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Failed Controller-Free Gaming Devices of the Past

adeelarshad82 writes "While Microsoft does get points for innovation, Kinect for Xbox 360 isn't the first attempt to make gaming a hands-free affair. Decades before Microsoft would release its depth-sensing camera system, other companies tried to take the gamepad out of the gaming equation. PlayStation, Dreamcast, NES and Sega have all been there. These attempts varied in usefulness, ranging from somewhat functional to laughable and pointless, and from the forgettable to the downright infamous."

91 of 135 comments (clear)

  1. The real question: by Phopojijo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think the bigger story is that after all these iterations... developers still don't know how to properly use the hardware.

    People envision that Kinect will be used for sign language recognition and creating custom animations/taunts (actually waving bye to that Pyro wanker's head).

    Will we ever see a developer use the hardware? Or will they just use it shallowly and default to what they know for anything of substance?

    1. Re:The real question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      IIRC, the Kinect's depth camera doesn't have enough resolution to distinguish between fingers. Having a better camera would have made the unit too expensive.

    2. Re:The real question: by Anrego · · Score: 5, Interesting

      developers still don't know how to properly use the hardware.

      Indeed!

      This really is the problem. I think this looks like a very interesting and powerful piece of technology.. but if it only ever gets used to make a bunch of wii style "minigames", what's the point!

      There will probably be a whole collection of Kinect minigames which though fun will not provide any real substance, and a handful of "real" games with Kinect support thrown in (but not required) for a little novelty. I'm not holding my breath for any serious titles appearing which really use Kinect to provide fundamental unique gameplay.

    3. Re:The real question: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Until recently, I was working at a company that had come up with a demo of something very interesting to do with the Kinect.

      Of course, when I left, the project had been shelved because no one was willing to put up money for anything interesting. The publishers all wanted a normal game with some kind of Kinect minigame glued on as a bonus. No one wanted to stick their head out and make a game which you could only play if you had a Kinect.

      That's what will kill it. There won't be any game out there that you *have* to buy it for, so most people won't bother to buy one, so the publishers won't back any game that can't be played without one, so no one will buy one...

      It's a pity, because on a big screen this demo changed the way I was thinking in a way that no game has ever done before, and I've been a game dev since the end of the 16-bit days.

    4. Re:The real question: by Psykechan · · Score: 1

      I've been envisioning a variation of standard first/third person shooter game that would be played with the standard controller but have Kinect support for altering the player's view based on their movements.

      Can you imagine leaning to one side to look around a wall? Or ducking to get cover? I think something like this is needed to sell this thing to the gamers. Developers need to accentuate the existing controller interface and not try to replace it with flailing.

      I only hope that Microsoft brought Johnny Chung Lee on board with the intension to do such a project. I'd be disappointed if he was just hired to help with Kinect Adventure or something.

    5. Re:The real question: by antiseptic_poetry · · Score: 1

      So why didn't your company develop the concept a little, and then self-publish under Xbox Live Arcade? If it's that good it still would have sold tons, especially at a $4.99 price-point.

    6. Re:The real question: by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      Dance Central may be that "must have" game.

      Shape may be the "Wii Fit" of Kinect.

      New XBoxes are being sold as either Kinect ready or with Kinect.

      I think it'll do ok.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
    7. Re:The real question: by parlancex · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Correct, which is one of the main reasons I can't see it ever catching on. In order to control anything you're going to have to make huge motions with your entire arms like a god damned gorilla, with all the accuracy and subtlety that entails.

    8. Re:The real question: by JimboFBX · · Score: 1

      Maybe you can explain this to me- but why is dance central a "must have" game? It looks like it does dance moves and then you have to mimic it, but there isn't any feedback as to what you are really doing other than what you are really doing is wrong. Not going into the music taste department of the game, just looking at it's fundamentals.

    9. Re:The real question: by Dr.Boje · · Score: 1

      Yes, since millions of self-proclaimed "hardcore" gamers with an XBox are going to be frothing at the mouth for Dance Central. Give me a fucking break. I bet the thing flops because developers will almost exclusively target the casual audience, which the Wii already has under lock, and the casual audience by definition isn't going to care to replace their casual gaming system with another. Don't get me wrong, I think the technology is interesting (albeit without tactile feedback), but it's clear they are trying to copy-cat Nintendo's motion-gaming success.

    10. Re:The real question: by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      Well, those "millions of self-proclaimed 'hardcore' gamers with an XBox" did seem to spend money on casual games like Guitar Hero and Rock Band, so yeah, I'd say Dance Central could wind up being something pretty big for Kinect.

      I have a Wii, a PS3 and an XBox + Kinect - I don't know if I'm "hardcore" but I will say that there's a rather distinct difference between the Wii and the Kinect, for sure. Heck, the first title for Kinect - Kinect Adventures - already does more than the Wii does: whole body immersion in the game. It may not seem like a big thing, but it is vastly different and way more fun, to me.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
    11. Re:The real question: by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

      Can you imagine leaning to one side to look around a wall? Or ducking to get cover? I think something like this is needed to sell this thing to the gamers. Developers need to accentuate the existing controller interface and not try to replace it with flailing.

      I was thinking if Microsoft would figure out how to not just concentrate on games, they could have a heads-up on the simulation industry. Perhaps a more advanced version able to recognize fingers (it'll cost way more money), but you could do a lot of interesting training with it. Think military - if this thing is capable of recognizing fingers, all of a sudden you could do scenarios where you can communicate with pure hand signals (think aircraft marshalling, communications with team-mates, etc). It could give a whole new meaning to wargame simulation and training.

      Or taken this to the home level - same FPS, but now you can communicate with your AI and other online players with hand gestures rather than pre-canned button pushes.

      And heck, who hasn't done some "body english" when trying to make some particular move? Imagine if Kinect could detect you leaning and maybe do something. (We've all leaned to the right when trying to make a difficult platformer jump across a chasm, for example, or moved the controller up when trying to make a leap up something).

    12. Re:The real question: by Dr.Boje · · Score: 1

      Guitar Hero and Rock Band are vastly different from Dance Central. My guess is strumming or drumming along to a track is much more preferable to a likely out-of-shape hardcore gamer than is copying an on-screen avatar's dance moves without any tactile feedback whatsoever. I still seriously doubt you'll see hardcore gamers picking this up. Maybe the casual crowd will take a liking to it, but as I already said before, that crowd has a Wii and I doubt they'll be shelling out $300 or whatever it is for a 360 and Kinect.

    13. Re:The real question: by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      Anything's possible - personally, I don't really care since I'm having fun with it, and it isn't like they won't make more/better games as people figure out the device :) They're selling enough (Kinetic addons and games) that I'm reasonably sure of this. Add in the ability for indie devs to make stuff soon and I think it'll have a solid library.

      With regard to DC, I didn't find the lack of tactile feedback to be that big a deal - it flashes on the bodypart that is not in the proper spot/beat/synch which has worked for me (went from failing every move to being able to complete them properly about 75% of the time). With my plastic guitars I also get a flash on screen and a sound - it's the same kind of feedback mechanism really, but you're holding something in your hand, vs. just using your body.

      I'm with you on the out-of-shape thing: unlike Wii, where you can kind of just twitch to make larger motions, with Kinect you really need to move to make things happen; I played KA and DC last night for about 3 hours and I was having too much fun to realize just how much of a workout that actually was - really sore this morning.

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
  2. It's that time again, eh? by damn_registrars · · Score: 5, Informative

    Apparently it is time to rip on the Power Glove yet again. As I, unlike some of the people who write negatively about it, actually owned one, I would like to give my piece on the matter. In particular, I would like to point out that indeed there was one good game that worked with a regular controller but worked exceptionally well with the power glove.

    Unfortunately, that game was not Punch-Out (with or without Mike Tyson). Punch-Out was a massive pile of failure to end all massive piles of failure with regards to the power glove. For some reason some idiot programmer thought that a good way to set up the power glove for punch-out was to move your hand forward for a punch, and then backwards for a power punch. Which of course meant your only power punch was gone pretty well immediately and then you were hosed for the rest of the round.

    No, the game that worked well with the power glove (while not being power glove specific) was Top Gun. That game had very sensible controls; move your hand, move the plane. First two fingers are your weapons. You didn't need anything more than that. Unfortunately few people ever used that great combination.

    I suppose it is probably a good thing that some of the MS engineers who worked on Kinect are actually too young to have ever tried to play punch-out with a power glove. Because if they had, they might have started out with the idea that motion control without a controller could never work properly.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:It's that time again, eh? by antifoidulus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Actually I think you hit on the biggest problem with the power glove, very few games were actually designed for the power glove and the creators of the power glove had to assign control schemes to every game. I wonder how long they actually spent testing out each game.

      I think the control scheme for punch out was designed solely as a way to advertise the power glove(I remember the power glove commercial prominently featured Punch-Out). What looks really cool in a 30 second ad obviously may wear thin really quickly.

    2. Re:It's that time again, eh? by hedwards · · Score: 1

      I didn't own a Power Glove, or any NES stuff at the time, but I have a hard time believing that it was possible for it to live up to the hype that came with The Wizard. That scene with Lucas bringing it out and suiting up pretty much killed any chance of it ever living up to the hype.

    3. Re:It's that time again, eh? by Boycott+BMG · · Score: 2, Informative

      I never had a power glove, but the kid across the street did. We tried it when he got it on his birthday. Designing games for the thing would have only solved one problem with the thing. Another major problem with the power glove was the weight. Your right arm got really tired holding the thing all the time in a certain position. It meant you had to limit your gaming sessions to 20 minutes at a time.

    4. Re:It's that time again, eh? by Kenja · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've owned several power gloves, which when combined with the old sega stereo shutter glasses made for a poor mans virtual reality rig.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    5. Re:It's that time again, eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I too owned one. They actually worked pretty good. The problem was I didnt have arms of steel. I could play using one for maybe 20-30 mins tops.

      For those who dont know what I am talking about take your arm hold it out in front of you. Now do that for 20 mins. By the time min 20 rolls around your arm will be in some serious pain.

      Good idea took some tweaking. With the wii they got it right. The control was light and you could hold it anywhere. The glove you had to hold it pretty much 'just right' for it to work and pretty much in front of you.

    6. Re:It's that time again, eh? by EdIII · · Score: 5, Funny

      I never got to own a Power Glove :(

      When I saw the advertisements for it, I went apeshit because of the hype. The only way to describe myself in front of the TV was Wayne from Wayne's World chanting, "it will be mine, oh yes, it will be mine". Kind of an obsession for awhile...

      Which brings me to my other memory of the damned thing. There was a TV show with Kuppa from Super Mario Bros. Can't remember too much about the show, but I do remember a sweepstakes that allowed you to send a postcard to win a Power Glove.

      I ended up sending several hundred postcards into the show and did not win. Of course, I had to take a box of stamps from my father's office that was apparently valued at "severe ass whooping" to do it.

      Good thing I was never disappointed by it I guess.

    7. Re:It's that time again, eh? by davester666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      But he'll be happier once he reaches puberty to have a stronger right hand/arm!

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    8. Re:It's that time again, eh? by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      We used the power glove for Top Gun, but it was still ass as a controller. There was a little bit of gimmick to it, but better results were elsewhere. The better controller for that was the big ass Nintendo joystick.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    9. Re:It's that time again, eh? by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

      Indeed the NES Advantage was the best controller ever made for the 8-bit Nintendo, bar none. I logged many hours playing River City Ransom, Double Dragon, and other classic beat-em-ups on that. The uber-low-tech "slow motion" feature on it was amusing at times, as well - especially if you accidentally hit it on a game that brought up some sort of menu when pressing start...

      --
      Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  3. Mindlink by MrEricSir · · Score: 1

    The first article fails for not mentioning the Atari Mindlink.

    --
    There's no -1 for "I don't get it."
    1. Re:Mindlink by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      um but it does, its 1 of only 2 controller-free controllers on the list (I dont really count the power glove its just, but if you do make that 3)

      TFA is pretty crap, but whoever put up this summary is a tard, TFA has stuff on it not even release yet, so "not from the past" has a jaguar controller so its not "controller-free", and 1 was never released so how could it "fail"

      grumble

    2. Re:Mindlink by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      Ah I see there are 2 articles in this summary, my bad

    3. Re:Mindlink by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The guy behind the Atari Mindlink was a real interesting piece of work. He'd wander the hallways of the building we were in (the consumer folks had been co-located with the Atari Coinop engineering folks) with the band on his forehead, apparently looking for praise and adulation. He was /so/ convinced that royalties on it (even as an individual developer) would make him a millionaire.

      I tried using it once. Could sort of make a paddle go left and right, and I got a headache.

    4. Re:Mindlink by falsified · · Score: 1

      Where'd you get one? It was never released.

      --
      HI, MY NAME IS ISAAC.
    5. Re:Mindlink by socsoc · · Score: 1

      Read the first half of the post.

  4. Power Glove by mister_playboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I love the Power Glove... 'cuz it's so bad.

    --
    Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law ::: Love is the law, love under will
  5. Re:eh? by _xeno_ · · Score: 1

    And where's the innovation in voice commands?

    Theoretically (code word for "I'm not convinced this isn't utter bullshit"), Kinect does quite a bit more than just simple voice recognition. It uses the camera to track the player's mouth, so it knows where it should be listening and can then do spatial noise canceling to listen to just the player's voice.

    This is according to the articles I've read about the Kinect, at least, and I'm not entirely convinced that the authors of the articles actually know how it works and aren't speculating. So... whatever. That's the innovation they're talking about - combining motion tracking with a microphone to get clearer audio without requiring a headset.

    --
    You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
  6. Jaguar controller by slapout · · Score: 1

    I actually found the Jaguar controller to be pretty comfortable.

    --
    Coder's Stone: The programming language quick ref for iPad
    1. Re:Jaguar controller by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      On thing people don't realize, is that the keypad was supposed to be simple to use because you'd place an overlay with icons over it. You wouldn't press button 1, you'd press an icon of a pistol, etc. Not losing the overlay is a different matter all together.

      I really wish the Jaguar did better...

    2. Re:Jaguar controller by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      If it didn't cost a million, billion dollars it might have done. If you didn't need to plug a CDROM into the top when everyone else but Nintendo was going optical... Or of course, if it had more than three good games

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  7. Re:eh? by WrongSizeGlass · · Score: 1

    While Microsoft does get points for innovation, Kinect for Xbox 360 isn't the first attempt to make gaming a hands-free affair.

    And where's the innovation in voice commands? Is it the fact that your XBox won't "set so double the killer delete select all"?

    Player: Kinect, voice command: rm -rf kin*
    Kinect: Kin phone removed from memory ... thank you so much. I feel better already.

  8. Fred Savage by Paradise+Pete · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure one of the kids in that Power Glove commercial is the kid from The Wonder Years.

    1. Re:Fred Savage by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      That was a joke. It was really a full length movie... to advertise Nintendo products. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0098663/

  9. Not controller free by lyinhart · · Score: 1

    Well that article was short, but riddled with inaccuracies. First of all, none of these devices can be described as "controller-free" - there's no such thing. They are simply alternative controllers to your standard joystick/gamepad/buttons/analog stick/lightgun etc controls. You must have a controller (e.g. a means of interaction with the images on screen) in a video game, otherwise it's not a video game. And the end of the article categorizes the U-Force as "hands-free", when it does require using your hands.

    And of course, there's other "alternative controllers" that the article doesn't mention. This includes some of Konami's hardware - like the voice-activated LaserScope for the NES and their motion sensors for games like Police 911 and Mocap Boxing.

    --
    Freedom is drinking a beer in the park when you're supposed to be at work.
    1. Re:Not controller free by volcan0 · · Score: 1

      Police 911: Best arcade game ever. Could play for hours ( or until money ran out ). Damn I miss it.

  10. There's only one way you get me to buy Game Boat by CrazyJim1 · · Score: 1

    And that if they made Knight Boat.

  11. An Impressive Try by Brianech · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Its well known that MS actually bought the tech from an over seas company. Either way though its an impressive piece of machinery for a company first try. I picked one up after reading mixed reviews, and being a guy that must have the latest gadgets I decided not to fight my inner geek. I actually love this thing. My only complaint is the most common. LAG! But what I found was despite the fact you have to adjust to the lag, you do. 10mins after turning it on, I was use to doing everything 1/3 of a second early. I wonder if its a USB limitation, or the lack of an onboard processor. The voice commands actually work well, as Im a person that cant enunciate my R's very well, this was a bit of a surprise. Some complaints about unresponsiveness have gone unnoticed by me. When I do something, even in fast succesion it happens on screen (nothing like making your avatar jerk off). I think Kinect was a good step to controller-less gaming, and albeit not perfect, is definitely fun. I have a Wii that I have only used a few times, a PS3 I love for offline gaming (but no Move) and a 360 now with Kinect. I'll still have to get the Move before I make a verdict. But i enjoy bowling/boxing more on the 360 than on the Wii. Not to mention ping pong is a blast!

    I went 3 days after launch expecting to find a ton of Kinects in store after the mixed reviews, but when I went to futureshop there was only a single unit left. I was shooting the shit with the guy in the game/movie section, and he said demand was far higher than they predicted. Interesting considering the device is far from perfect. In the end though, I have had a ton of fun so far. I just dont know when the novelty will wear off (like it did with the Wii) but this is just my 2 cents on the Kinect after a few days use. I really like it, but time and games will tell if it can be a Wii killer, just like the PS Move also hopes to be. At least sales wise I dont think initially this can be classified a failure, and use wise I also wouldn't call it a failure, just not a complete success. Solve the lag issues, get some longer lasting games, give a better menu system than holding your hand over a button (have you ever tried pausing with Kinect while playing?!?! you have to stand still for like 2 seconds) and extend the Kinect use to incorperate voice commands at all times, and it could be.

    1. Re:An Impressive Try by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

      They bought the camera from overseas but it's not the really innovative part of kinect. That involved a lot of R&D in house.

    2. Re:An Impressive Try by S3D · · Score: 3, Informative

      PrimeSense system had originally had built in depth processing on the chip, and that was planned to be included the project Natal, but at the end MS decided it would be too expensive and moved processing to CPU. Of cause that caused lag. Though I've read in the latest versions they had reduced lag considerably.

    3. Re:An Impressive Try by iserlohn · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's the lag that kills the experience though. Once the novelty wears off, any sort of gaming becomes a drag when there is lag. The used to be a Japanese arcade game like Time Crisis but different in that you had to physically duck to dodge incoming bullets. I played that game once or twice but the lag on it killed the whole experience.

      Think about the Wii. Most of the original Wii sports game made use of the precise timing for controller movements to control the on-screen action. Wii tennis for example is all about the timing of your swing. Latency is the single biggest "hidden" (ie. no visual or auditory) factor that determines gaming experience and any sort of lag will definitely kill it.

    4. Re:An Impressive Try by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Its well known that MS actually bought the tech from an over seas company.

      Yes... and by 'overseas' we mean 'an Asian company'.

      as Im a person that cant enunciate my R's very well, this was a bit of a surprise.

      Umm, ya. Like I said, it's an Asian company so it shouldn't have been a sulplise in the first place.

    5. Re:An Impressive Try by citizenr · · Score: 1

      PrimeSense system had originally had built in depth processing on the chip

      This _IS_ the original reference design, with processing done in asic

      , and that was planned to be included the project Natal, but at the end MS decided it would be too expensive and moved processing to CPU.

      M$ didnt decide shit, they are using reference design, depth map is streamed to the Xbox.

      Of cause that caused lag. Though I've read in the latest versions they had reduced lag considerably.

      So there is Kinect V2.0 somewhere already?

      --
      Who logs in to gdm? Not I, said the duck.
    6. Re:An Impressive Try by angloquebecer · · Score: 1

      Exactly why the Wii is perfect for the casual gamer. They can get into the game without having to learn all the controls. They don't expect to dominate the competition, but just have a little fun.

      There are a few games on the Wii that attract a more hardcore gaming crowd. Mario Kart or Monster Hunter Tri, for example offer motion sensor controls but for the players who take the games beyond casual, they always choose to use a Classic Controller or Gamecube. Some Mario Kart tournaments even prevent the players from using the more classic controllers to make it fair for the Wii Wheel players. The Conduit would've been 10x better if we could just use a regular controller, but like the other games it would make it quite unfair for the motion sensor controller users.

      Are there an abundance of casual games for the 360/PS3? If so, then Microsoft and Sony might be able to convince Grandma to play. Otherwise, the Wii is cheaper and has the reputation of being more family friendly.

    7. Re:An Impressive Try by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

      Hm, maybe I am old and slow, or maybe I'm not having that issue of lag - I haven't really noticed it; it's felt pretty responsive to me. I tried it on both an XBox 360 Elite and on my XBox 360 4GB.

      Dance Central is FUN! I can't dance to save my life, but it's FUN!

      --
      Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
  12. Odama? by jedcred · · Score: 1

    No Odama or EndWar? Odama was a hilarious exercise in controlling armies composed of tiny men getting crushed by a giant pinball/boulder, and it worked acceptably well.

  13. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by Brianech · · Score: 1

    Is it though? both new additions are both coping motion yes, but they both went about it in different ways. Playstation used a similar device to the wii, but added a light and camera to improve accuracy. So it technically should be an improvement over the Wiimote. MS went a different way and purchased a company that dealt with cheap motion detection systems. This made their system controller-less and different. Yes both Sony and MS jumped on movement based gaming, but both used different approaches which could turn out to be better. Both companies are bending to demand so obviously the Wii isn't meeting the expectations of some gamers. Gamers are asking for a new solution, why is that bad? Its like saying Porche copied GM.

  14. Re:eh? by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

    no. the only thing it can do is simple voice recognition. face recognition is completely separate and is used to login different people to xbox live.

    --
    Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
  15. how to rock the powqerglove by Tsiangkun · · Score: 1
  16. Guaranteed clickization by DNS-and-BIND · · Score: 1

    The internet today is primarily composed of top 10 best or top 10 worst lists. They sure make up a lot of content, and I suppose they get a lot of clicks. Heck, they even slipped that iphone pinball advertisement in there without losing their cool.

    --
    Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
    1. Re:Guaranteed clickization by socsoc · · Score: 1

      Your post definitely makes my top 10 worst list. There are plenty of things on the web (that's what you meant, by Internet, right? Cause I don't think port 53 carries many top 10 lists) that are not lists. You're just visiting the places that are crap (and linked to by /.).

  17. Activator by dasherjan · · Score: 1

    I was so happy when I got the Sega Activator for my birthday. That lasted for all of 20 min...and that's including setup time.

  18. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by Osgeld · · Score: 1

    I am not sure there is a demand anymore, everyone that wants a 2005 game console probably already has one, needing more sales they looked at what did out sell them and lately get in on the action

    one major problem though, nintendo, and lets face it, they could give you a turd on a stick and it would sell like hotcakes, infact they DID with the standard wii controls and it sold

    also nintendo historically is a very gimmicky company, they have products that last in sales but only cause of things like color cases, picachu edition, new backlight, 3d, motion controls, and that is fine cause they are sold and marketed as cheap toys, microsoft and sony items are marketed as investments in entertainment, and this latest fad of "me too's" cheapen the product

    sony especially, look at the PSP, there for a while they were introducing new models every freaking year, thats fine for a 99$ gamebox, not so much for a 200$ psp

  19. PowerGlove was good for Garage VR by MauiMaker · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The PowerGlove may have been a failure as a game controller, but it was a boon for those of us trying to create Virtual Reality systems with our home equipment. Rend-386 was the software only rendering engine that let us create a virtual handshake coast to coast with powergloves. 3D Rendering went on a MAJOR growth rate curve in the 90s (doubling every 6-9mo). Unfortunately 3DUI didnt do so well. The professional gloves were better than the P-glove, but still not all that great, even 10yrs later. I've still got my dual-glove PC controller. I just dont have a working 386 computer anymore.

  20. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by KDR_11k · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The Wii also uses a light and camera, the setup is just reversed. The Wii has the camera in the controller and the light in the sensor bar, from what I heard Move lacks accuracy when it comes to pointing (which is mostly rotation) while of course having more when it comes to detecting controller movement (which is mostly translation). Yes, the Move has a gyroscope but that's not nearly as accurate as the sensor bar setup when it comes to determining where the player is pointing since the gyroscope will drift and the camera cannot recalibrate it (since the light is spherical).

    --
    Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  21. Re:Nintendo other controller! by Khyber · · Score: 1

    It's the first freaking image!

    --
    Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
  22. The U-Force worked by drej · · Score: 2, Informative

    TFA (yeah yeah, I know, I wasn't supposed to actually read it) seems more like an advertisement for Kinect to me. I actually owned a U-Force and it worked without a hitch, even the flight-stick accessory. But oh well, guess they were going for that whole "Thanks for liberating us from the oh so sucky past, Microsoft! Now could you pay us?" thing.

    1. Re:The U-Force worked by darthyoshiboy · · Score: 1

      I question if you actually did own a U-Force, as I did and while it could sometimes be said that there was a function being preformed there, "working" would hardly be the word that I would have used to describe that function over 90% of the time.

    2. Re:The U-Force worked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      The U-force had a flight YOKE and the stick part of the yoke was inserted into a hole that did not allow for keeping it centered.

      When the U-force did somewhat work it really only worked when it was flat, and then it was only somewhat usable for playing games such as Super Mario Bros. Also consider that even when playing Super Mario Bros. doing the larger gap jumps that required hold right (so hover the left hand over right sensor on left half of the U-force in a flat position) + speed (B Button, so hover the right hand over B-button sensor on the right half) then press jump (A button, oops it's on the same right half so have to use an arm motion to try to cover both sensors on the right half) that detection was quite imprecise. Either the jump was late or else the speed button got released just at the jump point--both of those resulted in falling in the gap not clearing it.

      The concept was good in theory, but all the motion detection was late due to have to use slower and more gradual motions and often times some of the motions were missed if done too quickly. I gave the U-force several tries, then gave up on it due to motion detection problems and went right back to the standard NES controller.

    3. Re:The U-Force worked by Renraku · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This all seemed like advertising shill to me. It was like.

      "X device sucked, unlike Kinect."
      "Y device sucked, unlike Kinect."
      "Z device sucked, unlike Kinect."

      If they would have put, "unlike Kinect, Wii, or Move." it would have been more neutral.

      --
      Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
  23. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by Brianech · · Score: 1

    Haha yeah I had a first gen PSP and all the later revisions really pissed me off. In the end my netbook replaced it as my cheap travel companion because it wasn't a hassle. It didn't require converting movie formats, it didnt require almost weekly updates (which if you used custom firmware became a chore) and could play better games.

  24. Re:Wrong by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

    >>The rest - skeleton recognition - is not especially hard. And MS doing it not quite well.

    As someone who worked for a company that licensed tech to do this about four years ago, I can assure you that single camera skeleton recognition is not an easy problem in the slightest.

  25. One controller port by tepples · · Score: 1

    Do none of you remember that 3DO is the company that thought in their ultimate wisdom to be the first to have only 1 input-port on the console that extends to a controller and then that controller has a port for anothe controller to extend onto and ad-infinitum?

    Daisy-chaining was by no means exclusive to the 3DO; pre-USB Sidewinder gamepads for PC also used it. But better-engineered platforms used a hub topology:

    • The PC Engine aka TurboGrafx had only 1 controller port, and players had to buy a hub when using multiple gamepads.
    • Before USB, PCs had one "gameport" supporting four analog sticks and four buttons, and PC gamepad makers implemented various implemented proprietary workarounds (such as GrIP's hub and Sidewinder's 3DO style daisy-chain) to add hub support, which each game had to recognize.
    • Laptop PCs for a few years after 1999 had only one USB port because they hadn't yet ditched PS/2 ports or moved the battery slot to the back, and players had to buy a hub for multiple gamepads when using the laptop with an S-Video monitor.
    1. Re:One controller port by tepples · · Score: 1

      The old PC game port actually supported only two joysticks and four buttons.

      Oops, brain fart. I was thinking of the four axes, which were traditionally placed on two sticks, and I got confused.

      I have never seen a laptop with only one USB port.

      Acer TravelMate 721TX, distributed in the third and fourth quarters of 1999 to the Class of 2003 at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.

    2. Re:One controller port by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      The hat used a single axis. 4 distinct values (5 including the centre position), so there was still an axis free.

    3. Re:One controller port by Double+Drop · · Score: 1

      I have never seen a laptop with only one USB port.

      Yup, epic fail here as noted by others. Check out the Dell E4200 which is a *current* model and note the single USB port. Unfortunately I own one of these suckers and it is as insanely annoying as you might imagine: http://www1.euro.dell.com/uk/en/business/Dell-Laptops/laptop_latitude_e4200/pd.aspx?refid=laptop_latitude_e4200&cs=ukbsdt1&s=bsd

      --
      WarGear - Risk Everything
  26. Re:The Powerglove wasn't fail... at least by del_diablo · · Score: 1

    Well, you still fail to adress the issue: Nobody will make games thats innoative and properly uses the controler.
    Look at the Wii: We already got tons of horror eksamples of the motion controls are just being used tagged on as a gimmick, instead of doing it properly. The orginal wiimote is accurate, the only downside is that the interlal sensor is inferior to its wiimotion+ upgrade, but it can still detect which way its being swung or tilted perfectly. The nunchuck does suffer from not getting a upgrade, but play a game where its capabilities is not used for swing it randomly around and attempts to properly use it("Dragon Master Spell Caster", while being one of the worst wiiware games, does use the nunchuck correctly). With the wiimotion+, technically you can start aiming off-screen since the wiimote is with it capable of knowing how its turned in comparision to the tv's position(Red Steel 2, you will actually find this under the option meny somewhere, it will have a sword onscreen, which will point in the same direction as the wiimote, you can turn around and swing it around, and it will still be accurate!
    But do you see good games for it, except a few killer ones? No.
    The same has happened on every other controlers where the controler system can be turned into a gimmick: It does not go anywhere.
    The kinetic will likely suffer from this, and there will barely be anything worth playing on it, except gimmick minigames..........

  27. Hoqe and Chenge by tepples · · Score: 1

    The Odama mic is the GameCube counterpart to the Hey You Pikachu mic, which the article mentioned (if I read the same article you read). But almost everyone in my country forgot about Odama after the 2008 U.S. Presidential election campaign as a side effect of having to keep Obama and Osama straight.

  28. Original Macbook Air by sjbe · · Score: 1

    I have never seen a laptop with only one USB port.

    Allow me to introduce you to the Macbook Air which had only one USB port on the original version.

  29. EyeToy was no failure by FromWithin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From the article: "Sony dabbled twice with console-based webcams over the last two generations, and it only got any success after it introduced the Move."
    From Wikipedia: "As of November 6, 2008, the EyeToy has sold 10.5 million units worldwide.".

    10.5 million sales is most definitely a success by any definition.

    The whole article strikes me as a Kinect advert: "Despite the occasional misinterpreted gesture, Microsoft's Kinect offers impressively immersive game controls and voice commands, all without needing to lay your finger on a single button."

    1. Re:EyeToy was no failure by chrysrobyn · · Score: 1

      From Wikipedia: "As of November 6, 2008, the EyeToy has sold 10.5 million units worldwide.". 10.5 million sales is most definitely a success by any definition.

      Interesting, though, that 10.6 million is a failure by every single measure.

  30. Re:eh? by socsoc · · Score: 1

    ummm.... kin* would be greedy enough to delete kinect too.

  31. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by socsoc · · Score: 1

    So it's okay to constantly refresh models at the $100 price point, but not at the $200?

  32. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by Osgeld · · Score: 1

    its much less of a problem at a lower price point yes, and typically they added value where as sony did not

    for example gameboy vs gameboy pocket vs gameboy color

    or GBA vs GBA SP, vs GBA micro

    what did sony do?

    psp phat to psp slim, made the case cheaper and more apt to break, while only shaving mm off the thickness, and you had to buy new accessories

    psp slim to psp bright, which did add a brighter screen, but at the cost of image quality

    psp bright to psp go, which made it incompatible with everything previous, so not only did you have to buy all new accessories, but your games also

  33. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by socsoc · · Score: 1

    Ya know, to be honest, I don't find any added value between the revisions of either devices that you mentioned. I just think it was bizarre to choose the price point as the straw that broke the camel's back. Breaking the accessory compatibility (of official ones) and games really is fucked.

  34. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by Osgeld · · Score: 1

    well with the gameboys

    pocket halved the battery requirement, had longer play times and a better screen (and I think bigger)

    color gave well color and slightly better battery life

    gba sp added a backlight and better battery life, micro added even more battery life

    the sony revisions actually decreased battery life in the case of the phat vs the slim because they had to use a smaller battery to fit into the thinner more fragile case, the bright reduced it a tiny bit more

  35. Developers Should Heed Messages of Past & Pres by pixelposse · · Score: 1

    I agree that the developers should not let such potentially ground-breaking technology be frittered away with trivial games. Nintendo really broke the mold when they diverted from the typical gamer applications and went after the physical therapy possibilities that presented themselves through the use of the Wii. That choice opened up an entire new world to all of the platforms if they'll simply open their minds to the possibilities. They should put forth the efforts and resources to really perfect what they've got and develop the applications for all of the potential users including the almost limitless uses in the medical/rehab fields. Keith {http://www.theperfectmirror.net}

  36. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by socsoc · · Score: 1

    Thanks... I've used a some sort of newer gameboy once and didn't realize they really changed so much. Just thought it was like new color cases or something.

  37. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by alchemy101 · · Score: 1

    Not true; although the PSP2000/3000 used a smaller battery you got the same amount of game time as the 1000 through some effeciencies gains with the newer hardware components.

    There were also a few trivial additions as well such as inbuilt mike and I believe there was more ram that allowed for better caching of the UMD.

    The way I see the PSP's refresh cycle (with the exception of the PSPGo) is more akin to the GBA > GBA SP > GBA SP (B (The B had a better internal back light)), the 2000 like the GBA SP got rid of some heft, included a few minor features and a better backlight, in turn the 3000 improved on the 2000 slightly by again including a few minor features and a better backlight. The difference between the 2000 and 3000 were minor and was marketed as such, the PSP Go was like the GBA Micro.

  38. Re:Wrong by im_thatoneguy · · Score: 1

    Uhhhhhh no. That is completely backwards.

    Depth sensors are relatively easy to create. Full body motion capture from a 3D shape is very difficult to do.

  39. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by Osgeld · · Score: 1

    Not true; although the PSP2000/3000 used a smaller battery you got the same amount of game time as the 1000 through some effeciencies gains with the newer hardware components.

    not according to my tests, yes close but no not the same, in the red

  40. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by Thelasko · · Score: 1

    The Wii has the camera in the controller and the light in the sensor bar

    I don't think it's so much a camera as a photodiode.

    --
    One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
  41. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

    If you go into the Wii's controller calibration screen, you can see an image of exactly what the wiimote's IR camera sees. The exact technology is irrelevant, it can capture and image therefore it is a camera.

  42. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

    Well, if you can determine the direction of multiple light sources with just a photo diode, sure.

    --
    Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
  43. Re:MS Gets Points for Innovation??? by sznupi · · Score: 1

    It's a low resolution monochromatic camera (looking through filter transparent to IR); it's just that the data output is not as a video stream, but as locations of light sources tracked in its FOV.

    --
    One that hath name thou can not otter
  44. The Future Envisioned by mkw87 · · Score: 1

    When I first read about "Kinect" I immediately jumped forward several iterations. What I expect from gaming hardware is the eventual ability to play a FPS game standing, holding fake guns, pointing them at the screen. We'll probably still need a joystick on the gun to turn completely around, but imagine how much fun this will be? There will be many other uses for the technology, but considering how well FPS games sell, I consider this the ultimate goal. We may even be able to switch from a rifle to a pistol by putting down one controller and picking up another; I'm hoping this is what the future holds.

    --
    Arguing with an engineer is like wrestling a pig in mud. Soon, you realize the pig is dirty, and he likes it.