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According to Immersion, its TouchSense solutions include:

Immersion says its previous TouchSense 2000 and 2100 solutions targeted devices such as appliances, cameras, IP phones, PMPs (portable media players), PNDs (personal navigation devices), and printers. As such, they had limited haptic effects libraries and didn't include high-level operating system support, according to the company.
In contrast, the new TouchSense 2500 solution offers Windows 7 and Android drivers, and supports USB and I2C I/O in place of the previously offered I2C, SPI, and GPIO, Immersion says. Now targeting tablets, netbooks, notebooks, and ultra-portable PCs, it offers an "infinite" haptic effects library, the company adds.
Haptic effects can not only be tailored to touchscreen graphical elements such as virtual keyboards or scrolling through lists, but can also provide feedback for gestures (such as tap, double-tap, swipe, spread, pinch, slide/drag and long press), according to Immersion. It's said a custom haptic effects tool allows device designers to create any haptic effect they want, including game effects, music effects, and texture simulation.
According to Immersion, its haptic technology -- presumably in the new TouchSense 2500 iteration -- has been incorporated into Toshiba's Libretto W100, pictured at right above. The $1,100 device runs Windows 7 on a 1.2GHz Intel Pentium U5400 processor, has 2GB of RAM and a 62GB SSD (solid state drive), and offers an accelerometer and six different virtual keyboards, according to Toshiba.
Immersion Vice President of Marketing Dennis Sheehan stated, "Now standard in mobile phones, we're seeing increased adoption of touch-input interfaces across a range of other markets, most notably in mobile computing. TouchSense 2500 provides OEMs and designers an easy-to-implement haptics solution and makes these interfaces dynamic, ultimately pleasing users and differentiating products."
Further information
More information about Immersion's haptic technology may be found on the company's website, here. More information on the Toshiba Libretto W100 may be found in our previous coverage, here, and on the Toshiba website, here.