Motion Controlled Smartphone Previewed
BoB writes "The folks at MobileBurn have had a chance to play in detail with a new motion controlled smartphone prototype by MyOrigo, called 'mydevice'. Surprisingly, it actually works quite well, and the writer claims it's fun to use, too. Is this the start of a whole range of motion controlled devices?" We covered a previous showing of MyOrigo's device a few months back.
Am getting some weirdo JSP errors.
But here's the Google cache to the rescue.
So not only do people see me "talking to myself" (earpiece) but also me jerking my phone rapidly and waving my arms.
I just need a 3 way call with 2 shrinks to be given one of those nifty white jackets with the long sleeves.
"I'm not crazy. . . Yes I am. . . Shut up, all of you."
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Also, no mention of outdoor screen brightness/contrast that I could find. That could be a killer with no real buttons.
Next came handsfree with autoanswering. It scared the crap out of me when the guy in front of me in line, sorta-kinda looking in my direction, would all of a sudden say, "Hello? Hi! How's it going?"
Now people will think you're epiletic or something when they see you waving a phone about crazily. Reading email isn't that bad, but what happens when you install Pacman?
Although maybe it would be good exercise against carpals....
Buses stop at a bus station
Trains stop at a train station
On my desk there's a workstation....
RTFA. There is a button you have to "lightly touch" before the scrolling works, so no accidental scrolling because of random movements.
I do however wonder how controlable the scrolling would be in the situations you mention.
siener's youtube channel
"Can I use your my device, please ?"
With that aggravating beauty, Lulu Walls.
First impressions:
- There's a technical term for people shaking their things in public. I believe the term is "w*nker" or "exhibitionist"
- Cellphone etiquette has improved a bit at last, and we have grown used to people talking to themselves in public. With this innovation, we can expect guys in suits doing a weird St-Vitus-SHake-that-funky-booty-type dance in restaurants, airports, streets.
- Looking at the problems my father used to have with his self-winding mechanical watch - i.e. Look, shake, hold to ear to see if its ticking, shake swear, hold to ear again, twiddle knob, shake, swear, swear - and this was in a time when people were still able to build GOOD mechanical devices, I cant see this thing lasting very long before it goes on the blink.
"If you wish to speak to an operator, put your hands on your hips, and stick your knees insiiiiiiide"
Not confused enough? http://translate.google.com/translate?u=www.slashdot.jp&hl=en&ie=UTF8&sl=ja&tl=en
When Compaq (RIP) were developing the iPAQ they looked at using a similar method of navigation. I remember reading an article in Linux Journal(?) about playing Doom under Linux controlled by shaking the pda around.
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This sig is inoffensive.
I did RTFA. That's how I know they talk about motion control and mirroring. But UI design that fails to take into account how we use devices - and I'm not stretching anyone's imagination by suggesting that mobile phones are primarily used by people on the move - is bad UI.
If these features prove unusable to anyone moving at average walking speed or higher, then what yse are they? (NB. I'm not saying that is the case, only asking what use they are if it is so.)
"Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
Mirror One - http://spark.ath.cx/mirror/
Mirror Two - http://decompile.us/mirror/
Speaking at Defcon 12 - Credit Card Networks Revisted: Pen
That "motion control" feature seems quite cool (i RTFA'd)... I can see a lot of games that could make use of this feature.
:( ), myOrigo could have a point there (licence technology to Nokia nGage?)
;)
First example that comes to mind: these little car racing games you find on lots of mobile phones now (or on the GBA, colinMc Rae Rally & such...). One could use the phone itself as a car wheel, tilt it left to turn left, tilt it right to turn right, pull it towards you to brake, push it away from you to accelerate... (Would be cool for flight sims too)
The phone could even "counter-rotate" the image to compensate for the tilting: picture still upright even when you've tilted the device 90 degrees to make a turn. (I'm not sure if I'm being clear enough on this point)
You could also make a simulation of these wood & plastic games, where you had to navigate a metallic ball through a maze, by just tilting the device...
Since games are apparently becoming the next big thing for mobile phones (that, and polyphonic ringtones
Remember in 5 years, when myorigo will have outplaced Nintendo & Sony thanks to these features: you heard it here first!
Hello! I'm a disaster waiting to happen!
Of course, to access your speed dial you just use the "special code" - Up, Up, Down, Down, Left, Right, Left, Right.
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This will add a whole new dimension to "phone sex".
Up, Up, Down, Down, Left, Right, Left, Right, B, A, START
So...if you shake it more than three times, does that mean you're playing with it?
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?