Haptic Harmony Ring
Haptic Harmony adds a tactile layer to Gestura. It can provide silent confirmation, gesture-triggered actions, and a more hands-busy workflow when voice alone is not ideal.
What the ring is best for
- Gesture-based triggers such as muting or invoking a control action.
- Silent feedback when a workflow completes or needs attention.
- Environments where audio cues are distracting or inappropriate.
How it fits into Gestura
In Gestura's mental model, the ring is a feedback and control surface. It does not replace sessions, permissions, or tools; it simply gives you another way to start actions and receive confirmation.
What to configure
- Whether haptic feedback is enabled.
- Haptic intensity and pattern selection.
- Ring simulator support if you are testing without hardware.
- Any gesture settings exposed by your current build or device workflow.
Setup checklist
- Confirm Bluetooth or simulator support is ready on the host system.
- Charge the ring if you are using hardware.
- Enable haptic-related settings in Gestura.
- Run a simple confirmation workflow before depending on gestures in real work.
Best practices
- Validate basic voice or chat workflows before adding ring complexity.
- Keep the ring charged and confirm connectivity before long sessions.
- Use haptics as confirmation, not as the only source of critical status information.
Maintenance
Treat the ring as part of your input and feedback stack. Keep firmware, simulator settings, and host Bluetooth state consistent with the Gestura build you are running, and re-test after major updates.
Need help?
Use Ring Troubleshooting when you run into connectivity, haptic, or gesture-recognition issues.