A patent belonging to Nokia reveals that the Finnish based manufacturer
might soon offer active bezels in future models of its Nokia Lumia
smartphones and tablets. To increase the size of the touch-sensitive
area of a device, Nokia's idea is to make the bezels respond to touch
input. You probably are asking yourself how could this be done?
Considering how often a device user touches the bezels on a device,
wouldn't this lead to a number of accidental touches?
According to the patent, Nokia has solved this problem by making the bezels active only after the user presses down on part of the bezel with a force that would exceed a predetermined amount. This would allow the phone or tablet to know that the user wishes to interact using touch input on that part of the device. A visual indication or haptic feedback could be used to let the user know that the bezels are active.
According to the patent, Nokia has solved this problem by making the bezels active only after the user presses down on part of the bezel with a force that would exceed a predetermined amount. This would allow the phone or tablet to know that the user wishes to interact using touch input on that part of the device. A visual indication or haptic feedback could be used to let the user know that the bezels are active.
"A
force component of the touch input may be detected and compared to a
predetermined force threshold. In cases in which the force component of
the touch input exceeds the predetermined force threshold, user
interaction with the content at that location may be enabled. In this
way, the force exerted by the user in applying a touch input in the
bezel area may be considered an indication of the user’s intent to
interact with corresponding content within the bezel, and such
interactions may be provided for accordingly."-Nokia patent filing
The active bezels could be disabled by merely allowing it to be active
for a certain period of time. The patent even goes as far as saying that
the amount of time that the bezels remain active could correspond with
the amount of force used to enable the feature in the first place.
via: NPU
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