His company is providing sensors for iRobot Corp's IRBT.O latest robots, including a new Roomba automatic vacuum cleaner that can actually 'see' dirt and head for it, rather than aimlessly trundling around the room. "We see a whole world where machines of any kind interact with you," said Uzi Breier, chief marketing officer for PrimeSense, an Israeli company that built some of the technology behind Microsoft's Kinect system, and has teamed up with Taiwan's Asustek 2357.TW to bring gesture-controlled TV and computer functions to the living room screen this year ( bit.ly/dHwAGq ). The opportunities for using sensors, cameras and voice recognition to make everyday objects ‘intelligent’ is almost endless, promoters of the new technology say. There’s a lot of competitive technology out there,” said Kutliroff, whose company was one of a handful showing off gesture control technologies at CES in Las Vegas. “Cameras are going to get smaller and cheaper. (For a video of the technology click: bit.ly/fb9ZVi ) "Control everything without touching it - it's moving that way faster than ever," said Janine Kutliroff, CEO and founder of Omek Interactive, an Israeli company that makes software for gesture recognition through 3-D sensors, so you can play games or manipulate a TV just by moving your hands and body.
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