Hold tight

Meta's Haptic Glove will let you throttle your foes in VR

A new demo reel from the company shows off the new technology.

Meta, the holding company for Facebook, Oculus, Instagram, and WhatsApp, unveiled a piece of wearable technology this week — a haptic glove that seeks to reproduce the sensation of touch within digital spaces.

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The glove, designed and created by Reality Labs (RL) research, a division within Meta, is meant to accurately understand and reflect the wearer’s hand movements while reproducing the sensations of pressure, texture, and vibration.

Meta

Dapping someone up will never be the same.

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How it works

The haptic glove uses hundreds of soft actuators (tiny motors) that move simultaneously to recreate tactile sensations. Heat and size constraints prevented Reality Labs explains from using more conventional actuators, so instead, they turned to soft robotic and microfluidics.

Meta

“We’re creating almost everything about this discipline from scratch ... We’re pushing the boundaries of what’s possible with soft robotics and instrumented tracking systems. And we’re inventing entirely new soft materials and manufacturing technologies — it’s a clean break from the past.”

RL Research Director Sean Keller

Meta

Enjoy the sensation of losing at Jenga within an AR setting.

Meta

The vision for the haptic gloves is to be able to leverage pneumatic actuators in conjunction with advanced hand tracking technology, so that the system would know where your hand is within a virtual scene — accordingly, the RL team is also developing a new type of rendering software that could send the right instructions to the actuators.

Meta is still not ready to release a commercialized version of the haptic glove, as some of the technologies needed to deliver believable haptic experiences in virtual and augmented reality don’t exist yet. The RL team stills needs to finish developing the microfluidic processor that would power the actuators along with customizing the glove to fit all kinds of hand sizes.

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For a more in-depth look at the haptic glove prototype, you can check out Meta’s official blog post about it here.

Meta