Motion Controlled Smartphone Previewed 95
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.
About the name (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:About the name (Score:1)
Re:About the name (Score:1)
But "origo" is not a swedish word at all.
Re:About the name (Score:2)
If not, either the reviewer got it backwards, or this device is backwards in the "page" mode:
Finally, we have the "My Book" system, which is basically a way of presenting information in a book style fo
Re:About the name (Score:1, Informative)
Re:About the name (Score:2)
Yes, but it's used in Swedish, dumbass.
Slashdotted? (Score:5, Informative)
But here's the Google cache to the rescue [216.239.41.104].
On the move? (Score:2, Interesting)
I can imagine how annoying it would be to have web pages scroll when you don't want them to scroll just because you were walking too quickly or the car or train you were travelling in provided a less than perfect ride.
Frankly, it seems like a big gimmick to me. UI that doesn't take into account practicality - UI for UI's sake - is doomed to failure.
Re:On the move? (Score:5, Informative)
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.
Re:On the move? (Score:1)
Re:On the move? (Score:5, Insightful)
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.)
Re:On the move? (Score:2)
If you surf the web while walking at normal speeds or faster, remind me to put a bunch of crap in your way and bring a video camera so I can capture the hilarity that ensues.
Re:On the move? (Score:3, Informative)
It seems to be a quite interesting device... But they say it's "slightly bigger than the P800", so that's a no-no for me
Re:On the move? (Score:2, Interesting)
Frankly, it seems like a big gimmick to me. UI that doesn't take into account practicality
I tend to aggree with you.
This phone got a good asskissing evaluation, but looks like it was tested in an office environment, not the natural habitat of a mobile, or cellular devices.
Possibly this technology is suited more for a desktop PC, or other non-critical motionless devices.
I also think this would be difficult to sell to our button-mad consumers, who are the reason for UI anyway.
I won't be buying one unti
great . . . (Score:5, Funny)
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."
Bigger than the P800 (Score:3, Insightful)
Also, no mention of outdoor screen brightness/contrast that I could find. That could be a killer with no real buttons.
Re:Bigger than the P800 (Score:2)
Another reason for people to think you're crazy.. (Score:5, Funny)
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....
Re:Another reason for people to think you're crazy (Score:1)
Stupid name ... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Stupid name ... (Score:5, Funny)
It's as if some years ago, some marketroid deep in the basements of Redmond once wanted to leave a bit earlier than normal on a friday afternoon:
Engineer: "Hey marketing dude, what shall we call this new thing we've got here?"
Marketing Dude: "Aw hell I dunno, let's just call it 'MyThing'".
Then, incredibly, other marketroids the world over simply gave in and got assimilated:
Marketroid1: "Well that's it then, Microsoft have come up with the ultimate naming scheme, might as well take our stock options and retire now."
Marketroid2: "Hey wait a moment, they can't trademark just the 'My' part of it right? So we can call our other thing that we make 'MyOtherThing', yay!"
Marketroids the world over rejoiced, and never did any work again, even though they were getting paid even more than before because they were coming up with names as good as Microsoft's.
Unfortunately, the rest of us got stuck with the stupid friggin' Mythis, Mythat, Mykitchensink, ad infinitum.
And as for having 'my' in *both* the product and company name, all I can say is: "My, oh my, oh my!!!"
Playing in public (Score:4, Funny)
- 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"
Re:Playing in public (Score:1)
Re:Playing in public (Score:2, Insightful)
iPAQ (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:iPAQ (Score:3, Informative)
Re:iPAQ (Score:3, Informative)
There's a library for the dongle, a hack to 'map' tilt motions to the hard scroll keys, and a pretty cool game called Mulg [harbaum.org] (which works even without the sensor).
Re:iPAQ (Score:2, Insightful)
Mirror (Score:3, Informative)
Mirror One - http://spark.ath.cx/mirror/ [spark.ath.cx]
Mirror Two - http://decompile.us/mirror/ [decompile.us]
Injurious? (Score:1)
Jokes aside (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Jokes aside (Score:2)
Software wise, hooking in those controls, can be difficult (maybe?).
Re:Jokes aside (Score:2)
No more broken keys!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
I've now had 2 or 3 relatively expensive mobiles and every single one has at some stage or other had problems with the keypad - it's gutting to have a nice swanky phone but still take 5 minutes to do the most simple tasks.
Motion control = games !! ;) (Score:5, Interesting)
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!
Re:Motion control = games !! ;) (Score:2)
My little brother has a GBA Special Edition, this little thingy is amazing... I had never gone beyond the original Game Boy, so when I
saw him play Colin Mc Rae Rally in full 3D, I couldn't believe it at first
But Nokia has something the others don't: they understand the economics of the mobile phone industry, and maybe with version 2.0 of the NGage they will also have been able to take into account the gripes of the gamers... Wait and see...
I
Re:Motion control = games !! ;) (Score:2)
Re:Motion control = games !! ;) (Score:2)
No, that was my second paragraph: while you are tilting the device, say, 45 degrees left, the *image* on the screen "counterrotates" 45 degrees right, so you still see it upright/horizontal without tilting your head... (granted that would require quite a lot of processing / battery)I'd like to make a sketch but I only have MS Paint, soo...
And if I want a ball maze, I can buy one for a few pence!
Yeah, but you don't get the 99 levels + the hidden bonuses
Re:Motion control = games !! ;) (Score:2)
So the screen has to shrink at one end and grow at the otehr end to emulate perspective? That still means that the alreayd small picture gets even smaller.
What you would really need in this case is for the screen to be mounted on some sort of frame so that the device moves around it but th
Re:Motion control = games !! ;) (Score:2, Insightful)
Contra Ref (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Contra Ref (Score:2)
Re:Contra Ref (Score:2)
U D U D L R L R B A
u d u d l r l r b a
It's-a-me, Mario! Or Kirby. (Score:2)
play in detail? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:play in detail? (Score:1)
Can't resist saying it... (Score:5, Funny)
Old joke revisited? (Score:4, Funny)
What OS? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:What OS? (Score:1)
Re:What OS? (Score:1)
here's all the specs [mobileburn.com]
Already got one. (Score:1)
Also, I can throw my phone at the wall when I'm getting bad reception. I've been told that this does not improve functionality of the phone, but it sure makes me feel better.
Do the Mobile (Score:1)
"Do the Mobile"
"Tilt" didn't catch on for monitors, did it? (Score:2)
Anyway,
It would be nice (Score:1)
This would probably prevent some traffic accidents, not shure if anyone who normally talk and drive would buy one.
Tilting pie menus rock! (Score:3, Informative)
Pie menus [piemenu.com] are a naturally efficient way to operate a tilt-sensitive user interface. Scrolling up and down through one-dimensional linear menus with a device that can tilt in any directions is a waste of the device's potential.
Here's a cool research paper from Sony's Computer Science Labs, about "tilting pie menus". I love it! I can't wait till all cell phones can sense tilt. Tilt control rocks!
Tilting Operations for Small Screen Computers [sony.co.jp]
By Jun Rekimoto [sony.co.jp], Sony Computer Science Laboratory, Inc.
More details: Tilting Operations for Small Screen Interfaces (Tech Note) [sony.co.jp]
HTML version from Google [216.239.53.104]
-Don