[App]Invisible Grip - Block accidental finger touch on Tablet - Android Apps and Games

**** Only available on Android Tablet devices ****
Invisible Grip is a tiny but convenient tool for Android Tablet users to block unwanted, accidental screen touch while watch movies, ebook reading, or anything which requires you to hold your tablet for a long time. Brought you by the same Dev who made Smart Taskbar and Button Savior.
Nowadays, Android Tablets are getting smaller and lighter and at same time, the frame between LCD screen and the edge of tablet is also getting so thin and small to hold comfortably. Every tablet user should have such experience that his finger drops on touch screen area by accident and make movie playback stops or redirect to other webpage by clicking on ads near the edge of webpage during flash move playback. Why do you need to be ultra cautious from unwanted screen touch in movie playback while making your hands and thumb sore??
With Invisible Grip enabled, it creates two invisible strips at the left and right edge of display to block any touch event that falls on it. To disable protection, just simply draw a line on protected area. To re activate it again, just click on status bar icon located at system Bar in Honeycomb system.
[Features]
* Can display 2 invisible touch protection area at left and right
* Able to adjust sensitivity
* Able to disable protection automatically upon screen off
[Download]
Download From Android Market
Comment and feature request welcome !

Related

[Q] [q] soft keyboard at top of screen

Hello XDA-ers.
I have a Moto Atrix MB860 and I can never really find a comfortable way to hold the phone which allows me to single-handedly thumb navigate and type like I could on my old HTC Vogue. I think the issue (and it's the same for most of the candy-bar smartphones) is that the menu buttons and keyboard live at the bottom of the screen, which occupies most of the phone's length. When I grip the phone high enough so that it's not at risk of falling out of my hand, my thumb can't comfortably reach down to the bottom of the screen. If I turn the phone upside down - so the business end is near my fingers instead of the heel of my hand - I can reach the menu buttons AND the soft keyboard quite easily. The only problems with this are that everything is upside-down on the screen and the hard buttons, etc. are in the wrong place. Does anyone know of an alternate keyboard, or a way to configure an existing keyboard so that it lives at the top of the screen instead of the bottom? I can't imagine that there isn't a single implementation either by a third-party or by a handset manufacturer.
Thanks.

Drop down menu with touch on surface, problems

Aloha all, Having trouble knowing how to ask this...bear with me.
I am having problems with the menus that are triggered by the 'hover' action of a mouse. Using the surface pro or even my lumia 920 I am frequently unable to operate many menus on sites.
officefootballpools.com tournamentpools.com and a host of other sites have the same type menus.
Normal action would be with a mouse and when you hover it drops down a menu that you click your selection. Its isn't a normal drop down but a .li. html type for the menu.
Im sure this has been discussed but I was looking for some vocabulary so I can search the right threads.
You cant interact with hover images via capacitative touch. The browser has no way to tell if you want to click or just show the drop down, it assumes click. Some sites (with limited success) I have managed to press and hold on a link to show its drop down, then if you ignore the usual right click popup then you can sometimes hit the correct icon, this is on a lumia 710.
Otherwise if you have a device with an active stylus (the surface pro for example) you can get rollover easily. If you notice when you hold the pen a tiny bit off of the screen you get a little dot appearing on the screen where the pen is pointing without any physical contact. This dot can trigger rollover events as in this case windows knows that you are not touching the screen, touch becomes a click, hovering the pen over the screen becomes mouse movement which is enough to trigger rollover.
Thank you for your reply. I understand and assumed the same. I have been working with an x61t for a few years so the jump to capacitive has thrown me a bit.
Okay, so what are web developers doing instead of this type of drop down? I recently read an article that says a lot of developers are moving to the new msn.com type format with nav bars on left or right with no hover...
Anyway thanks again. The volume of sites with this issue is pretty large. Yahoo.com/fantasy chokes a donkey, etc.
Side question, does Win8 have the on screen mouse that I used to have on my Lenovo? Or is that a Lenovo product probably?
Alot of web developers are doing nothing at all. In some cases clicking the link that causes the dropdown redirects to a page listing the other links in that dropdown, that's always handy. Usually most devs create mobile versions of sites which are normally touch friendly. I have seen 1 or 2 sites create iPhone versions before, these worked nicely on android so I would assume they are fine on the lumia and maybe the surface.
I haven't ever seen an on screen mouse before but if there is not one in windows 8 then there may be a 3rd party one somewhere. I am on my phone right now, otherwise I would have looked myself.
One advantage of using "Mobile" websites is that they should be designed with the limitation of touchscreens - specifically, the inability to track hover - in mind. That may help you out.
Alternatively, the Surface Pro uses an active Wacom digitizer (as well as a touchscreen) that can sense the pen at a distance. You can use the stylus pretty much perfectly as a mouse, with hover and right-click and everything.

Throw fruit, turn Kindle pages with eyes (5 dollar eye-tracking). Android SDK

**Integrating an eye tracker into the hardware**
“The Eye Tribe released its first eye-tracking product to developers in December -- a long, thin $99 module that attaches to a Windows laptop, computer or tablet. It sold out immediately and the company is now working on a second batch. But it also has a more exciting proposition in the pipeline -- a software development kit module for Android phones that it eventually wants to see integrated into the a wide range of mobile devices.
“Most of the requisite hardware is already built into phones. The Eye Tribe just needs to persuade companies to integrate the technology.
All that's required is a camera sensor with infrared capabilities. "What we know is that in Q4 this year, sensors are coming out that can switch between regular camera and infrared camera."”
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wired/co/uk/news/archive/2014-02/25/eye-tribe-android
**Cost**
“OEM vendors could likely add this sensor to their handsets for just five dollars”
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
reviewscnet/eye-tribe-shows-off-working-eye-tracking-on-a-mobile-phone/
If modifying the device to add eye-tracking only adds 5 dollars to the manufacturing cost, then I’m sure that at least one of the smartphone, tablet, notebook, and laptop manufacturers will make the supposedly easy camera modification.
**See before touch**
I think that most of the time, a person will see a widget that they want to touch before they actually reach out, and physically touch it
(The only times where I’m not looking is when I press the Android Navigation Bar buttons that are near the bottom edge of the screen. Although, on a larger Nexus 10, I usually have to look at them first).
**Eyes + consecutively touching the same few buttons**
On certain tasks, it might be convenient and fast to have the option of touching “single tap where I’m looking”, and “swipe up where I’m looking” buttons. You would only need one or two buttons that are close to you (kind of like the Navigation Bar buttons at the bottom).
Look, touch an easy-to-reach spot, look, and then touch the same button again. You don’t have to keep changing your hand and finger positions between each tap.
“Looking at icons on a desktop instantly highlights them, and you can then tap anywhere on the screen to open up the selected app.”
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
stuff/tv/mwc-2014/eyes-eye-tribe-we-play-fruit-ninja-using-nothing-our-eyeballs/feature
I guess that in one of their demos, they temporarily made the entire screen a “tap where I’m looking” button.
Besides the three default buttons in the Navigation Bar, you could add “single tap where I’m looking”, and “swipe up where I’m looking” (to perhaps simulate a Page Down for reading) buttons, and those alone should allow you to do a lot of things).
Vertical touchscreen
If you have a vertically propped up tablet with an external keyboard, you could remap a keyboard button to be the “tap where I’m looking” button.
**Hands-free interaction**
Even without the above options, I still think the ability to have a page automatically scroll down when your eyes reach the bottom of the page, or have an e-book automatically turn the page when the gaze reaches the corner of the text would be pretty good features to have. They would be especially handy for computer interaction while cooking and eating, and interacting with a vertically set up touch device, or laptop that is more than an arms-length away while you do other stuff on the desktop.
(**Google eye tracking patents**
Notably, Google has an eye tracking patent that involves recording advertisement impressions through eye focus with pay-per-gaze, and another patent that demonstrates a method to unlock a device by having a sensor in a head-mounted accessory (probably something like Google Glass) track the patterns of the pupil.
It indicates that eye tracking could have even more backing in the near future).

[Resolved][Q] Removing dirt/dust from screen w/o affecting playback

In dark areas of the screen, any dust or dirt becomes easily visible and distracts me from watching a movie.
I can of course wipe it off with a finger, but then the movie will fast-forward, volume and brightness-level will change etc.
Is there some trick - short of disabling all gestures - that will make it possible to touch the screen without affecting playback?
(Like a special gesture that will temporarily enable the other gestures)
Screen lock, in the bottom left corner.
Feeling a bit silly now, that lock was there all the time...
I found another solution also: volume and brightness does not need to be changed often, so once they're fine one can disable those gestures and then clean off dust vertically.

Question Lenovo P11 tablet, cannot draw curved lines when starting to draw

Hello,
I've recently bought a Lenovo P11 tablet to take notes. When drawing with a pen, however, I have this problem (and I have verified it by enabling touch detector in developer options): when I lay the pen/finger on the screen, there is an area (I would say 2-3 cm) where the cursor doesn't move even if I move the pen. When I exit that area, a line gets drawn between where I started and where I arrived, but this is wrong as I may have drawn curves in the middle of the two.
This leads to two things:
* When I want to draw something rounded (like a "2"), the upper part gets drawn as a line unless I draw it very big.
* When I want to draw something small, only a dot gets drawn because I didn't leave the "area" and therefore didn't trigger the cursor.
Now I am pretty sure this is a software problem, as if it were a problem with the screen this wouldn't happen only at the start of the line.
Also, I'm sure this is not because of the application I'm using (OneNote), as I've tested with the developer options to show the cursor and in any place in the OS, when I start drawing, the cursor is stuck at where I've begun.
Anyone can help?
Thanks.
Nexgan said:
Hello,
I've recently bought a Lenovo P11 tablet to take notes. When drawing with a pen, however, I have this problem (and I have verified it by enabling touch detector in developer options): when I lay the pen/finger on the screen, there is an area (I would say 2-3 cm) where the cursor doesn't move even if I move the pen. When I exit that area, a line gets drawn between where I started and where I arrived, but this is wrong as I may have drawn curves in the middle of the two.
This leads to two things:
* When I want to draw something rounded (like a "2"), the upper part gets drawn as a line unless I draw it very big.
* When I want to draw something small, only a dot gets drawn because I didn't leave the "area" and therefore didn't trigger the cursor.
Now I am pretty sure this is a software problem, as if it were a problem with the screen this wouldn't happen only at the start of the line.
Also, I'm sure this is not because of the application I'm using (OneNote), as I've tested with the developer options to show the cursor and in any place in the OS, when I start drawing, the cursor is stuck at where I've begun.
Anyone can help?
Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
was it a solution?

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