
"Dribble is a concept device that tries to move those interactions onto your index finger. Designed by Kangmin Park, it is a tiny pill-shaped module that clips onto a ring-like band, turning your finger into a discreet remote for messaging, AI, health, and payments. Instead of wake words or screens, it relies on small taps and glances, handling quick tasks without broadcasting that you are using tech."
"The interaction model is straightforward. One tap triggers a core action, two taps go back, and a long press activates multi-step tasks or Dribble AI. A hidden under-display camera and motion tracking help the device understand context without sticking a visible lens on your hand. The idea is that you can reply to a message or jot a note with a tiny movement that barely anyone notices."
"Talking to phones and smart speakers in public still feels awkward. You either whisper to your wrist or say "Hey Siri" out loud on a crowded train, and everyone turns to look. Pulling out a phone just to check a notification breaks whatever you were doing, and making big hand gestures to control earbuds turns you into the person air-conducting an invisible orchestra on the sidewalk."
Dribble is a tiny pill-shaped module that clips onto a ring-like band, converting the index finger into a discreet remote for messaging, AI, health monitoring, and payments. One tap triggers a core action, two taps go back, and a long press activates multi-step tasks or Dribble AI. A hidden under-display camera and motion tracking provide context awareness without a visible lens. A narrow wrapover display shows a line of text, heart rate, or AI cards designed to be read in a second or two. Short, subtle taps and glances aim to replace frequent phone pulls and loud voice interactions.
Read at Yanko Design - Modern Industrial Design News
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