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Just yesterday, eye tracking experts Tobii and Microsoft announced a collaboration to bring a new input method to Windows users everywhere. Everywhere where there’s a… ...
Microsoft introduced Windows 10 Eye Control in Window Insider preview build 16257, and we take a look at how well it works.
It was only yesterday that Microsoft announced a new built-in eye tracking feature for Windows 10, but the company is already interested in getting the accessibility option out in the wild.
Eye Control in Windows 10 is in beta now, and participants will need to sign up to Microsoft’s Windows Insider program to get access.
Microsoft is using eye-tracking technology to allow Windows 10 users to interact with the system using nothing other than their eyes, the company announced in a blog post (which we first saw via ...
Microsoft's Fall Creators Update of Windows 10 includes a beta of an eye-tracking technology, called Eye Control. What could be a solid eye tracker falls short due to an apparent bug.
Microsoft is adding eye tracking to Windows 10 to improve accessibility options for Parkinsons' patients, the partially or fully paralyzed, and sufferers of ALS, among others.
Tobii has pioneered technology that lets you control a computer with your eyes, and today it is announcing that it will collaborate to bring eye tracking to Microsoft’s Windows.
What started out as a 2014 hackathon project is finally turning into an actual Windows 10 feature with the preview build release of an Eye Control beta for Insider users. The development has ...
Windows adding eye control to boost accessibility Technology grew out of a 2014 hackathon event.
Microsoft today released a new Windows 10 preview for PCs, with the recently announced Eye Control feature, as well as improvements to Edge, Console, input, and Windows Defender Application Guard ...