Hawkeye Access

Control your iOS device using your eyes

13 followers

Hawkeye Access lets you use eye and face movements to control your device hands-free. For people with motor impairments, this makes controlling an iOS device much easier.
This is the 4th launch from Hawkeye Access. View more

Hawkeye Access for Mac

Control your Mac using head movements
Control your Mac using head movements. Rotate your head to move the cursor and make facial expressions to click, drag, and scroll. Powered by your iPhone’s TrueDepth camera.
Hawkeye Access for Mac gallery image
Launch tags:iOSMacAugmented Reality
Launch Team
Vy - Cross platform AI agent
Vy - Cross platform AI agent
AI agent that uses your computer, cross platform, no APIs
Promoted

What do you think? …

Matthew Locker
This is awesome! Kudos to the makers for bringing this accessibility to the technology people already use - keep it up!
Matt Moss
@mlocker Thanks a ton Matthew, appreciate the support :)
Tomislav Jovanoski
Whoa! 😱 I believe this could be easily ported to native Mac app when Apple includes FaceID cam into their laptops. It will definitely skip setting up the iPhone from the process, thus leading to better UX. Kudos ?makers ! 👏
Matt Moss
@tomislav_jovanoski Yes! A TrueDepth cam on the Mac be a huge step up. Fingers crossed for some new Mac hardware this year 🤞
Chris Kotelmach
This is amazing, it looks really refined, and a perfect solution for anyone that is unable to operate a computer with their hands.
Matt Moss
@chriskotelmach Thanks Chris, super excited to see all the different ways people use the product :)
Ribier Design
good
Peter Lukac
very cool idea, but was not able to test the product. App seems broken - i can't get past the "Pick a selection mode". Also the pairing with macbook doesn't work.
suzywebtech
This is awesome and will help many with motor impairments! Well done.
Hernán
Made me remember Opera browser (Opera Reborn, part of that team now in Vivaldi) being ahead of its time, as many of their developements, when they created the "face gestures" 10 years ago: https://dev.opera.com/blog/intro...