Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. Legacy Archives

Hands-free PC control device The Leap partnering with Asus

Add as a preferred source on Google

the leapCheck out our full review of the Leap Motion gesture controller.

Less than a week into 2013, some of the most exciting technology on the market has a major announcement. Leap Motion, makers of revolutionary gesture control device The Leap, are partnering with Asus to ship PCs bundled with the gadget that allows for gesture-controlled computing.

Recommended Videos

In addition to the partnership, co-founder and CEO Michael Buckwald tells me that the company has raised a $30 million B series. He says the funding will help Leap Motion keep up with demand – of which there is plenty. “We’re in mass production right now,” he says. “We’re producing hundreds of thousands to millions of devices.”

While working on partnerships with OEMs and developers remains a clear focus, The Leap is a consumer-facing product that anyone can pre-order. “We’ve been blown away by the interest,” says Buckwald. He tells me credit cards won’t be charged until the company starts filling orders, which should be early this year.

It’s been less than a year since we were first introduced to The Leap, and there have been some small structural changes. The final unit is smaller than the one we originally saw, and it has a larger field of view. “You could be sitting in a front of a computer and anywhere you move your arms and hands, The Leap can track,” Buckwalkd tells me.

The standalone accessory is how Leap Motion is going about packaging its technology now, but the team is open to change. “We really want this to be ubiquitous and we’re focused on the peripheral as well as embedding this technology into a wide spectrum of devices,” he says, listing smartphones, tablets, and even cars as gadgets that could integrate the company’s gesture control system into their hardware.

The Windows 8 push makes The Leap – and the many competitor gesture control services hitting the market – an even more interesting, intriguing feature. PCs that use The Leap will also come with access to its app ecosystem (which is home to apps built from the ground up, as well as existing ones that are rewritten to take advantage of the hands-free system).

With CES less than a week away, we are absolutely going to see a big push in hands-free PC control – and it’s only the start. Leap Motion isn’t alone here: Elliptic Labs will be at the show demonstrating its gesture control technology that’s embedded into laptop screens, and smaller companies like Fluttr have also made headway here. Clearly, reimaging how we interact with our computers is changing, and the mouse and keyboard are being (somewhat) put on notice.

“We think the answer to what comes next is not about one sensor or about one type of input,” Buckwald says, also promising we’ll hear more OEM announcements in the near future regarding bundling and integrations. 

Molly McHugh
Former Social Media/Web Editor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
WWDC 2026: iOS 27, Siri AI, Apple Intelligence upgrades, and everything else
Apple stopped making promises at WWDC 2026 and started delivering: Siri AI, six OS updates, and Cook's farewell.
WWDC 2026 poster

Unlike most years, Apple’s WWDC 2026 carried more weight than usual, not just because it was Tim Cook’s final keynote as CEO, but also because it represented Apple’s chance at redemption after missing deadlines, mounting questions, and criticism about its ability to keep pace in the AI race. 

Fortunately, Apple answered many of those questions on June 8, 2026, unveiling an upgraded AI-powered Siri alongside a range of new Apple Intelligence features, while also raising a few fresh questions. WWDC was packed with announcements across six operating systems that underpin Apple’s ecosystem of devices. 

Read more
Forget RGB, Aston Martin’s gaming PC is dressed for Monaco
This Aston Martin RTX 5090 PC is gorgeous and wildly expensive
Chillblast X Aston Martin Gaming PC Front

Gaming PCs are usually easy to spot. They are loud both in design and fan noise, depending on how you build it. But Chillblast is and Aston Martin have a very different approach to this with a new collection of hand-built gaming PCs that look like something you would part next to a watch winder than hide under a desk.

The Chillblast x Aston Martin Collection has been designed and handcrafted in the UK with three models in the lineup. The entry point is the Chillblast x Aston Martin RTX 5070 PC, priced from £3,749.99. Above that sits the Limited Edition RTX 5090 PC, priced from £8,499.99 and limited to just 20 units. At the top is the Signature Water Cooled RTX 5090 PC, a built-to-order collector’s machine priced at a staggering £15,999.99.

Read more
reMarkable Paper Pure review: An excellent digital slate that I love, and feel vexed by
If you love writing, or just want to get back in the groove, it's unbeatable. If you seek digital conveniences, too, there are better options.
reMarkable Paper Pure digital note-taker device.

Quick Review

I bought into the reMarkable dream years ago and tried multiple slates, but the Paper Pure is the version I keep coming back to. At $399, it’s the entry-level E Ink tablet from the brand that finally retires the aging reMarkable 2, and it does so by stripping away almost everything you’d expect from a 2026 gadget.

Read more