Levitating Haptics Joystick Gives Good Feedback 70
SubComdrTaco writes "A controller developed at Carnegie Mellon University allows computer users to
manipulate three-dimensional images and explore virtual environments not only through sight and sound, but by using their sense of touch. It simulates a hand's responses to touch because it relies on a part that floats in a magnetic field rather than on mechanical linkages and cables, according to Ralph L. Hollis, a Carnegie Mellon professor who developed the controller.
The controller — like a joystick topped with a block that can be grasped — has just one moving part and rests in a bowl-like structure connected to a computer. Two of the controllers can be used simultaneously to pick up and move virtual objects on a monitor.
In a demonstration Tuesday, visitors to Hollis' lab were invited to move an image of a pin across a plate of various textures, causing the controller to bump along ripples, vibrate across fine striations and glide across smooth areas.
On one computer, users could "feel" the contours of a virtual rabbit.
Hollis said his researchers had built 10 of the devices, six of which were to be sent to other universities across the country and in Canada, and that a new company, Butterfly Haptics, would begin marketing the device in June or July.
The controller, which Hollis said will cost "much less" than $50,000, could enable a would-be surgeon to operate on a virtual human organ and sense the texture of tissue or give a designer the feeling of fitting a part into a virtual jet engine, or might also be used to convey the feeling of wind under the wings of unmanned military planes."
that would be cool (Score:1)
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What worries me about this is the reverse of this. If a little wand can resist a 40N force, a miscalculation in the simulation software could presumably easily apply a 40N force to a joint which shouldn't have 40N applied to it...
Especially if the evolution of this device is to make it bigger/more immersive.
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Script kiddie 1: I hax0red your Box and deleted your pronz lol!
Script kiddie 2: Well I hax0red your Box, enjoy your broken arm.
It's somewhat frustrating that a lot of possibly cool consumer goodies are ruined by their potential to kill/injure the user. If only humanity wouldn't inevitably find the way to damage themselves.
When its mainstream ... (Score:1)
Anyways, support for something like this (when it is commercially available) would be very interesting. What happens when it becomes mainstream with the porn industry?
Re:When its mainstream ... (Score:5, Informative)
I had a go, it was pretty cool. He'd just installed Vista on his laptop and the software wouldn't run at full speed any more (surprise!) so he could only demonstrate touching a sphere of material, but it was good. There was a sphere of molasses, which really did feel gooey, and one of ice, which was slippery. There were others, but I didn't try them.
Re:When its mainstream ... (Score:5, Informative)
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A flight simulator requires pressure feedback to be effective. I use Xplane to practice landings, but only to practice getting the numbers right. The actual flair requires some feedback on how hard you're pushing or pulling the yoke. Getting a proper trim in the simulator is nearly impossible, because you don't know how hard you're pulling or pushing to maintain altitude.
A surgeon uses tools for the most part. His work is ex
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X-Rated Headline (Score:5, Funny)
This has got to be the dirtiest headline Slashdot has ever written.
RT X-Rated FA (Score:4, Funny)
Possibly, but they'd have done better to just quote the article:
Somehow, I think this will have porn applications...
Bette-Rated Headline (Score:2)
Did you ever know that you're my hero,
and ev'rything I would like to be?
I can fly higher than an eagle...
'cause you are the wind beneath my wings.
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sounds pretty cool (Score:1)
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Where to start (Score:1)
Are you sure this is real? The list of naughty joke start points is too long: Joystick, Gives Good Feedback, topped with a block that can be grasped, virtual human organ, bump along nipples (OK one that was misspelled).
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Save up to 50% or more! (Score:5, Funny)
Well gee, that provides a lot of information.
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Cheap! (Score:3, Funny)
Now I have hopes of only having to sell my car.
virtual surgery (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's get a bunch of complaints out of the way right now and point out the obvious: that such virtual surgery would only be an educational tool and would, for obvious reasons, be completely unsuitable as a "telecommuting surgeon" solution.
Re:virtual surgery (Score:5, Informative)
Now, no you would never want to use something like this in preference to a live surgeon. However, for remote places like the arctic/antarctic stations and other situations where flying a patient out or a surgeon in for some specific emergency just isn't going to happen, well, it's better than nothing.
75Hz != realtime haptic (Score:2)
The claim [youtube.com] is that the current model can provide 75Hz updates, which isn't high enough for haptics -- 1000Hz [ieee.org] is the standard for a real-time haptic interface.
It sounds promising, though, especially with regards to the stiffness it can produce.
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gamer usage of this inculde (Score:1)
Oh, joy (Score:2)
Virtual Rabbit (Score:2)
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Magnetic feedback idea is cool... (Score:5, Informative)
Some medical device company owns a force-feedback patent and sued or threatened all of the original FF joystick makers in the 90's. The only feedback we have now is vibration, which may be exciting for 51% of the population, but seems kinda lame to me. Oh, and isn't there a patent covering it as well? Lame.
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Huh?!? (Score:1)
Did I misread your statement? I have a force feedback steering wheel sitting in my house using electric motors to provide varying levels of resistance on the wheel. There are dozens of force feedback wheels and joysticks on the market that offer more than just vibration. And who modded this informative?
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The real use (Score:4, Funny)
From the article:
I think we all know that this is a euphemism for pornography
Two words: Missile... (Score:2)
Bunny contours? (Score:5, Funny)
More Haptics (Score:3, Informative)
Also, Immersion technologies make Haptic controllers (BMW contol wheel, XBOX Steering Wheel, Vibration in the PS3 - which, Sony claimed couldn't fit into their controller but it was a patent problem - Immersion sued Sony & won... now the PS3 has vibration). They also make haptic stuff for surgery simulations. Carnegie Melon be jealous...
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See... (Score:1)
Cancer (Score:1)
Re:Cancer (Score:5, Informative)
You know that every time you open your fridge, there's a changing magnetic field beneath your hand.
In broad terms, the only forms of radiation that can cause cancer are ionizing radiation. That means that individual photons can break a bond between two atoms. The reason this can cause cancer is that you can break a bond within a DNA strand which could be repaired incorrectly by the cell in such a way that it looses control over itself.
So starting from lowest energy and going up.
Electric fields and magnetic fields (or RF waves) can't cause cancer.
Infrared waves (heat) can't cause cancer
Microwaves (cellphones) can't cause cancer
Visible light can't cause cancer
Ultra Violet rays are slightly ionizing, and can cause cancer
x-rays and gamma rays can cause cancer
There's an exception to this. If you made a substantial change in an electric or magnetic field in under 10^-16 seconds, then you would emit some UV rays. This isn't something we're capable of doing without some sort of cathode ray tube. (not used in this device)
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The only reported effects of these sorts of fields are at powers much greate
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This is often stated, but really the biological effects of non-ionizing EM radiation remain largely unknown - which is why we still have argument about whether cell phones will give you cancer or not.
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Or, we could blame everything on gravity. The same reasoning can conveniently be extended to any number of imagined causes. ;)
The video is from 1998 (Score:4, Informative)
The linked video [youtube.com] is from 1998.
I've seen several gadgets like this at SIGGRAPH, although not this "maglev" version. There are better haptic input devices, which are more like robot arms in reverse.
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First, although the device is called a 6 degree of freedom joystick, it is much, much more than that. Essentially, its a a set of coils inside a set of rare-earth magnets. The coils are attached to a bowl, called a flotor, which has a handle at its center. Coils in a magnetic field generate a Lorentz force when a current passes through them, levitating the bowl. You've now got a bowl, floating in a large air gap with no physi
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I'll sue ya! (Score:2)
More details about this haptic device (Score:1, Troll)