Over on the home page, there is a discussion on Augmented Reality which inspired me to start this thread.
I think AR is probably a bit in the future and likely to be expensive in the early days - I also wonder about the complexity of its gestural recognition system, and whether this will be fast enough for glitch free music control. Some time in the future I have no doubt AR will be capable of replacing the theremin "interface", but I think that time may be a while yet.
I came across the MYO controller which lacks "Augmented Reality" (as in, there is no visual feedback mechanism intrinsic to it) but, to me, looks well suited for musical applications. (or at least as "well suited" as any non-tactile interface.. And I personally have strong doubts about this kind of interface for musical equipment - I no longer believe that the theremin is a sensible instrument - I think that, but for its novelty, it would have gone the way it "should" have gone - onto the scrapheap of daft ideas! - Yeah - heresy and blasphemy here, I know ;-)
Using muscle impulses picked up on a wrist band (combined with other mechanical signals), the "source" control signal should have extremely low latency I think - Its an analogue "front end" using biometric data which starts to appear even before the muscles actually move.
Provided this biometric (and other) data is processed quickly, and with high enough resolution, I think the MYO could be ideally suited for gestural music control.. If one had a MYO one each arm, I see no reason why the days of antennas and/or cameras etc should not be over soon.
at $150 per MYO, shipping early 2014, its still in the future - Developers of musical instruments will need to produce the software for their applications and integrate the API's - either for use on PCs or for use in dedicated hardware - so we probably wont see a MYO "theremin" until late 2014 earliest, if we ever see one.
Fred.
Just found another - It makes all my efforts to develop my capacitive 3d J/S look like a complete waste of time by a hobbyist!
I have no idea what technology is employed in the above - the original looked like it might be capacitive - but the production units are so small.. Optical / camera? Combined ? Whatever - I cannot imagine resolving individual fingers using capacitive sensing, let alone to the resolution of 0.01mm .. In fact, this kind of resolution in such a large area pushes every technology I know beyond any solution I can think of .. even at ten times the price.
This, to me, looks huge - Something which could utterly change the way we interact with electronic appliances... Its not just theremin developers who will be having to re-think their plans, I imagine that lots of technology will become redundant quite quickly if this product is even close to its claims... They already mention musical applications (air guitar for example) so presumably the access time is fast..
Since seeing the Leap controller (above) I am less impressed by the MYO (below) .. The MYO would probably be useful for more portable applications (?) but the LEAP looks like its ready to go, and possibly ideally suited for "theremin replacement".