Slashdot Mirror


Google Patents Motorized, Omnidirectional VR Sneakers (arstechnica.com)

Google has patented motorized, omnidirectional virtual-reality sneakers that may solve the "limited space" problem associated with the interactive computer-generated experience. Ars Technica reports: Google's patent describes what are essentially motorized VR roller skates that will let the user walk normally while the motors and wheels work to negate your natural locomotion and keep you inside the VR safe zone. As the patent puts it, Google's new kicks will let you walk "seemingly endlessly in the virtual environment" while keeping you in one spot in real life. Google's shoe solution would track the user's feet, just like how VR controllers are tracked today. The tracking would know when you're too close to the virtual walls of your VR area, and the system would wheel you back into place.

Patents are always written to give the broadest possible coverage of an idea, but Google's patent shows normal wheels, tracks, and even omnidirectional mecanum wheels as possible wheels for the VR shoe bottoms. Omnidirectional wheels would be great, as they would allow you to do things like sidestep, while still having your position corrected by the shoes.

1 of 60 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Are they on balls? by Luckyo · · Score: 4, Informative

    Even if they were like you describe, it would not address the correct problem pointed out in the GP post. Inner ear tracks acceleration, and when its tracking becomes inconsistent with what you're observing with your eyes, automated systems in your body make an assumption that you ingested some kind of psychoactive substance that is affecting your cognitive abilities and immediately act to evacuate the stomach to reduce additional substance absorption and have you lie down so it can maximize amount of resources needed to counteract the effects.