is pretty easy - it’s more a matter of priorities than it is about missing use-cases. For the iPad Pro: yes, it’s for professionals. It’s one of the cheapest decent drawing tablets on the market, so it’s a no-brainer for professional visual artists. Probably no one else “needs” that line.
I was typing the same thing, but was afraid it would come across sarcastic. Mind blown for sure.
Seriously, this just blew my mind.
This actually a really nice article. Congrats
Holy shit - this is just a straight forward informative post explaining the answer to an interesting question. Well done.
According to Speed 2 physics it should be an entire boat length into the dock.
I guess...maybe...if I entered my pin like some kind of automaton then this might be feasible, however, given that I have fingers that move, I can enter my pin without that ridiculous hand frozen movement in the video. Next. This hearkens back to the kerfuffle over Google Glass being able to determine someones…
Poor guy must have broke his wrist and all his fingers to type password in like that... Humans are alittle more articulate then that and I doubt the sensors in a watch could accurately track every key stroke, perhaps they could detect the start of typing and maybe make a few guesses but thats it.
If a smartwatch can figure out which key I type after however many mid air, swirling figure eight hand motions it takes to find the "g" key, it deserves all my data.
I see an issue with it, at least with the gif. I can believe the tech works, but I can’t believe it works with no context. In my mind it wouldn’t be able to tell what number you pressed until you got the third press, which in this case was the asterisk. Pressing 4 and 3 could be 4-3, 7-6, or *-9. You need the context…
I imagine that it’s probably better suited for hunt and peck styles where only 1 finger is used and the whole hand moves around enough for the motion sensors to pick it up. That’s all assuming it’s able to decipher what’s happening on a full keyboard and not just a numeric keypad.