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URC MX-5000 Appears to be First Universal Remote with Tactile Feedback

Modeled after URC's two-way MX-6000, the MX-5000 is designed for one-handed operation and appears to be the first remote with haptic technology for 'very satisfying sensation.'
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“Boy it feels so good and looks so good.”—URC’s Eric Johnson

Universal Remote Control appears to have the first remote with tactile feedback, known as haptics.

If you press a virtual button on the new MX-5000 touchscreen, you know you've pressed it. It seems to click just like the real thing.

"It's something we've long wanted to do," says Eric Johnson, URC's VP of technology. "We've experimented with haptics for three years."

What's taken so long? I discovered haptic-enabled touchscreens at CES several years ago and thought it was the next big thing for CE touchscreens. But URC seems to be the first implementer.

The delay "has to do with a combination of price and testing the reliability thoroughly," Johnson says. "We look at hundreds of thousands of button presses. If it can't survive one-million button presses, we're not really interested."

Currently, URC and its competitors use beeps if consumers want feedback, but the noises "can grow tiresome," Johnson says.

The MX-5000 employs a single tactile sensation, but Johnson says haptic technology "has a lot of promise." URC has tested different sensations, for example, for sliding volume controls.

URC is keeping the haptics simple and plans to implement the technology in other remote control devices in the future.

Sexiest Remote Control Ever?


When you hear Johnson gush about the MX-5000, you'd think it was something other than a remote.

"It [haptics] gives you an immediate, very satisfying sensation," he says. "When you look at the rest of the remote, too, boy it feels so good and looks so good."

He notes that URC has never received so much immediate, enthusiastic feedback from its beta dealers.

The morning after URC sent out its beta units, "We got exactly 18 phone calls," Johnson recalls. "One dealer called us up and said, 'I opened the box and all of the guys came over to look.'"

Johnson says the painstakingly designed remote represents the "epitome of engineering."

Modeled after URC's MX-6000 two-handed controller, the MX-5000 is designed for one-handed operation – made easier with haptics.

MX-5000 Features:

  • 2.7-inch LCD color touch screen
  • WiFi (B and G) for metadata, control, integration
  • Narrowband RF and IR for control
  • Via URC base station, integrates with IR and RS-232 components
  • Includes rechargeable battery and charging base
Pricing has not yet been released, but URC says the MSRP will be less than $1,500.

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MX-5000 (left) is like the MX-6000 but with one-handed ergonomics and haptic technology for tactile feedback.

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Article Topics

News · Product News · Universal Remotes · Universal Remote · All topics

About the Author

Julie Jacobson, Editor-at-large, CE Pro
As a co-founder of EH Publishing in 1994, Julie has edited and contributed to all of the company's publications at one time or another. An authority on home automation, networking, integration, digital convergence and the CE pro channel, Julie speaks often about these subjects at industry events. She graduated with a B.A. in Economics from the University of Michigan, and received an MBA from the University of Texas at Austin. Julie is a washed-up Ultimate Frisbee player.

10 Comments

Posted by Hi Koo  on  07/20  at  06:15 AM

Haiku about MX-5000

Em Ex Five Thousand
from Universal Remote
vibrates. Ain’t that cool?

Posted by Julie Jacobson  on  07/20  at  01:03 PM

I worry about
Eric—little too fond of
The ergonomics

Posted by d_roller  on  07/20  at  08:12 PM

Looks nice. It could use hard button numbers though.

Posted by 39 Cent Stamp  on  07/21  at  12:05 AM

Throw on a numeric keypad and you have yourself a T2-C buster.

http://www.guijaboard.com/image/screenshots/mx_5000_edited.gif

Posted by Dave Stevens  on  07/21  at  03:14 AM

Eric,
Do you put the remote in your pocket when you change channels or inputs?

Want to impress me? How about designing a remote using “Taser Technology.” This way when an unauthorized user picks up the remote it sends some serious voltage through them.

Feel free to call it the “Tased & Confused” or “Kid B Gone” series.

Posted by alma  on  07/21  at  03:27 AM

Logitech Harmony One is same, and only $150.

Posted by Julie Jacobson  on  07/21  at  05:06 AM

39 ... nice!

Posted by Isaac  on  07/21  at  07:00 AM

Logitech Harmony One retails for $249, and isn’t even close in terms of feature-set. No IP capabilities at all, inferior screen, no haptics, non open-architecture software, hardware that could never support bi-directional feedback, the list goes on and on…

Posted by Mike Wilson  on  09/03  at  11:22 AM

Alma, don’t even mention the harmony with any of URC’s remotes. A properly programmed URC remote will give the customer more satisfaction than any harmony ever will. You get what you pay for.

Posted by Kerry  on  09/11  at  07:46 AM

Not to mention the biggest feature which is the RF control that your harmony will never have. URC is for professionals, harmony is for “wannabes”

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