The eye-tracking camera of the Royal College of Art graduate Mimi Zoo is controlled by blinking and squinting - and even recognizes your friends when they look in their eyes.
The iris camera uses biometric technology to help people by identifying their unique iris you signatures. If the user of the iris is detected, the camera will automatically load your favorite settings including aperture, ISO and screen display. As the user looks through the lens that can zoom in and out by reducing or increasing their eyelids. To take the picture, they just keep blinking her eyes and double.
Once the photo is taken, biometric technology identifies the subject's iris, and offers to tag them. Have photographers and their friends to register their biometric data in order to access these features, but they can also be marked out in photos. The camera works for both still images and moving images, and it can now upload files through Wife connection, or store them on an SD card inside, until it reaches connection.
The images and movies are shown possible design for the camera. Zoo preview working model of technology on RCA card in 2012, the graduate show at London's Royal College of Art, you just completed the college's Innovation Design Engineering Course.
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