BumpTop
Original author(s) | Anand Agarawala |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Bump Technologies Inc. |
Initial release | January 22, 2010 |
Stable release | 2.10 (Build Revision 6225), OS X 1.04.2
/ March 31, 2010 |
Repository | |
Operating system | Windows XP/Vista/7/Mac OS X[1] |
Size | 15 MB[1] |
Type | desktop environment |
License | proprietary |
Website | http://www.bumptop.com |
BumpTop is a desktop environment supporting normal behavior of a real-world desk. It is aimed at stylus interaction, making it more suitable for tablet PCs and palmtops. It was created at the University of Toronto as Anand Agarawala's Masters Thesis. Anand Agarawala also gave a presentation at the TED conference about his idea. The 1.0 version was released on April 8, 2009, along with a fully featured pro version that is a paid upgrade.[2] On April 30, 2010 the author announced that BumpTop was being discontinued and that they were taking the software "...in an exciting new direction..." [3] Two days later on May 2, it was announced that the company had been acquired by Google.
In BumpTop, documents are described by three-dimensional boxes lying on a virtual desk. The user can position the boxes on the desk using the stylus or mouse. Extensive use of physics effects like bumping and tossing is applied to documents when they interact, for a more realistic experience. Boxes can be stacked with well-defined gestures. Multiple selection is performed by means of a LassoMenu, which fluidly combines into a single stroke the act of lasso selection and action invocation via pie menus. BumpTop currently supports Windows XP/Vista/7, and a version for Mac OS X was released into private beta on Jan. 18th, 2010. The Mac edition eschews the pie menu in favor of a more normal selection menu [4]
The software installer and the application phone home. While the download page on the official website does state: "Internet connection required for activation",[5] this may not appear in other sources such as Cnet. There is no explicit dialog box asking the user to confirm this connection at the time it is required.
BumpTop automatically updates to the latest version.
Multi-Touch
With the release of BumpTop 1.2 on October 9, 2009[6], Multi-touch support was added for Windows 7. It added 14 new gestures to the system that utilized multiple touches on the screen. One such gesture is “scrunching” your hand to pull files into a pile. Just like the regular version of BumpTop, the extensive use of physics is applied to these multi-touch gestures. Multi-touch support has since been added to Mac OS X as well.
Multi-touch support is currently only available in the Pro version of the software.
BumpTop Inside
On August 18, 2009[7], BumpTop announced their new “BumpTop Inside” program. Partnering with HIS, PowerColor, and SAPPHIRE, a free copy of BumpTop will be included with their graphics cards. The reasoning behind the partnership was to allow BumpTop to be spread to more customers, as well as allowing BumpTop to utilize the power of the newly bought graphics card. “BumpTop creates a brand new user experience for computer desktops,” said Ted Chen, CEO of TUL Corporation. “We are excited to add this innovative application into our graphics solution. Backed by the power of PowerColor graphics, BumpTop will make the user experience more vivid and change the way the traditional computer desktop is used.”[8]
Reception
BumpTop has been generally well received by critics; with many of them excited about how many of BumpTops features could become standard in GUIs. CNET Editor Seth Rosenblatt gave it 5 stars, citing that “it could push how we use our computers into a whole new dimension.”[9] Thanks to the added multi-touch support, Engadget says that “Bumptop gives Windows 7 touchscreen PCs purpose.”[10] CrunchGear simply says “BumpTop: A Better Windows desktop.”[11] On BumpTops website, they have 23 quotes of positive reviews from professional editors.[12]
“This program is a real looker. When I showed it to friends, they immediately wanted to play with it, dragging pictures to pin on virtual walls and drawing circles around several icons at once to stack them into piles like magic. BumpTop is a pleasure to use and for no cost, the free version is certainly worth a try. If you like what you see and you're willing to change the way you use your desktop, the Pro version might be worthwhile.”
— Katherine Boehret, The Mossberg Solution, Wall Street Journal
Acquisition by Google
In April 2010 it was announced that Bumptop had been acquired by Google. It is unknown what Google has planned for the software, but speculation has begun it plans to revamp it for a new Android based tablet UI [13]. Shortly after its acquisition, Bumptop announced plans to remove the software completely from its website, only giving "End of Life" support for those who purchased the Pro version[citation needed].
References
- ^ a b http://download.cnet.com/BumpTop/3000-2072_4-10912219.html
- ^ Lardinois, Frederic (2009-04-07). "Bumptop Launches: Make Your Physical Desktop Virtual". ReadWriteWeb. Retrieved 2009-04-08.
- ^ ""An important BumpTop announcement"". 2010-04-30. Retrieved 2010-04-30.
- ^ http://getsatisfaction.com/bumptop/topics/osx_linux_support
- ^ http://bumptop.com/download.php
- ^ http://bumptop.com/blog/bumptop-gets-multi-touch-support-on-windows-7/
- ^ http://bumptop.com/blog/bumptop-inside-bundled-with-millions-of-3d-graphic-cards/
- ^ http://www.powercolor.com/Global/news_content_HTML/090629_BUMPTOP/POWERCOLOR%20ANNOUNCES%20PARTNERSHIP%20WITH%20BUMPTOP.pdf
- ^ http://download.cnet.com/BumpTop/3000-2072_4-10912219.html?tag=mncol#editorsreview
- ^ http://www.engadget.com/2009/04/08/video-bumptop-gives-windows-7-touchscreen-pcs-purpose/
- ^ http://www.crunchgear.com/2009/04/08/bumptop-a-better-windows-desktop/
- ^ http://bumptop.com/love.php
- ^ http://www.fastcompany.com/1635960/google-buys-3d-multitouch-desktop-software-maker-bumptop
- Agarawala, Anand. Ravin Balakrishnan. Keepin' it Real: Pushing the Desktop Metaphor with Physics, Piles and the Pen. Proceedings of CHI 2006 - the ACM Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. pp. 1283–1292.
External links
- Official website
- Video of TED Presentation on BumpTop
- BumpTop reviewed at Thunderror.com
- BumpTop reviewed at ZDNet (January 20, 2009)