Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

A device that connects kids to real games

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 23 May, 2014 01:18 PM
    Not happy with your kids being hooked to ipads or tablets playing video games? Turn to a new kind of gaming device, developed by an Indian-origin entrepreneur here, that uses the iPad but brings kids back into the real world of play.
     
    A brainchild of former Google employee Pramod Sharma who began an entertainment start-up called Tangible Play in California, the $99 (Rs.590) device called 'Osmo' works in a sophisticated yet remarkably simple way. 
     
    Anything from toothpicks to paintbrushes can be part of the experience. 
     
    "Osmo extends gameplay beyond the screen, changing the space in front of a tablet into an interactive environment that turns any object into a digitally connected game piece," Sharma emphasised.
     
    For Sharma, "his team is pioneering actual reality - unleashing experiences that go beyond digital screens".
     
    This is how this device works.
     
    Just set the iPad in a vertical stand and attach a small mirror in front of the tablet's camera so that the lens uses the mirror's reflective capability to see downward.
     
     
    Now, you can play puzzle of block games where the camera recognises small objects that you put in front of the iPad.
     
    A mobile app directs the kids to play collaborative games that make use of both the screen and physical objects.
     
    "Kids love iPads but they get sucked into the screen. That is not healthy. Technology should remove that and we are working on it," Sharma told VentureBeat.
     
    One of those games is Osmo Words - a game that resembles Hangman. 
     
    The iPad shows you an image of something like a bear and a word that you must guess with four letters. 
     
    Two players can toss out letters in front of the iPad. 
     
    The camera will recognise both incorrect letters and correct letters.
     
    You can play Osmo Words in a competitive mode too.
     
    "Tangible Play has started a crowd-funding campaign to create a movement around Osmo (short for osmosis, or learning by seeing)," Sharma was quoted as saying.
     
    After graduating from Stanford, Sharma spent eight years at Google architecting book scanning machine and then held senior management roles in search, Gmail and distributed computing.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    When WhatsApping becomes a secret!

    When WhatsApping becomes a secret!
    Don't want to let your friends know whether you have read their latest WhatsApp posting - especially ones who get angry soon?

    When WhatsApping becomes a secret!

    Now, see how your child would age

    Now, see how your child would age
    Do you often play guessing games at home how would your child look like when he/she grows old? Well, ask a computer and you can see how your child would age!

    Now, see how your child would age

    After diabetes, Google Glass sets eyes on Parkinson's

    After diabetes, Google Glass sets eyes on Parkinson's
    After unveiling a smart contact lens that monitors glucose levels in tears in January, Google is now working on to support people with Parkinson's disease - via Google Glass, it much-anticipated wearable device to be launched later this year.

    After diabetes, Google Glass sets eyes on Parkinson's

    Intimacy 2.0: This dress goes transparent as you are turned on!

    Intimacy 2.0: This dress goes transparent as you are turned on!
    Wear this dress very, very carefully as it goes transparent the moment you are sexually aroused. Aptly named 'Intimacy 2.0', the dress gets transparent when the wearer is aroused.

    Intimacy 2.0: This dress goes transparent as you are turned on!

    Coming Soon, 'touch' secure smart phones, tabs

    Coming Soon, 'touch' secure smart phones, tabs
    Afraid of losing important data saved in your smart phone or tablet? Not to worry any more as researchers - including an Indian-American scientist - from the Georgia Institute of Technology have gone a step further from passwords, gestures or fingerprint scans.

    Coming Soon, 'touch' secure smart phones, tabs

    'Australia' discovered on Mars!

    'Australia' discovered on Mars!
    This is just another example of Martian pareidolia - a psychological phenomenon that tricks your brain into seeing familiar objects in apparently random shapes - but the similarity is uncanny.

    'Australia' discovered on Mars!