There are of course useful things for this....
1. Young children could add items to the table and hear / learn the 
pronunciation of the objects name.
2. In a similar vain, using a pen they could complete their homework on the 
table and have it transmitted direct to the class teacher for marking without 
the needs for additional hardware or paper etc.
3. Putting a glass of beer on the table could result in it's temperature being 
broadcast every 2 Degree's change in temperature - always drink at the 
optimum!
4. Ditto for food.
5. If the table was hinged you could flip it through 90Degrees and use it as a 
TV that you could throw soft balls at when something happened you don't like 
and have the channel changed. Soft ball hits could be fed back to the TV 
channel for instant feedback.
6. A couple of joysticks on each end and you could have one of those 1980's 
style tennis table breakout games.

I'm warming to MIcrosoft.... :-)

Phil

On Monday 11 June 2007 22:51:41 Doug McGarrett wrote:
> On Monday 11 June 2007 09:01, Stevens wrote:
> > Take a look at this and you'll start to understand what our great
> > grandchildren will grow up with and think of as normal.
> >
> > Or, "Practical Applications For Eye Candy"
> >
> > http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/industry/4217348.html
>
> I envision (no pun intended) several problems with this.
>
> 1. Some of us have a limited eye focusing distance, and could never see
> the far side of the table clearly, without standing up and leaning over it.
>
> 2. You couldn't put anything down on the table, which is what people
> usually do with tables, without making part of its function unusable.
> (Except digital cameras and iPods [oops!] and wireless phones.)
> I would also think it might be a bad idea to spill a drink on it.
>
> 3. Many of us dislike the "move-your-finger" mouse-pads on laptops.
> This would be a giant version of that.  (I personally dislike moving
> mice as well;  I use track-balls [Kensington]).
>
> There are probably other gotchas, but this is a first shot.
>
> PS:  I still think nobody would actually read an OT list.  This is at
> least partially a technology list, and I wouldn't have it any other way.
>
> --doug


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