Gyroscope Gives CellPhones 'Tilt Control' 213
Paul Stamatiou writes "You can now control cellphone activities by simply tilting it.
"If you have a game involving keeping a car on the road, you do that by tilting," says company spokesman Jan Ahrenbring. The tilting technique can also be used to sweep large virtual pages across the phone's screen, which acts as window on the information."
It is still... (Score:2)
Re:It is still... (Score:3, Funny)
If the phone is anything like my Motorola T720, if I tilted it in any way, I wouldn't be able to see anything on the screen.
Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:5, Insightful)
How about 3 day battery life with 6 hours talk time?
How about good, clear calls?
How about not magically losing signal when I walk in to another room?
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:5, Informative)
All it is really missing is motion control. That way I can answer the phone simply by picking it up, hold a call by putting the phone down, and scroll through my address list by shaking the phone like a lunatic instead of clicking those damn arrow keys.
My guess is: if the rocker control is cheap and easy to hook up to the UI, it will be a natural and useful extension to the way we use phones.
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:5, Insightful)
The market (Score:5, Insightful)
The USA's "free market" is anything but. For a really free market in telecoms, you have to look to countries where there is no anti-competitive parastate monopoly.
Amazingly, also the countries with the cheapest and often best mobile phone services.
Re:The market (Score:3, Informative)
Energy and telecoms are regulated out of necessity. It makes sense for one company to run power lines and one company to run phone lines. Having 10 companies compete would be nice, but it is not likely to happen. So regulation is how the industry is kept from price-gouging. The power blackout in New York was caused by a (British owned) power company that neglected up
Re:The market (Score:2)
As for the "free market" comments, in general, though - I think the biggest problem comes about when technology begins rendering the old assumptions about industries requiring regulation obsolete.
Right now, I think the U.S. is in sort of a strange place, where some of the traditionally "unquestioned" regulated monopolies are subject to new questions.
Telcos were the first to feel this. (The old concept that it just
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:2, Informative)
Much more advanced... (Score:3, Insightful)
1. does it work in my area?
2. is it reasonably reliable?
3. is it economical?
And most of the mobile networks in the USA fail on these grounds for reasons that have nothing whatsoever to do with technology. I remember trying to use my GSM in the States, frustrated to find that outside the airports and
Re:Much more advanced... (Score:2)
Re:Much more advanced... (Score:2)
Re:Much more advanced... (Score:2)
Got that right, bro.
It has seemed to work, so far.
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:2)
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:2)
GSM has a 16km hard cell-size limit. CDMA cells can be 4 times as large and handle 2 times as many calls. Oh, and it has lower-latency, higher bandwidth data service. And better voice quality.
Hmmm, so we have a better, more economical, easier to deploy technology, o
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:2)
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:2)
Seriously though, why is the difference so big? I mean, is it because differences between the phone networks or do all american product come with weak batteries?
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:2)
Seriously though, why is the difference so big? I mean, is it because differences between the phone networks or do all american product come with weak batteries?
Two words: Population Density. Europe's is about twice that of the US. This makes it more economical to put up more towers, more towers mean that digital phones are closer and thus broadcast at a lower power than they would if they were just barely on the edge of receptio
Battery Life Differences are Radio-based (Score:2)
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:2)
The Itsy had this (Score:2)
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:2)
Try the Nokia 6310i [nokia.com]. It may be black and white but it's got Bluetooth, GPRS, HSCSD, Triband, Java and has impressive battery life (both idle and talking). Not to mention the easy to use UI and support for syncing to and from Outlook (tasks, calendar and, most importantly, contacts).
How about good, clear calls?
How about not magically losing signal when I walk in to another room?
If you're in Europe, this sounds like a network provider problem rather t
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:3, Funny)
I suggest NOT calling poor conversationalists, and dumping Sprint.
Re:Another feature I don't want/need. (Score:2)
How about 3 day battery life with 6 hours talk time?
I have more than that on my Sprint PCS LG phone that I bought 2 years ago.
How about good, clear calls?
Again, I'm on Sprint PCS and am not sure what you're talking about.
How about not magically losing signal when I walk in to another room?
Ask your cellphone provider to boost the coverage/signal in your area.
Driving on Cell Phones (Score:5, Funny)
How about you try keeping your car on the road by NOT talking while driving?
yippee! (Score:2, Interesting)
The way I see it, this whole cell phone thing is really starting to suck.
Cue article... (Score:2, Funny)
Palm! (Score:3, Interesting)
It's also been done.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It's also been done.. (Score:2)
Re:Palm! (Score:2)
Re:Palm! (Score:3, Informative)
low viewing angle (Score:2, Insightful)
Er... (Score:2)
Give me a break (Score:4, Funny)
No, it's a camera...
No, it's a video game...
No, it's a breakfast cerial...
When I thought of digital convergence, this isn't what I had in mind...
Re:Give me a break (Score:2)
Still no spell-check, though.
Drunk (Score:3, Funny)
Not all that new (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not all that new (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Not all that new (Score:2)
Cellphone Game (Score:4, Insightful)
Gits.
To turn it off... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:To turn it off... (Score:2)
Yes, that is one option that could work. What I want to know is if the phone is in your pocket and detects that it is spinning will it automatically call 911 for help? Also, if it detects that it is twirling through the air after having just left your hand, does it automatically message your carrier of their inferior service?
You WILL like this (Score:3, Insightful)
How about stop all the crap 'features' that people have to be convinced are useful, and just get the damn things to work...
(blissfully, I don't really care, because I remain cellphone anchor-free)
Re:You WILL like this (Score:4, Interesting)
I finally bought a cell phone for my wife and I to keep in contact easier. I tried to give it to my boss (I'm a programmer with some responsibility for an on-line service) but he refused to take it, saying that nothing was that important that it couldn't wait until tomorrow. He did take it eventually when I went on a 2 week vacation but he never called it, even when there was trouble; he found someone else to deal with it, even though he knew I could have handled it faster.
Re:You WILL like this (Score:2)
You need to broaden your thoughts, my son. As a developer, WTF does it matter if I fix the bug tommorrow instead of 0 dark thirty tonight?
And you know the way to minimize work-stopping bugs?
Design, code, TEST. Test some more. Fix the things you find. Then test again. Build applications correctly from the start, and you won't GET those 2 AM calls.
Granted... w
Usefull feature? Hmmm (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't think of a good thing I can do with a phone with a gyroscope in it right now. I assume that anyone can come up with some basic telephone feature that is still missing. One I can come up with is "if busy, present a callback function (Call back in 30 seconds? Yes/No)". Another one is "answer and delete message".
Oh boy, if only I would design phones...
Re:Usefull feature? Hmmm (Score:2)
"if busy, present a callback function (Call back in 30 seconds? Yes/No)"
Don't most phones already do this? My old Ericsson did it automatically, and on a Nokia I think it's under Call settings - Automatic redial
Re:Usefull feature? Hmmm (Score:2)
As for the Gyro.. well it would make a nice McGyver episode, where McGyver uses the cellphone's gyroscope to navigate a broken airplane thus saving hundreds of lives...
Re:Usefull feature? Hmmm (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Usefull feature? Hmmm (Score:2, Funny)
If you still have it, sell the discman on eBay. You'll probably get more than the mutual fund would be worth today.
Been done before - quick patent it (Score:3, Informative)
A solution in search of a problem (Score:5, Insightful)
There is much less control in tilting a palm while trying to watch the screen scroll, and then tilting it to level again to read the map - and once you tilt it level, you have to switch the toggle to stop it scrolling if you tilt it up to look at it.
It reminds me of those games where you have a marble and have to make it fall in the hole in the middle of a big plate - you always overshoot the hole and end up on the other end.
It's a dumb way to solve a problem that has already been solved via scroll bars and/or buttons.
Re:A solution in search of a problem (Score:2)
See, you've come up with a game application yourself! The phones will have an electronic 'marble' game.
Seriously, I don't see why they suggested the car driving game - the marble game simulator is clearly a better example.
Re:A solution in search of a problem (Score:2)
Well done. Course, at least in the real world marble game you can see the ball and the hole at the same time. In the Cell Phone virtual one, you can use the large "virtual screen" to see a high resolution recreation of the play area... the fact that you dont know where the hole is half the time only adds to the challenge.
Re:A solution in search of a problem (Score:2)
Re:A solution in search of a problem (Score:2)
Now I can finally play Marble Madness on my cell phone!!
Re:Absolutely brilliant - in principle (Score:3, Insightful)
Imagine if you typed into your word processor by placing your hands in the middle of the document on your screen and typing on a virtual keyboard - you can't see what yo
Bah... (Score:5, Funny)
What I really want.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:What I really want.... (Score:2)
Yeah, and you'd still have a separate pager...
Re:What I really want.... (Score:2)
News from the future (Score:2)
16:12 18 July 04
Eddies in the space time continuum again?
pro and con (Score:3, Interesting)
- my seimens phone is now so small I can't reliably grasp it and press keys.. need somethign else to control now (or just return the phones to hand sized)
- it could standardize some controls (think t9) as opposed to a new set of buttons to think about on every brand
cons:
- we have enough gesturing while driving
- you can't reliably track something that's in motion (try reading a book thaqt you're waving back and forth, then try reading when the book ist still and your head is moving - big difference)
- i don't want the gyroscopic effect when i'l trying to wrestle with the phone (ok, they'll likely be small) or the dam thing precessing while on my driver's seat...
Tilting pie menus (Score:5, Interesting)
Tilting Operations for Small Screen Interfaces (Tech Note)p df [sony.co.jp]
By Jun Rekimoto [sony.co.jp], Sony Computer Science Laboratory, Inc. www.csl.sony.co.jp/person/rekimoto/papers/uist96.
HTML version from google:
http://216.239.53.104/search?q=cache:xf0Rxikgk34J: www.csl.sony.co.jp/person/rekimoto/papers/uist96.p df+tilt+pie+menu&hl=en&ie=UTF-8 [216.239.53.104]
-Don
A technology so good (Score:2)
The downside of tilt control (Score:3, Interesting)
hmmm.... (Score:2)
Mercury switch vs Gyroscope? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Mercury switch vs Gyroscope? (Score:2)
Because mercenaries use them in bombs. Then you'd have Riggs and Murtaugh after you, and you certainly don't want that!
Marble Madness! (Score:2)
This would be fantastic for a game such as the 1984 classic Marble Madness [kinetic-arts.co.uk]
Anyone remember the itsy (Score:2)
Drinking and Phoning (Score:2, Funny)
If it's a powerful gyroscope, I can drink enough to fall over, yet stand upright while making a phone call -- !
Rotation (Score:5, Informative)
Rus
Pseudo/alternate GPS use? (Score:3, Interesting)
Non-glare wide-angle screen? (Score:2)
How about... navigation use (Score:2, Interesting)
Just imagine the possibilities of such a navigation system. Finally, there's no more excuse for not finding the office of your PHB in a new building .
Why a gyroscope? (Score:5, Interesting)
Another nifty thing you could do; if the camera is on the back-side of your phone, you should be able to activate it and use the phone as an optical mouse. Just slide the phone on your desk, and the mouse pointer on the phone screen moves. Cute eh?
Maybe I should patent this and get rich?
But now I have already written about it on slashdot. Too late. Damned slashdot, hindering innovation like this!
Re:Why a gyroscope? (Score:2)
Re:Why a gyroscope? (Score:2)
Get back to me when you have a demo.
Obvious pr0n industry application... (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm just saying it seems the sex trades are the first to jump into new technology. (I'm still waiting for the multi-camera function of DVDs to appear in anything but adult entertainment)
Did I mention they also have cameras??
I can see it now ... (Score:2)
"Hey old man, this cell's got a gyro. What do you know?"
Been done before (Score:2, Interesting)
Too bad the GBA SP loads the cartridges from below, making the game unplayable.
GyroScope vs. Accelerometer (Score:2)
The Palm stuff has all been Accelerometers, which are cheap becuase you need them to control airbags. They can detect change in orientation, but don't really know the orientation of the device, so you tilt and come back to level and have to tell the device it is level again. It might be able to do an OKAY job of knowing it's tilt at a given time, but the sampling rate will eventually make it necessary to hi
The gyro is too small... (Score:5, Funny)
It would be JUST as useful as that silly tilt control, and a lot cooler.
I also want it to have flip-out accessories for clipping nails, opening cans, and extracting stones from horse's hooves.
I've given up on the things ever being reliable ways to make telephone calls.
Re:The gyro is too small... (Score:2)
Jonathan
Gyroscope? (Score:4, Insightful)
German vocabulary (Score:2)
Schadenfreude [reference.com]
haha (Score:2)
could they make it easier?
Think of the practical applications! (Score:2)
another case of SO (Score:2)
So much technology, so many idiots, and still the kids starve in the streets.
Car on the road LOL!! (Score:2)
Etch-a-Sketch (Score:2)
--D
An exciting rehash of 80's technology (Score:2)
Until recently, no really satisfactory substitute for the Atari joystick has been available. The first alternative was "Le Stick" from DataSoft. Billed as a onehanded joystick, it has internal mercury switches which detect the angle at which it is being held. The "fire" button is mounted on top. Some people like Le Stick, but most find that it is very hard to keep the stick perfectly upright, a position often needed to keep the cursor from moving. A squeezetrigger in Le
Everything old is new again... (Score:2)
"I love the powerglove... it's so bad!" [x-entertainment.com]
Didn't Compaq do this first? (Score:2)
I like the old game better... (Score:3, Funny)
It's hard enough to keep my car on the road while blathering on the cellphone, but now I have to tilt, too?
Re:More features I'll never use (Score:2, Interesting)
Oh how nice. You just use your cellphone to make calls.
Thank you for your input. I DON'T CARE.
I don't even know why the vast batallions of people who insist on saying "Hi! I only use my phone for making calls!" think they're saying anything new or original.
If all you care about is making phone calls, there are lots of good, cheap phones which just do that. The VTech A700 comes right to mind--it's cheap, weighs nearly nothing, and just to keep all these people who insist on mentioning that they don'
Re:grammar nazi (Score:2)
DAMN! I did it again.