|
This technology looks like it works very well. I have seen lots of 2 LED motion sense units but the third LED seems to add lots to the capability. Now if only someone came up with an open source version of it since the prices seem a bit high. "As you move in your chair and rotate your head small amounts : your game-view will precisely correspond. You never have to look away from the monitor because all aspects of your motion are amplified and adjustable. There are only 6 ways you can move around in 3D space. There are 3 ways to lean, and 3 ways to rotate. The technical term for all of these movements is "6 Degrees of Freedom" (or "6DOF"). True 6DOF support is one of the main things that puts TrackIR well ahead of any other input device."
|
July 22nd, 2008
They do have a free / open source version called FreeTrack. It uses 2+ LED’s for up to 6 DOF. It just requires a web cam and your IR LED’s.
http://www.free-track.net/english/
July 22nd, 2008
Cool. Love the idea. I hate to deride a good product with this side-note, but I have no choice.
Did anyone catch that “we have patented math” part? It is infuriating that the whole reason that patenting software was not possible until recently was because you explicitly cannot patent absolute facts like math. And that software is simply applied math. Of course the patent lawyers got involved and made it possible to patent the application of the math and thus patent software. But this man gives us the perfect reason as to why software patents are a bad idea. You cannot get a patent for a math problem. You can as always copyright it. Sorry for the sidetrack. Good product. Would love one for myself. I think I’ll try the non-patented math open source version.
July 22nd, 2008
i have 5x better idea i just need help
who lives in new york cite and has good knowledge building gadgets for computers plese contact me
yahoo
m_ghv_geo@yahoo.com
skype
m_ghv_geo