Pranav Mistry is the Indian brain behind Samsung’s Galaxy Gear smartwatch:
Last night Samsung unveiled its entry into a new product category of smartwatches with its Galaxy Gear. It wasn’t a well-kept secret with features and even photos of a prototype
leaking days before the official launch event. But one secret not many
knew before yesterday evening was the brains behind the Galaxy Gear.
Meet Pranav Mistry, who now heads the Think Tank team at Samsung’s
Research America division. For those who may recall, Mistry’s claim to
fame is his SixthSense technology, which was also documented in a TED
talk that has received over 1.5 million views.
Mistry, a Research Assistant and PhD
candidate at MIT’s Media Lab, was born in Palanpur in Gujarat. He
completed his masters of design from IIT Mumbai and followed it up with
another masters degree in media arts and sciences from MIT. He also
worked as a UX researcher with Microsoft.
“Our time is a time for crossing boundaries, a time for rethinking
and revising old categories. I think the future of our digital world is
not just about giving a new face, a new form to our existing digital
devices. It is the creation of new experiences, new ways of interacting
with real and digital,” Mistry said at the unveiling of the Galaxy Gear
yesterday evening.
The Galaxy Gear is a good beginning for Mistry of making his concept
of sixth sense in technology a reality. The first generation smartwatch
has some nice touches that one can instantly recognize to be coming
directly from Mistry. The Galaxy Gear has sensors that can decipher if
the user is moving the watch close to the ear in the event of an
incoming call and automatically receives the call.
“We have uniquely positioned the speakers and microphone so that you
can talk as you would talk to the hand. It is such a natural gesture,
just raise your hand to your ear and talk,” he gushed to the thousands
sitting in the audience at a packed venue in Berlin.
The Galaxy Gear in Mistry’s mind is a marriage of a simple user
experience with cutting edge technology. “The goal was to make it, well…
a wearable. Unobtrusive, comfortable yet something out of sci-fi. We
wanted to make a wearable that is designed for everyone. We took our
inspiration from an object we have loved and relied on for over a
century,” he said. “The strap is packed with technology from the next
decade,” he added.
Whether the Galaxy Gear becomes a runaway hit or not is something
that the market would decide. But it seems Mistry has finally found an
avenue to make his dream a reality in the hands of millions of users.
His famous TED talk from November 2009 follows below.
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