Die Wiimote zweckentfremdet
Wer haette das gedacht: die Wiimote ist nicht nur zum Zocken gut. Diverse Hacker benutzen sie fuer ihren eigenen Nutzen, so z.B. ein DJ, der mitten auf der Tanzflaeche tanzt, waehrend er mittels Wiimote und per Bluetooth uebertragener Daten die Musik generiert, zu der er tanzt. Wie auch die anderen 5o Disco-Besucher um ihn herum zu dieser Musik tanzen. Lustig [...]
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Magic Wand: How Hackers Make Use Of Their Wii-motes
The $40 Game Controller Hits Balls, Plays Deejay And Regulates a Roomba
By JAMIN BROPHY-WARREN · April 28, 2007; Page A1
A deejay in the Netherlands uses his to mix techno music at dance parties. A medical student in Italy has reprogrammed his to help analyze the results of CT scans. And a Los Angeles software engineer has found a way to get his to help vacuum the floor. The high-tech device in each case: the remote control from a $250 videogame console.
Since Nintendo Co.'s Wii landed in stores in November, it has become one of the game industry's biggest hits, selling more than two million consoles in the U.S. Many stores can't keep the console in stock, and it fetches nearly twice its retail price on eBay. One of the major drivers of the Wii's popularity is its remote control, which fans call the Wii-mote. Unlike past remotes, it is motion sensitive and can detect when a player waves it to one side or tilts it forward or back.
The Wii-mote is becoming a cult object for hackers, with gadget geeks re-engineering the device to do all sorts of things having nothing to do with playing videogames. To repurpose the Wii-mote, they download free software from one of a number of Web sites and then tweak that code to assign a specific command to each movement of the device. In the end, the remote takes the place of a computer mouse or keyboard. Waving the Wii-mote sends a message wirelessly to the computer, which then communicates with whatever object the hacker is trying to control.
Software engineer Chris Hughes has tinkered with almost everything in his Los Angeles home, from adding more storage capacity to his TiVo digital video recorder to changing the combination on the keyless entry to his Ford Explorer. When a friend at a Christmas party suggested he find a way to get his Wii-mote to control his Roomba robot vacuum cleaner, Mr. Hughes worked through the night tailoring the software code.
He sent a video of the results to his girlfriend and posted a demonstration on YouTube. It shows the sleepy Mr. Hughes tilting his white remote up and down to make the Roomba go back and forth, and then turning it over to get the vacuum cleaner to spin circles in his living room. "Normally my eyes just glaze over when he talks about technical stuff," says his girlfriend, Erin Bradford. "But he was so pleased with himself." She's hoping the invention means the house will now stay cleaner.
The standard videogame remote, little changed in two decades, consists of a joystick or game pad that controls a character's movements, and buttons to trigger different actions, like shooting a gun. The Wii-mote, which is about the size of a large candy bar, relies on some different technologies. It communicates with the on-screen cursor, for example, via an infrared beam. But what has most captivated hackers is a mechanism inside the Wii-mote called an accelerometer that can detect its speed and direction of motion. It is the accelerometer, made by Analog Devices Inc., in Norwood, Mass., that allows Wii players to use their remotes to act out whatever game they're playing, whether it's casting with a fishing rod or swinging a tennis racket.
Tim Groeneboom, who lives in the Netherlands, uses his Wii-mote to spice up his deejay act. He was inspired by a video on the Web of a California music student bobbing in front of the computer in his room and making jabbing motions with the Wii-mote to splice different tracks. During his second gig with the Wii-mote, Mr. Groeneboom, 22, says he was able to roam up to about 100 feet from his deejay booth and still be able to control how the music blended and do some sound effects. At one point, he danced into a circle of revelers clutching his Wii-mote.
Aaron Rasmussen has a sporting purpose for his Wii-mote. At his Garden Grove, Calif. software company, USMechatronics, he and his partner stuck a tennis racket in the "hand" of a $40,000 industrial robot and then tweaked the Wii-mote to control the robot's arm so it can hit back tennis balls on the factory floor. "This is what we do to relax," he says.
Some people are using their remotes to play Laser Tag -- where players shoot one another with infrared light beams -- while others are using them to strum a virtual guitar. Several Web sites, like Wiihacks.blogspot.com and WiiLi.org, have sprouted up for hackers to trade tips on repurposing Wii-motes. Because Nintendo sells the Wii-mote separately for $40, hackers don't even need to buy the console.
Nintendo says it is surprised by efforts to reprogram the Wii-mote and discourages the practice. "The Wii Remote was created to play on the Wii system only," says Anka Dolecki, spokeswoman for Nintendo.
But all the interest in the Wii-mote could have an upside for the company. The dozens of free games on the Web that incorporate the Wii-mote have helped add to the buzz surrounding the console.
Much of the Wii-mote hacking is by music aficionados. Bob Somers, a second-year student at California Polytechnic State University, has figured out a way to play his virtual drum set with the Wii-mote. He waves the remote while holding down one of the buttons on the device to produce a drum sound. To get a bass kick, he holds down the "B" button while flicking his wrist; for the snare drum, he makes the same movement but holds down the "A" button. Paul Henry Smith, 43, has even bigger ambitions. A formally trained conductor in Hamden, Conn., Mr. Smith wants to lead a handful of classical musicians through a Beethoven symphony. The musicians would use Wii-motes to control a digital version of a section of the orchestra.
Some companies see possible business applications with the Wii-mote. Rick Bullotta, vice-president of SAP Research, an arm of the German software giant SAP AG, is looking at ways to integrate the Wii-mote into their clients' manufacturing operations. He envisions factory and warehouse employees walking through facilities pointing and waving Wii-motes to monitor and control machines. "It's the first time we've used a videogame controller for R&D," he says.
Write to Jamin Brophy-Warren at Jamin.Brophy-Warren@wsj.com
>> # top # | Q: The Wall Street Journal Online.com
(show me)(don't show me)
<<
Magic Wand: How Hackers Make Use Of Their Wii-motes
The $40 Game Controller Hits Balls, Plays Deejay And Regulates a Roomba
By JAMIN BROPHY-WARREN · April 28, 2007; Page A1
A deejay in the Netherlands uses his to mix techno music at dance parties. A medical student in Italy has reprogrammed his to help analyze the results of CT scans. And a Los Angeles software engineer has found a way to get his to help vacuum the floor. The high-tech device in each case: the remote control from a $250 videogame console.
Since Nintendo Co.'s Wii landed in stores in November, it has become one of the game industry's biggest hits, selling more than two million consoles in the U.S. Many stores can't keep the console in stock, and it fetches nearly twice its retail price on eBay. One of the major drivers of the Wii's popularity is its remote control, which fans call the Wii-mote. Unlike past remotes, it is motion sensitive and can detect when a player waves it to one side or tilts it forward or back.
The Wii-mote is becoming a cult object for hackers, with gadget geeks re-engineering the device to do all sorts of things having nothing to do with playing videogames. To repurpose the Wii-mote, they download free software from one of a number of Web sites and then tweak that code to assign a specific command to each movement of the device. In the end, the remote takes the place of a computer mouse or keyboard. Waving the Wii-mote sends a message wirelessly to the computer, which then communicates with whatever object the hacker is trying to control.
Software engineer Chris Hughes has tinkered with almost everything in his Los Angeles home, from adding more storage capacity to his TiVo digital video recorder to changing the combination on the keyless entry to his Ford Explorer. When a friend at a Christmas party suggested he find a way to get his Wii-mote to control his Roomba robot vacuum cleaner, Mr. Hughes worked through the night tailoring the software code.
He sent a video of the results to his girlfriend and posted a demonstration on YouTube. It shows the sleepy Mr. Hughes tilting his white remote up and down to make the Roomba go back and forth, and then turning it over to get the vacuum cleaner to spin circles in his living room. "Normally my eyes just glaze over when he talks about technical stuff," says his girlfriend, Erin Bradford. "But he was so pleased with himself." She's hoping the invention means the house will now stay cleaner.
The standard videogame remote, little changed in two decades, consists of a joystick or game pad that controls a character's movements, and buttons to trigger different actions, like shooting a gun. The Wii-mote, which is about the size of a large candy bar, relies on some different technologies. It communicates with the on-screen cursor, for example, via an infrared beam. But what has most captivated hackers is a mechanism inside the Wii-mote called an accelerometer that can detect its speed and direction of motion. It is the accelerometer, made by Analog Devices Inc., in Norwood, Mass., that allows Wii players to use their remotes to act out whatever game they're playing, whether it's casting with a fishing rod or swinging a tennis racket.
Tim Groeneboom, who lives in the Netherlands, uses his Wii-mote to spice up his deejay act. He was inspired by a video on the Web of a California music student bobbing in front of the computer in his room and making jabbing motions with the Wii-mote to splice different tracks. During his second gig with the Wii-mote, Mr. Groeneboom, 22, says he was able to roam up to about 100 feet from his deejay booth and still be able to control how the music blended and do some sound effects. At one point, he danced into a circle of revelers clutching his Wii-mote.
Aaron Rasmussen has a sporting purpose for his Wii-mote. At his Garden Grove, Calif. software company, USMechatronics, he and his partner stuck a tennis racket in the "hand" of a $40,000 industrial robot and then tweaked the Wii-mote to control the robot's arm so it can hit back tennis balls on the factory floor. "This is what we do to relax," he says.
Some people are using their remotes to play Laser Tag -- where players shoot one another with infrared light beams -- while others are using them to strum a virtual guitar. Several Web sites, like Wiihacks.blogspot.com and WiiLi.org, have sprouted up for hackers to trade tips on repurposing Wii-motes. Because Nintendo sells the Wii-mote separately for $40, hackers don't even need to buy the console.
Nintendo says it is surprised by efforts to reprogram the Wii-mote and discourages the practice. "The Wii Remote was created to play on the Wii system only," says Anka Dolecki, spokeswoman for Nintendo.
But all the interest in the Wii-mote could have an upside for the company. The dozens of free games on the Web that incorporate the Wii-mote have helped add to the buzz surrounding the console.
Much of the Wii-mote hacking is by music aficionados. Bob Somers, a second-year student at California Polytechnic State University, has figured out a way to play his virtual drum set with the Wii-mote. He waves the remote while holding down one of the buttons on the device to produce a drum sound. To get a bass kick, he holds down the "B" button while flicking his wrist; for the snare drum, he makes the same movement but holds down the "A" button. Paul Henry Smith, 43, has even bigger ambitions. A formally trained conductor in Hamden, Conn., Mr. Smith wants to lead a handful of classical musicians through a Beethoven symphony. The musicians would use Wii-motes to control a digital version of a section of the orchestra.
Some companies see possible business applications with the Wii-mote. Rick Bullotta, vice-president of SAP Research, an arm of the German software giant SAP AG, is looking at ways to integrate the Wii-mote into their clients' manufacturing operations. He envisions factory and warehouse employees walking through facilities pointing and waving Wii-motes to monitor and control machines. "It's the first time we've used a videogame controller for R&D," he says.
Write to Jamin Brophy-Warren at Jamin.Brophy-Warren@wsj.com
>> # top # | Q: The Wall Street Journal Online.com
Labels: videogame news
posted by Woodrow at 5/04/2007 06:39:00 AM
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