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The Mechanics of Motion Sensing

Dr. Eggman writes, "The AP has a short technology piece on the mechanics that go into the motion-sensing capabilities of the Wii and PS3 controllers. It also details some of the past uses of the technology and gives a nice overview of just how far the technology has come from the earliest missile-guidance sensor equipment."

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  1. Who was first? by Glacial+Wanderer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Nintendo Wii Remote one-ups the Sony controller by including an infrared camera.

    I think they meant to say: The Sony controller dumbed down the Wii Remote by excluding the infrared camera.

  2. Re:Interesting. by fatphil · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Should - and do. One of Freescale Semiconductor's clients' more popular uses for accelerometers is in industrial applications -- BIG kit -- on things that vibrate constantly. Things that vibrate more and more as bearings dry or wear (hence the need for the accelerometer - so you can perform detect this and perform maintenance before your printing press, or whatever, self-destructs). The accelerometers outlive any of the parts they are supposed to look after.

    Freescale has some pretty cool electonmicrographs of their 2-axis and 3-axis accelerometers - www.freescale.com, sensors, accelerometers, and browse around - I can't actually find the images now. I have a PPT on my work laptop, but that's no use. Grab a ZSTAR for <$50, and simply have a play with one yourself - (that includes everything - hardware and development kit).

    --
    Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863