Updated
Updated · Hackaday · May 23
University of Chicago Unveils 2-Arm BloomBeacon Mid-Air Display Safe to Touch
Updated
Updated · Hackaday · May 23

University of Chicago Unveils 2-Arm BloomBeacon Mid-Air Display Safe to Touch

1 articles · Updated · Hackaday · May 23
  • BloomBeacon creates a stable circular image in mid-air while letting users physically tap on displayed interface elements such as buttons.
  • Two spinning arms drive the system: one carries LEDs to form the persistence-of-vision display, while the other uses capacitive pads to detect touch.
  • Soft, flexible arms hinge upward and “bloom” as rotation increases, making contact safe even if a hand passes directly through the moving display.
  • The project points to an alternative to conventional LCD or OLED touchscreens by combining mid-air visuals with direct touch interaction.
Could this university project disrupt the multi-billion dollar display industry, or will it remain a niche innovation?
As AR glasses advance, will physical mid-air displays become a novelty before they are even widely adopted?
What new privacy risks arise when our digital interfaces can physically track our every move in shared spaces?