Multitouch Without Touch Using Wiimote 94
owlgorithm writes to mention that Gizmodo has a neat hack for the multitouch Holy Grail — multitouch without the touch. This hack turns the Wiimote into a receiver for IR light reflected from an emitter off of your fingers using reflective tape.
Who would have thought... (Score:3, Interesting)
You know what they say... (Score:4, Funny)
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Are they still in short supply?
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This mod seems good and the best part is it doesn't even need a wii console.
If you can lay your hands on a wiimote that will suffice.
He wrote the app on a pc using one of the bluetooth interface stacks.
Supply will increase massively soon (Score:2)
Re:Supply will increase massively soon (Score:4, Informative)
We're working very hard to make sure that consumers are satisfied this holiday, but I can't guarantee that we're going to meet demand. As a matter of fact, I can tell you on the record we won't.
I guess I'm going to have to start trolling target, walmart and such on a regular basis.
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Fortunately, these guys all publicly announce when they'll be receiving shipments via their ads. Check the new weekly ad online at target.com, etc., before open time on Sunday. If the new ad advertises the Wii, it means they're putting a new shipment on the floor that morning. Get in the habit of checking target.com, bestbuy.com, and circuitcity.com every sunday morning.
I managed to score a Wii (in the San Francisco b
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I bought mine on launch night, with a whole bunch of other Zelda fanboys, and we bought up the entire supply then and there, along with heaps of other games and accessories. We all then went home over Christmas and played Wii Tennis with family and friends, who then went out and bought up the entire supply through to about May. I'm not sure any of them ever bought any other game.
Wi
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Power Glove redeaux? (Score:4, Funny)
This could be really awesome. I can see this as a great way to bring good strategy games to consoles. It might even be better than a mouse. Supreme Commander with your fingers on a Wii? Nevermind that the Wii would gag on the graphics load, but the gameplay is intriguing.
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Good Point (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good Point (Score:5, Funny)
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When I was in boot camp, sometimes they would punish us by making us hold a pencil. We had to hold it with both arms held straight out. We were young kids in pretty decent shape and it didn't take long at all for it to get pretty painful. Just the weight of holding up your arms can get to be too much after a while.
If they had you hold your arms out to the sides instead of out in front, it would have had another name: Crucifixion. Anything done long enough can be painful.
I'd be very glad to see an actual game or product along these lines as it would introduce more exercise into the lives of the users. A really simple product that would work well with this would be in fast food. instead of having the workers touch a button with their gloves or hands, they just select the option they want in the air. And tell me,
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Re:Good Point (Score:5, Insightful)
Who says you have to aim at the tv?
It might work coming to the actual glass surface which means you could lay your arm down and rest it like a mouse but you have the third dimension when you need it.
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Video Here [dhadm.com]
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If only we had some kind of really cheap laser pen type thingy... oh wait.
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Re:Good Point (Score:5, Interesting)
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I don't see this as a problem. Artists and painters (think Sixtine Chapel, Michelangelo, Da Vinci, etc...) have been using their arms for ages. The trick is that you don't have to keep your arms up all the time. Every so often you must step back to take a look at your work and you drop your arms when you do. All it takes is short rest periods between work.
Personally, I believe that the multi-touch interface is perfect for parallel computer programming [blogspot.com]. In the future, progra
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In the future, programming will become almost entirely compositional. Just drag'm and drop'm.
that's what was being said in the 80s... the truth is, while it is 'cool' it is a lot more limiting for low level stuff and complex algorithms. maybe some things would work (probably the same sort of programs that will benefit from technologies like adobe's 'thermo' and multimedia work), but just like visual basic was supposed to change the way everyone programmed but fell way short of the mark when people realised that ease of use and *complete* control are essentially mutually exclusive, this phrase (in
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You could probably make this a flat surface representation where the wii not be on your television but below your hand which rests on glass. There are some interface issues that have to be taken into account as controlling something like windows does not work in this situation, but if you had an apple iphone like interface it would work great.
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The fuck they are! Keyboards and mice are relatively dreadful, quite frankly. Have you ever tried to draw with a mouse? It's like painting with a shoe. They're also extremely difficult to use for millions of people with various motor-related disabilities. And what's worse using them improperly (which most people do) *causes* disabilities -- carpal tunnel synd
wacom tablet.. (Score:1)
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I'm thinking 3D, First Person, Street Fighter.....using gestures and reflective tape in the right spots and I can just imagine "Ha-dou-Ken!" You should be able to get distance from it (size of dot in the video seemed to already indicate it)...speed (jab vs strong). (Of course, for the first idiot that actually tries Guile'
Bad Point (Score:1)
Everyone loves writing software... plus the Vicon (Score:4, Interesting)
In any case, this is a neat demo. People have been doing this on a much bigger, 3D, expensive $$$ scale with something called a Vicon Motion Capture System [vicon.com]. They basically take a whole bunch of those cameras, and a whole bunch of LED arrays, and strobe them so that they get a picture of little reflective points from many different angles. They then use some trigonometry to figure out where, in 3D space, a particular point is. Cool stuff -- good to see it's being brought closer to everyone's homes, rather than the tens of thousands of dollars that Vicon charges.
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Educational microcontroller kits for the digital generation. [nerdkits.com]
Re:Everyone loves writing software... plus the Vic (Score:1)
nerds at four o'clock!! (ok, slightly after...) (Score:5, Funny)
damn.
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to Quote Duglas Adams:
"nobody jokes in base 13, it's just not funny."
YouTube Link (Score:3, Informative)
"Holy Grail" is pretty old tech already (Score:5, Interesting)
The "Holy Grail" of multitouch without the touch is a pretty old problem. I've been working on something at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory for a while called the HI-Space table, and it was around before I came to the lab. It uses infrared and a camera and detects multiple inputs simultaneously, as well as object placed on the table. It doesn't require touching at all and works fairly well, detecting not only single fingers but each of the fingers, allowing the user to do different things with different arrangements of fingers. It understands motions as well, and can detect a swipe, circle, etc. Objects aren't tagged with anything special; they're just cardboard shapes.
Here's a video of the HI-Space table in action: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nFBoq1i81V4 [youtube.com]
Here's an old link to some of the work: http://infoviz.pnl.gov/hces/ [pnl.gov]
Stuck in our past. (Score:5, Interesting)
Its not that it is indistinguishable from magic, its that were TRYING to make it look like that.
Just a thought.
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We keep thinking things like this are a good idea. For instance, the Theremin [wikipedia.org], after a burst of initial popularity, never took off. Though it looks easy to play, it's in fact quite difficult, because there's no tactile feedback. Coming in at the right pitch after a long rest is hard, which is why you don't see many pieces for orchestra and Theremin; instead, the Ondes Martenot [wikipedia.org], which has a keyboard to indicate pitch, is used.
There's a rift in the Theremin world over people who play in the traditional
My fingers... (Score:1)
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Danger to eyes (Score:4, Informative)
I would suggest doing this in a very well lit room, and NEVER in the dark, or you will likely seriously damage your eyes.
Re:Danger to eyes (Score:5, Insightful)
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Although our eyes cannot see the IR light it can still pass onto the retina without much trouble.
Anything that's warm gives off IR light. Are you saying in a dark room looking at another person for too long will do damage to your eyes?
This thing gives off IR in a different frequency than the human body of course, but if in general IR light is "dangerous", then we'd all be blind years ago.
Using that thing for an extended period of time would quite probably damage the eyes.
I doubt it. IR is lower in energy/
Re:Danger to eyes (Score:4, Informative)
This thing gives off IR in a different frequency than the human body of course, but if in general IR light is "dangerous", then we'd all be blind years ago.
The near-IR light given off by this type of device has very little to do with thermal IR. It is much closer to visible red light, just a bit lower frequency (a couple of hundred nm or less difference, versus thermal IR being closer to ten times lower frequency).
Human eyes are also opaque to thermal IR, which is related to what the GP was getting at - near-IR is potentially dangerous because your eyes are transparent to it, but your retina has very little sensitivity to it. I doubt the amount of NIR illumination here is very significant, but imagine the equivalent of having a bright flashlight stuck in your face, except without the ability of your pupils to contract in response.
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Slashdotters don't have girlfriends, so there's not much chance of that happening.
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pee wii (Score:1)
Bimble (Score:1)
Possible eye damage (Score:1)
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The goggles they do nothing (Score:5, Funny)
But it occured to me that you could use a penis instead of a finger (giving it another use beside: http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2007/03/21 [penny-arcade.com] )
(Why, oh why this thought came to me...)
safe to use? (Score:2)
http://www.google.com/search?q=infrared+light+damage+eyes
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(Infrared == heat)
This is not quite true. If (infrared == heat) then (visible light == even hotter heat). Every thing emits light. Things at normal environmental temperature (0-100 degC) emit primarily in the long-wave to mid-wave IR (about 10000nm or so). A typical IR LED emits in the near-ir (about 900nm or so) which corresponds to about 1000 degC or so. Red light, which is about 700nm, corresponds to about 3000 degC or so. So saying infrared == heat is very misleading. Caveat: the number are off the top of my head
Isn't this what the MPAA is using now? (Score:2)
The unanswered questions (Score:2)
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Doing the same with a WebCam vs. Wii Remote (Score:1)
This is actually a little closer to how a multi touch "surface" does it.
This would merely require - as many DIY multitouch sites mention - removing the IR filter from your Webcam - and perhaps even replacing it with a visible light filter, as to pass IR only.
hmmmm idea! (Score:1)
Easier just to use two remotes? (Score:2)
Google Earth + Atlas Gloves (Score:1)
Just one thing... (Score:1)