HP Labs India working on bridging TV
and Internet
Infoworld.nl
March 08, 2006
Hewlett-Packard Co.'s HP Labs India is
working on technology to integrate satellite TV with the
Web, according to an executive at the lab.
The company will soon be testing with broadcasters
a technology that allows a user to click on hyperlinks embedded
in TV content, which will take the user to a Web site.
"We want to drive Internet traffic
through television," said Ajay Gupta, director of the
lab, speaking Thursday.
The opportunity for HP and the providers
of these services is to monetize the clicks on the TV content,
Gupta said. The return channel for the TV viewer could be
a satellite uplink, a broadband connection, or a dial-up
telephone line, he added.
HP Labs India is also doing field trials with the Indian
Space Research Organization (ISRO) in Bangalore and the
local Karnataka state government on technology that will
enable satellite TV viewers to print out documents from
their TV screen at the press of a button on the remote control
of the TV.
"We can weave data into the audio
and video signal, so that when people are watching the program,
if they want to keep some data, they can print it out,"
Gupta said. The technology will enable government and other
organizations to use the TV medium to disseminate important
documents, he added.
A key criteria before taking up new development
at the lab is to ensure that the technology can be deployed
globally in some form, Gupta said. The lab has decided,
for example, that TV is one of the best mediums to reach
out to the masses in emerging economies, he added.
As part of its research in the area of
pen-based interfaces, HP Labs India has developed a stylus
sensitive touch-pad that enables users to enter text in
the Devnagri script used in many Indian languages.
The Indian government and other local agencies
have been promoting the use of local languages in computing,
but the development of an input device for Indian languages
has proven to be difficult. The Devnagri script, one of
many scripts used in India, has over 40 basic characters,
and some 12 modifiers to the characters that are represented
above or below the basic characters. Most of the currently
available input devices for Devnagri script consist of a
complex overlay on top of a standard Roman script keyboard
with a QWERTY layout, and it is difficult for users to operate,
Gupta said.
The touchpad, which HP Labs India calls
the "gesture keyboard", uses a combination of
tapping and gestures. The touchpad has the basic characters
and numbers of the Devnagri script on it. The character
with the required modifier can be input into the computer
by specific user gestures when tapping the basic character
with a pen-based input device.
"The gesture keyboard is based on
the way people would normally write the script, so people
can learn to use it very quickly," Gupta said. The
technology has already been tested in computer kiosks in
Maharashtra state in western India.
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