Agloves Allow For Touchscreen Use On Cold Days 140
Zothecula writes "With capacitive the technology of choice on the majority of touchscreen devices hitting the market, people have been coming up with all kinds of interesting ways to interact with their devices when the winter chill sets in and gloves become a necessity. Many South Koreans apparently turned to using sausages as a stylus but if you'd prefer not to be hassled by dogs as you type a text there are less meat product-based solutions, such as the North Face Etip gloves. Now there's another glove-based solution in the form of Agloves, which provide even greater touchscreen friendly surface area for your hands."
Make your own (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.instructables.com/id/Making-A-Glove-Work-With-A-Touch-Screen/ [instructables.com]
Sigh (Score:3, Informative)
Not all touch screens are capacitive.
We also have good touch screens, which respond to actual touch, by any object.
Re:Make your own (Score:3, Informative)
Conductive thread usually is silver.
plain leather gloves (Score:5, Informative)
I have two completely different pairs of generic off-the-shelf leather gloves. They're a bit klutzier than bare fingers - they're gloves, after all - but they both work well enough with my iPhone. I figure it's because skin has similar electrical properties to... skin. Or am I just really lucky that these work somehow?
Re:Nanook (Score:3, Informative)
I often find that I accept incoming calls with my tongue. Gross but effective.
Just avoid Dots Gloves (Score:5, Informative)
Just please don't buy Dots Gloves. I was excited about them, bought them months ago based on their slick marketing, and finally got them delivered a couple weeks ago - they looked nothing like the ads. They were a pair of the cheapest, thinnest wool gloves you can imagine, with some conductive thread clumsily sewn over the very tips of the thumb and first two fingers. Horrible, horrible, horrible - so bad I've been looking for opportunities to give them bad word of mouth for it.
Re:I have a better idea. (Score:4, Informative)
Man up, and don't wear gloves.
In the real world day-to-day weather conditions can actually kill you if you're stupid. I strongly suspect you have never walked around in weather so cold that the humidity of your breath freezes your nose hairs and if the wind comes up you have to turn around and hide your face until it dies down.
Man up here and you die son. You die a fool, not a hero.
The Complicator's Gloves...in reverse? (Score:4, Informative)
( http://thedailywtf.com/Articles/The_Complicator_0x27_s_Gloves.aspx [thedailywtf.com] )
Yes, gloves. Many types of them - also fingerless gloves. Easy to make from cheap wool ones - and in this case cutting just the tips of two fingers will be usually enough, making them only slightly less warm.
Another score for my N900... (Score:3, Informative)
...in addition to APT, general hackability and real qwerty for fast typing.
It has resistive touchscreen and thus works well in -10 C, or so, when the gloves are not particularly thick.
Not that well in -25 C though, as using thick mittens tends to make touch somewhat imprecise. ;) But at least I can use thinner gloves underneath them so that I won't have to take them completely off.
Re:Harden up (Score:3, Informative)
Nope. My core body temperature, yes, but I've often found myself unable to operate a touchscreen because my finger-tips were too cold. When that happens, I sometimes resort to using my nose.
Re:N1 (Score:2, Informative)