Publication | Closed Access
Computer Displays Optically Superimposed on Input Devices
32
Citations
3
References
1977
Year
EngineeringComputer Displays OpticallyEducationUser Interface DesignDisplay TechnologyOptical PropertiesHead-mounted DisplayAdvanced Display TechnologyPhotonicsAssistive TechnologyInput DeviceDesignUser ExperienceHuman-machine InterfaceComputer ScienceAlt ButtonsMan-machine InterfaceLight ButtonsAutomationExtended RealityHuman-computer InteractionInteractive Computer TerminalTechnologyOptoelectronicsInteractive Computing
A set of pushbuttons on a console may appear to have computer-generated labels temporarily inscribed on them if the button set and computed display are optically combined, for example, by means of a semitransparent mirror. This combines the flexibility of light buttons with the tactile and kinesthetic feel of physical pushbuttons; it permits a user to interact more directly with a computer program, or a computer-mediated operation, in what subjectively becomes an intimately shared space. A console of this design can serve alternately as a typewriter, computer terminal, text editor, telephone operator's console, or computer-assisted instruction terminal. Each usage may have several modes of operation: training, verbose, abbreviated, and/or special-privilege. Switching from one mode or use to another is done by changing the software rather than hardware; each program controls in its own way the momentary details of visibility, position, label, significance, and function of alt buttons. Several demonstrations are described, including a prototype of a proposed Traffic Service Position System (tsps) console, and an interactive computer terminal resembling a Picturephone® set with a Touch-Tone® pad. Also suggested are combinations of computed displays with x-y tablets and other input devices.
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