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A DIY Mid-Air Pointing Device
Posted by
kdawson
on Thu Dec 14, 2006 12:22 PM
from the point-with-abandon dept.
from the point-with-abandon dept.
Werner Heuser
writes with an article in Linuxdevices on building your own handheld
pointing device that works in mid-air. There is a YouTube video
showing the Soap in action and detailed instructions to make your own
Soap. From the article: "'Soap,' which resembles a bar of soap,
is based on hardware found in a common wireless optical mouse, and is
relatively easy to make, according to its inventors. Imagine numerous
situations in which one might wish to control an appliance while
standing or walking, for example, when giving a slide presentation or
interacting with a wall-sized display."
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Ugh.. (Score:5, Funny)
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Don't feel like reinventing the wheel? (Score:5, Informative)
I know it's not home made, but it does the job pretty well.
TW
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Tm
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TW
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Tilt sensing is fundamentally different than this or a flying trackball. For one thing, if you set this down, your control point won't go careening to one side or another. Tilt sensitive devices are inherently joysticks. A mouse is a mouse. The Wiimote may bridge that gap, but only if you have an IR sensor beam to provide a position reference.
The sensor beam's for position in space... (Score:2)
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Wiimousing on Linux with IR pointing [youtube.com]
Wiimousing on Windows [Half-Life] with the accelerometer [youtube.com]
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On top of that, I think most people know the Wiimote isn't the first motion sensing device (or free hand moust); it is just one of the most complete devices and the only one being pushed by a major coporation. If it wasn't for Nintendo ensuring hundreds of games were being produced for the Wii, it would mostly just end up being a novelty and a piece of triva 10 years from now.
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Because it is directly connected to the shift in the outer "hull" relative to the inner "soap bar," rather than simply the motion of waving your hand around in the air-- allowing you to wave your hand around independent of the control motions of the device, it appears to me to be quite a bit more effective than th
So... (Score:5, Funny)
Except that the stubby thing is attached to a computer.
I believe that
Nothing to see here... (Score:1)
It doesn't have any sort of motion-sensing features, nor any pointing features (that is, it's not like a laser pointer with feedback).
All in all: slow news day.
- RG>
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I've got a better idea, stick a wireless mouse under a remote control car and drive your way around your FPS game.
I can't believe this got posted on
BFD.
LoB
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Yeh, but it mentiones YouTube and Digg has had its daily quota of YouTube postings soaked up by all the viral crap, so it's JUST GOTTA be posted somewhere else.
Cool^H^H^H^HKewl A+++ will buy again.
In Soviet Russia the HA HA Guy does nothing without goggles etc.
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That explains why they take a few moments to mention how well it works with Windows Media Center. No doubt the game they are playing is Halo and the wireless mouse is made by...Microsoft?
No doubt this is a last minute rush job to preempt the new iSoap that Steve Jobs was going to unveil at Macworld.
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LoB
MS does innovate (Score:1)
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As I've said elsewhere, with a $6 billion annual budget, if THIS is the 'innovation' they're getting then they should ask for their money back. IMO a wireless handheld trackball would do a better job.
I do know that Microsoft has been spending PR $$$ trying to make the world think they are 'innovators'. There was a recent article about how t
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http://www.osnews.com/story.php?news_id=15636 [osnews.com]
Ah, the wonders of linuxdevices/windowsfordevices/gimmepageviewsdontc areabouttheplatform
http://www.linuxdevices.com/news/NS9902727147.html [linuxdevices.com]
http://www.windowsfordevices.com/news/NS5549165530
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I could see this posted on Make by some garage hacker but from Microsofts R&D department? Sorry, it'll take a bit more to impress me when they've got over $6 billion
Ehhhh, not too shabby (Score:1)
Yep... (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, most of FPS gamers I know could use some soap...
I have (Score:2)
It is extremely useful for my current setup though where I have my 40" hidef LCD hooked up via DVI->HDMI to my computer. Once I get a wireless keyboard I'll be able to play WoW from my couch!
The other cool th
Batteries (Score:2)
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G: Does it fing?
-1 obvious
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Fully functional soap mouse (Score:1)
Interesting concept, lacking functionality (Score:2, Insightful)
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I invented this in 1992... (Score:1)
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I guess GTK needs to put the OK back on the left (Score:2)
With other pointer devices (touch screen, touch pad, wiii-controller, bar-of-soap), such an optimization is not helpful.
So can we now put the OK CANCEL back to left-to-right ordering?
The mouse is far from dead (Score:1, Insightful)
But unless we get to the point where people write code, check e-mail, etc, at something other than a desk sitting at a screen, the $20 mouse on my desktop works fine.
Also, I question the utility of this for most purposes. One of the reasons why current mice work on a table top is because THAT'S WHERE YOUR HAND IS. I spend a lot of time with a mouse in my hand, and if I was holding an object "floating in space," my arm w
Neat, but... (Score:2)
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har har.. (Score:1)
Nonsense aside, where is my power glove for PC? I should be able to navigate 3d environments by moving both my hands, one for motion the other for grabbing/moving data/files. Go download Tactile3d and play with it for a minute to better understand the concept. then imagine a device similar to the Wii's for navigation. It would make such systems faster to navigate & therefore useful!
I think it's absurd that a console should have something my PC does not.
Glad to
So then... (Score:2)
Chris Mattern
Hack-A-Day covered it a while ago (Score:1)
I think he even did it as part of his job, but for some reason I can't find where I've seen it...
already have an in-air pointing device, thanks (Score:2)
(points)
Trackball! (Score:2)
Only in mid-air? (Score:2)
But it looks like.... (Score:2)
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The article is about manipulating items you bought to make something new, that's like saying making a ball of rubber bands out of rubber bands is violating patent. It's not a commercially marketed device yet, so patents are a non-issue.
But thanks for playing.
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