[In]expensive Immersion? 62
rentaghost sent us a sharky bit about a mouse feedback device that actually connects your audio output to the mouse to add vibrations. It's OS independent, too. If you're not interested in the cheaper stuff, check out Vision Station: a domend screen and 3d sound projection? Of course, the scariest version is a whole room. You thought quake gives you motion sickness now.
Aiming Accurately During Explosions (Score:2)
The article bemoans the fact that you mostly likely cannot aim accurately if there are explosions nearby because the mouse will shake too violently under some settings, I would submit that this actually improves the immersion experience.
Of course, your non-immersed opponents may have an unfair advantage, but you can be comforted by the knowledge that you'll be building up experience to apply when the time comes for each of us to pick up a blaster and destroy the alien invaders in the real world, where explosions actually affect your aim :-)
Aw, *shucks*! (fingersnap) (Score:2)
Re:And if you only use the keyboard? (Score:1)
FatPhil
Can we say RSI? (Score:1)
I can already see a greater amount of people suffering from Repetitive Stress Injuries (most commonly known of which is Carpal Tunnel) thanks to the added vibration...
Translucent USB version ... (Score:1)
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Re:Anyone else hate the scrolly mice? (Score:2)
(I *HATE* mice without a wheel)
Force feedback Trackballs, anyone? (Score:1)
- systmc
Re:Prices, anyone? (Score:1)
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:1)
What's amusing is that the packaging of Logitech's $30 USD mouse has a blinking LED embedded in it to attract your attention. I'll bet the one on the outside of the box is virtually identical to the one in the mouse. The amusing part is that when you tear open the packaging you see that this blinking light isn't powered by some dinky two bit batteries. No, it's powered by a couple of AA Duracells. The batteries must have cost way more than that LED.
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:2)
In related work.... (Score:1)
cat /dev/mouse > /dev/audio
This doesn't work so well under Linux, actually, though it was really funky under SunOS 4 (back in the pre-Solaris days).
Re:I did. (Score:1)
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:1)
Now try playing Quake! It shakes the fillings in your teeth loose!
Properly done immersion (Score:2)
If immersion is properly done, the connection between your various senses will be perfect and you won't feel sick.
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Re:Inexpensive immersion? You're joking, right? (Score:1)
Um, yeah! What the hell, it's the ultimate immersion, eh?
Still, you're right about us having everything around for a (reasonably) cheap way-out barrage of the senses.
>Why isn't there any interest in homebrew VR
Yeah well, kids these days! In my day we watched TV with ONE eye, and were glad to have that...
Re:Properly done immersion (Score:1)
Why - system read compass and attitude sensor from headset, used this to control logic simulating about Mach 1.5 over a 90 meter resolution terrain (ok, so we dropped all the linear/near linear pts to get the pig to run, it was a few years ago). Whenever the machine detected a head wobble, it'd pull an inverted normal change to camera direction (turns opposite from tilt 90 degrees). And yup, when your eyes tell you you're screaming along over the ground at some ridiculous speed and doing 90 degree turns, and those turns are basically out of phase with your own head wobbles ___and your ears say "ain't nothing happening", you turn green. Every time.
So this is a long way of trying to point out that immersion ain't just the immediate see and hear bits, it's also what you feel, and what "subsystems" of your own report on the physical environment. Tell the right lie and a 90 foot fall is really about 3/4 inch (Disney) or even apply a light voltage and fool the balance organs (Stanford ????) but if you don't cover every base, you may soon find motion sickness acts like a system panic message indicating someone is lying about something.
Haptics... (Score:3)
They even have an app to train people on finding land mines!
FYI Haptics comes from the Greek Haptesthai. meaning to grasp or touch.
cheers,
rev
Re:Haptics... (Score:3)
Electronic Journal of Haptic research. [haptics-e.org]
Haptics Community Web Page [northwestern.edu]
What kind of trademark is "TruTheta" (Score:2)
Back to the drawing boards guys - how about "large domed screen" (TM) technology?
FatPhil
22nd (Score:1)
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:2)
You know, go out and play Metal Gear Solid (Playstation) all the way through and then play with a "rumble" equiped controller. There is a huge difference. It scares the shit out of you when you are spotted and not only do you get the music jolt, but also the tactile sensation.
It would make games like HalfLife a more creepy if you felt the "ground" shake as a huge monster came stepping through the tunnels.
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domend? (Score:1)
Next Step: The Tingler (Score:2)
You get gibbed on Q3A at 2 in the morning when your mouse sends 24 volts through your sweaty fingers. You will wet yourself.
obligatory plug, blah blah blah [ridiculopathy.com]
ummm..... wasn't this covered 2 days ago? (Score:1)
This was on /. 2 days ago....
What's next? monitors that omit odors/scents?
Re:And if you only use the keyboard? (Score:1)
Reverse engineer... (Score:2)
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Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:1)
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:1)
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Re:Vision Station: 1024x768? blah (Score:1)
You'd have to work out how much angle is subtended by each pixel at the viewing distance of this thing.
Re:Haptics... (Score:1)
Great, and when you do find them, the mouse blows your arm off.
Re:What kind of trademark is "TruTheta" (Score:1)
Re:Vision Station: 1024x768? blah (Score:1)
Anyone else hate the scrolly mice? (Score:1)
A middle button could be used for 2-D scroll with just some software (can KDE or Gnome do this?).
Hold down middle, and move the mouse to scroll.
Some would say, "I don't want to move the mouse to scroll". Well, you probably want a track ball, since you don't like moving the mouse. And again, some button would put it in scroll mode (software could make it act like a scroll lock button).
End of rant.
Vision Station: 1024x768? blah (Score:1)
-M
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:1)
Prices, anyone? (Score:1)
When Microsoft buys the patent... (Score:2)
Speaking of 3D sound... (Score:2)
Re:Haptics... (Score:1)
They even have an app to train people on finding land mines!
Don't they already have something like that included in Windows? Whatchamacallit Minesweeper? :)
P.s: For the humor impaired - that was a joke
Re:domend? (Score:2)
Inexpensive immersion? You're joking, right? (Score:2)
For one thing, the projector alone is going to set you back at least $2000 - probably more. The dome will probably run double or triple that. One thing that struck me as funny - aside from the desk, how is this thing different from the Flostation [flogiston.com]? The only differences I can see are front vs. rear projection, plus the VisionStation allows multiple people to share the same view (or nearly the same - seems like unless you looked at the exact center of the screen, things would be distorted). Actually, the FloStation allows users to share the experience, just in seperate stations, networked together. Plus, the chair is a "zero-G" chair, which allows for a comfortable position during use.
However, neither of these technologies is cheap.
And true, neither is true immersion (though the Flostation comes much closer).
True immersion is when I can look anywhere around me - turn my head, duck, look between my legs, peer around the edge of a building, etc. I have only experienced this kind of immersion once - using the Virtuality 1000/2000 machines. Almost everything in them were OTS, and while the HMD's could have been better, they weren't bad. I am sure today's offerings (what little there is) are even better, but still not cheap.
No one but a rich geek will be able to afford these for personal use. So what can all of the normal geeks do?
Simple.
Break out the soldering iron, and build your immersive experience!
I am not saying you will get the best of the best - it is homebrew, after all. But with today's PC's, and cheap prices on LCD TV's, anyone can build thier own HMD, for less than $500. In fact, it is easy to buy an old VFX-1 or, if you are really cheap (like me), and old Stuntmaster, off of Ebay. VFX-1's go for about $200-$400, and Stuntmasters can be found for less than $50 in most cases!
Head tracking can be built easily, and using a Forte Cyber-Puck for navigation, exploration can be painless (use the cyberpuck for nav in one hand, and use one of those handheld, trackball mice in the other for manipulation). Cobble some software together using AVRIL or REND-386, maybe throw in Mesa for good measure, or some other rendering library. Output the image through a VGA to TV converter, and into the HMD. Track the HMD via pots connected to ADC's on an ISA interface board (or use PICs and serial ports). Break out back issues of PCVR magazine, and use them!
Heck, it is even possible to cheaply do one of these dome things, with imagination! Fuji used to make a cheap projector called the Fujix P-401 - it was about the size of a video tape, and ran on a 6V source. Not great res, but good enough. I recently found one for $250!!! Build a dome screen (definitely not the easiest task, I imagine), run a version of FishEye Quake [gamesinferno.com], and you're there!
What has heppened? Why isn't there any interest in homebrew VR (on a related issue, why did they change the terminology from VR to VE)? Why, especially when we have all of this great technology to produce greater realism than ever before? To explore worlds of our own creation, data in new ways for new insights...
Or are we simply content to sit on our collective asses, and watch the world go by?
I support the EFF [eff.org] - do you?
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:2)
That's because you don't the the mouse positioned properly. Lot safer than hampsters, no?
Re:And if you only use the keyboard? (Score:1)
Re:Prices, anyone? (Score:1)
I scored an LCD projector from a company that was shutting down one of its' offices, got it for 150 bucks and let me testify: they're easily worth 20 times that. I ran my computer on it for a while (floor to ceiling quakeII will damage you permenantly!), but when I got my DVD player, it became the defacto display for it. I have a movie theater in my living room (completely covers one bare wall), and that's WAY cooler than having the biggest monitor on the block!
low noise? (Score:2)
Don't use low noise. Send a loud spark-gap type of sound.
I can just see people doing this through netbus (if these type of mice become commonplace), and watching the user's reactions via webcam (and/or microphone).
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Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:4)
I hate to rain on people's parades -- especially when they've put so much hard work into their cool devices...
How realistic can it be if all the sensory input (to the body) goes through the mouse? Yay! My hand is shaking, but my ass isn't...
Perhaps this 'tool' will find a use as some sort of feminine stimulation device -- like the ones you see sold on late night television or in the back of magazines desguised as 'personal massage' utilities...
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seumas.com
Why just have the mouse vibrate (Score:2)
FoonDog
MUFF MUFF! (Score:1)
Re:Force feedback (Score:2)
Re:Why just have the mouse vibrate (Score:1)
Hmm... (Score:3)
Re:Haptics... (Score:1)
Force feedback (Score:1)
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:1)
You, my friend, need a better DJ.
Practical Joke (Score:4)
Fun? (Score:2)
I can see writing a trojan horse that would move somebody's mouse around without them even touching it. Possessed computer!
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What's the point? It already exists. (Score:1)
Okay, first off, it's "independent, as in "independent clause"; not independant, as in "Independant Worm Saloon".
Why not just buy an extra subwoofer to place under the table which has the mousepad? Or even better, an extra subwoofer strategically placed under the chair for that special gut-thumping experience? Personally, I have two 1-meter speakers (with 8-inch woofers) on each end of my room. It sounds excellent when playing Quake 1 and Quake 3 (Q2 never had enough bass), as well as Counter-Strike.
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:3)
Vibrating console controllers did indeed seem like a silly idea when they first came out - but when programmed well, they can be amazingly effective. Two examples come to mind. The bumps and crashes in Gran Turismo - the vibration really does add to the experience. Silent Hill - as your character becomes weak, his heart beats harder. The closer he is to death, the louder his heart beats, and the more the controller shakes, in time to the heartbeat.
This device could be the PC equivalent, although merely linking vibration to the audio output is probably not all that effective.
Hmmm... I used to live in a house with a very shaky floor. I wonder how effective it'd be to somehow link the vibration instructions from a Playstation to a subwoofer of some kind?
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And if you only use the keyboard? (Score:1)
I get shot and my mouse commits ritual suicide off my desk?
I've already wasted money on a rumble pack, never again, a gimmick of the naffest kind.
FatPhil
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:1)
Re:Anyone else hate the scrolly mice? (Score:1)
Re:Hate to rain on parades, but... (Score:1)
Optical mice are just better. They never wear out or need to be cleaned. As an end user, I really like that and I'm willing to pay for it. What more rationale do you need?
I'm not sure why you're complaining that it's too complex. It's not like it's an operating system that becomes harder to program. It works just like an ordinary mouse for both users and programmers; how does this additional complexity disadvantage anyone? That's kind of like saying that the increase in speed of the Pentium 4 doesn't justify the huge increase in complexity.