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Oura acquires gesture recognition startup Doublepoint to integrate hand gesture controls into its smart ring platform, per TechCrunch
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The acquisition positions Oura to combine voice and gesture inputs for next-generation wearable AI interfaces
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Doublepoint’s technology can recognize micro-gestures like finger taps and hand movements using wearable sensors
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The deal comes as tech giants race to define post-smartphone interaction paradigms through AI-powered wearables
Oura, the Finnish smart ring maker valued at $2.55 billion, just acquired Doublepoint, a Helsinki-based startup pioneering gesture recognition technology for wearables. The move signals Oura’s bet that the future of wearable AI won’t just listen to your voice – it’ll watch your hands. According to TechCrunch, the company sees gesture control as critical to making its ring the control center for ambient computing.
Oura is making its most significant bet yet on the future of wearable AI. The smart ring company just acquired Doublepoint, a Finnish startup that’s cracked the code on recognizing hand gestures through tiny wearable sensors. Financial terms weren’t disclosed, but the strategic implications are massive – Oura’s signaling it wants to own the entire interface layer between humans and ambient AI.
The acquisition makes perfect sense when you consider where wearable technology is headed. Voice assistants got us halfway there, but talking to your wrist in public still feels awkward. Doublepoint’s technology solves that by detecting subtle finger taps, pinches, and hand movements – gestures so natural you barely think about them. The company’s algorithms can distinguish between intentional control gestures and everyday hand motions using just the sensors already built into devices like smart rings and watches.
“The company believes its next phase of wearable AI will be powered by a combination of voice and gesture,” according to the original report from TechCrunch. That’s not just product vision – it’s a fundamental rethinking of how we’ll interact with AI agents living in our ears, on our fingers, and throughout our homes.
Doublepoint emerged from research at Finland’s Aalto University and has been quietly building gesture recognition technology optimized for resource-constrained wearable devices. Unlike systems that require cameras or external sensors, their approach works with accelerometers and gyroscopes – the same motion sensors already inside the . The startup demonstrated its WowMouse technology that lets users control phones and computers through hand gestures detected by a smartwatch, proving the concept works in real-world conditions.