Smart rings are brilliant at tracking health, but interacting with them has always been a bit awkward.

Without screens or buttons, most rely on companion apps for everything from checking sleep scores to adjusting settings.

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Financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed, but the acquisition suggests Oura is looking beyond traditional app-based controls as it continues to expand its wearable ecosystem.

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For a product category like smart rings, that kind of interaction could be particularly powerful.

Devices such as the Oura Ring 4 are designed primarily for passive health tracking, collecting data on sleep, recovery and activity throughout the day, with most interaction happening on a smartphone rather than the ring itself.

Gesture recognition could change that dynamic, enabling the ring to detect micro-gestures and let you dismiss notifications, control music, or interact with connected devices without touching your phone.

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Apple Watches and Samsung Galaxy smartwatches.

The Apple Watch Series 9 introduced the Double Tap gesture, which lets users answer calls or pause music by tapping their thumb and index finger together.

Samsung has taken a similar approach with its Samsung Galaxy Watch lineup, which supports gestures such as pinch and double pinch to interact with notifications, control media or trigger actions without touching the screen.

While the feature relies on sensors built into the watch, smart rings could arguably be an even better fit for gesture control.

Positioned directly on the finger, they are well-placed to detect subtle movements that larger wearables might miss.

This type of interaction also fits into a wider trend sometimes described as “ambient computing”, where devices fade into the background and respond naturally to human behaviour rather than requiring constant input.

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