Looks quite interesting. I remember when the Leap Motion was first being released but I haven't seen a great deal in the wild that use it.<p>I signed up to get an early dev kit of their technology when I was working at an old job. We were a non-profit agency that helped educate individuals with disabilities - often having difficulty with their motor skills (using a typical mouse/keyboard was impossible for most of them). The idea was we'd use Unity3D or a similar game engine to create minigames that used the leap motion as the input device. The games would educate the individuals on many things from normal daily hygiene to cooking, etc.<p>In the end, our tiny team (of 3-4 people) bit off more than we could chew and nothing substantial was ever materialized. The leader of the team moved on to another company and the project dissolved. It was definitely one of the more interesting projects I worked on at that company.
Cool. But you shouldn't need Leap for this these days, you can do hand tracking with ML: <a href="https://ai.googleblog.com/2019/08/on-device-real-time-hand-tracking-with.html" rel="nofollow">https://ai.googleblog.com/2019/08/on-device-real-time-hand-t...</a>
Try checking out <a href="https://ai.googleblog.com/2019/08/on-device-real-time-hand-tracking-with.html" rel="nofollow">https://ai.googleblog.com/2019/08/on-device-real-time-hand-t...</a> this might remove the need for any hardware apart from the phone & its vibration motor.