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DTSTART:20140625T140000Z
DTEND:20140625T150000Z
LOCATION:Online - Webex
SUMMARY:Designing Products with Differentiated User Experience Using Capacitive Sensing Technology with Haptic Feedback
DESCRIPTION;ENCODING=QUOTED-PRINTABLE:iZR8flK.png As touch sensors become more popular, adding haptic feedback improves the user experience and differentiates the product. This session will highlight how capacitive touch sensing works and how to implement it into the system. Also covered is how to add different haptic effects to a design with touch sensors to provide feedback to the user. Finally, the discussion will address some of the challenges of a system with both capacitive sensing and haptics. Presenter: Mike Pridgen Mike Pridgen is an Applications Engineer on the MSP430 Customer Applications Team at Texas Instruments. He joined TI in 2012 into the Digital LEAP Program where he rotated through various business groups and expand his knowledge across several TI products. He has focused on the MSP430 ultra-low power microcontroller family with specialization in direct customer support for touch and haptics solutions.
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<html><body><div style="padding-bottom:5px;"><a href="http://i.imgur.com/iZR8flK.png"><a href="http://i.imgur.com/iZR8flK.png">iZR8flK.png</a></a><strong>As touch sensors become more popular, adding haptic feedback improves the user experience and differentiates the product.</strong>&nbsp; This session will highlight how capacitive touch sensing works and how to implement it into the system.&nbsp; Also covered is how to add different haptic effects to a design with touch sensors to provide feedback to the user.&nbsp; Finally, the discussion will address some of the challenges of a system with both capacitive sensing and haptics.</div><div style="padding-bottom:5px;font-size:1.2em;font-weight:bold;">Presenter: Mike Pridgen</div><div style="padding-bottom:5px;">Mike Pridgen is an Applications Engineer on the MSP430 Customer Applications Team at Texas Instruments.&nbsp; He joined TI in 2012 into the Digital LEAP Program where he rotated through various business groups and expand his knowledge across several TI products.&nbsp; He has focused on the MSP430 ultra-low power microcontroller family with specialization in direct customer support for touch and haptics solutions.</div></body></html>
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