Wacom reveals svelte RRFC capacitive touchscreen technology
By Darren Murph | April 25, 2008
Filed under: Displays
Hold on to your touch panels, folks, as Wacom has just made known its plans to reveal “a major innovation in capacitive touchscreen technology” at next month’s International Society for Information Display Exhibition. The tech, dubbed Reversing Ramped Field Capacitive (RRFC) touch, relies on “reversing ramped electro-static fields” to bring unprecedented precision and “drift-free performance” to touchscreen users. Reportedly, it can be integrated into dual-input applications with the firm’s EMR pen-input solution or can operate on its lonesome on devices that require just a finger touch interface. Of course, there’s way more pizazz to the whole thing than we can cover in this space, but feel free to don your nerd suit and hit the read link if you’re thirsty for more.
Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments
Topics: Gadgets |
« QNAP’s NVR-1012 network surveillance kit watches goons, your wild offspring | Main | Mexican attaché attempts to make off with White House BlackBerrys »
Comments
Similar Posts
- A Guide To Inverters
Dell Latitude XT tablet will have multi-touch, just not for a while
RallyPoint Handwear Computer Input Device gives soldiers a hand
LtWV Wrist Vmote Lightglove is one funky input device
Modder stuffs microphone into iPod touch dock appendage
XM patents multi-finger touchscreen — no, not that one
Apple files patent for multitasking gaming touchscreen
Toshiba unveils the Portege M700 tablet with touch capabilities
Nokia’s patent application looks at things from a different angle
New details about the iPhone
Samsung patent application reveals touchscreen ruler interface
Hands-on with Amtek’s iTablet T221
Teclast’s M26 PMP touts oodles of touchscreen
DIY hand-based 3D input
Ambient Baseball ScoreCast keeps you in the game
HP IQ770 “Crossfire” 19-inch touchscreen Media PC revealed!
Epson and E Ink partner on controller IC for e-paper displays
BlueAnt unveils voice-controlled V1 Bluetooth headset
Sharp’s latest 2.6-inch LCD touts integrated touch sensor
Is the VW Space Up! interface developed by Apple?
















