2012-01-09

Multi-touch added to resistive touchscreens

PORTLAND, Ore.—As touch-mania swipes across all markets, many applications look to upgrade to multi-touch but can't afford the high price of capacitive touchscreens. Now automobiles, appliances, medical devices, and low-end smartphones can retrofit multi-touch gestures to existing resistive-touchscreen designs, or create inexpensive alternatives to capacitive touchscreen products, by merely upgrading their controller-chips to Freescale Semiconductor Inc.'s new Ready-Play solution. The new Xtrinsic smart controller provides multi-touch gesture recognition for any standard 4- or 5-wire resistive touchscreen plus handles up to four capacitive touchpads.

"As tablets become more popular, the capacitive touchscreen business has been growing by over $200 million [per year, see figure], but the resistive touchscreen market has been growing at almost the same rate [$167 million]," said John Weil, global business manager for industrial MCU solutions at Freescale. "Adding a resistive touchscreen is a quick and inexpensive way to enrich existing and new applications in medical, consumer, automotive and other markets."

Using proprietary algorithms, and some analog hardware tricks, the new Xtrinsic CRTouch chip provides on-chip state-machines that can recognize slides, two-finger pinches for zooming in and out, as well as multi-finger rotations on standard resistive touchscreens. The controller chip also manages up to four capacitive touchpads for realizing keypads, rotary dials and linear sliders.

"We believe that the CRTouchB12 is the industry's first single-chip controller to offer both gesture recognition on standard resistive touchscreens, as well as capacitive touch sensing," said Weil.


Capacitive touchscreens get all the glamour, since they are used on tablets, but markets for both resistive and capacitive touchscreens grew by at least 20 percent in 2011. Source: IHS iSuppli.

Multi-touch added to resistive touchscreens

TAG:CES Micro Electro Mechanical System MEMS Resistive Capacitive Touchscreen EETimes NextGenLog Electronics

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