Nowadays there is a trend in using wireless keyboard and mouse. Wireless user interface technology is evolving greatly, and many everyday objects are being transformed into user interfaces so that it can be easy for us. In this article we propose a system that uses gloves to interact with the personal computer. In addition to the keyboard, the mouse interface is also included in the glove. To verify, the prototype of the proposal is created. This proposes that when a person presses the switches on the mouse movement with the fingertip, character insertion can also be done. Keywords: GLOVES, TACTILE SWITCHES, PIC MICROCONTROLLER, ZIGBEE, UART---------------- -------------------- ----------------------------------*** ------------- ---------------------------------------- ---------1. INTRODUCTIONKeyboard and mouse now provide the means for virtually all input. The use of options other than the mouse or keyboard, such as grasping virtual objects, hand, head or body gestures, eye fixation tracking is becoming popular with the popularity of ubiquitous and ambient devices such as digital TV and Play stations. We will see more old people and less young people as a process of enormous demographic change. The elderly population will continue to grow significantly in the future. It is widely recognized that we need to address this issue through further research work. The research work includes the use of switches on the fingertips and input in the form of ASCII codes and involves the correct assignment of fingers. We find such an application [1]. We also find another application that introduces a chord glove, provides a speed of 8.9±1.4 words/min, and requires a hard and practical surface to use it [3]. In another application, a data glove is developed using sensor and generator coils to track…half of the card…input glove interface device,” U.S. Patent 4 414 537, AT&T Bell Lab., Murray Hill , NJ, pages 213-245, November 2010.[18] JJ LaViola, “An investigation of hand posture and gesture recognition techniques and technologies,” Brown Univ., Providence, RI, Tech Rep. CS- 99-11, June 2009.[19]. T. S. Chou, A. Gadd, and D. Knott, “Eye-hand: A vision-based approach to data glove calibration,” in Proc. Human Interface Technology, pages. 2-7,2007.[20] H. Eglowstein, “Reach Out and Touch Your Data,” Byte, vol. 15, no. 7, pages 283–290, July 1990.[21] The Glove of power,” des. News, vol. 63–68, December 1989.[22] , in Proc. Inf. Vis., 2006, pp. 563–568.[23] Univ. Berlin, Berlin, Germany, Tech. Representative., 1995.
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