Razer Hydra Brings Motion Control To PC Gamers 111
Zothecula writes "While motion controllers are becoming a staple for console gamers with the release of the Wii, PlayStation Move and Microsoft Kinect, PC gamers have been left wanting. Razer is looking to change that with its Hydra motion controller which has been developed specifically for PC gamers. Unlike console-based motion control systems, the Hydra uses magnetic tracking technology by way of a base station that emits a magnetic field that Razer says allows the exact location and orientation of the handheld controllers to be detected with millimeter accuracy."
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Apparently you think the stone age was more efficient than the modern.
The mouse is still the most efficient pointing device for day to day use.
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The mouse cannot replace the Wii-mote.
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Yes, it is. Right now. The horse was also the most efficient method of travel for thousands of years and the blade the most efficient weapon.
This hasn't been in development nearly so long as the aeroplane or machine gun. Heck, computers haven't even. Give it a chance before you brush it off as a dead end.
Suspicious of Razer (Score:2)
Seriously though, If you want to stay in the stone age and use a mouse for the rest of your life, don't hold the rest of us back.
Problem with Razer is they cash in on making things look futuristic. This may be a great new technology, I am no expert. What I do know is that Razer has a nasty habit of covering something with fancy looking LED's and then tripling its price.
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Problem with Razer is they cash in on making things look futuristic. This may be a great new technology, I am no expert. What I do know is that Razer has a nasty habit of covering something with fancy looking LED's and then tripling its price.
Nerds, like moths, are irresistibly drawn towards shiny things. I'm just making up percentages here, but I'm guessing a good 90% of consumer products that fail do so because they're not shiny enough, and they don't have enough color-changing LEDs.
- iPod? Shiny, check. Success.
- Zune? Shit brown, dull. Failure.
- Apple Newton? Dull gray. Failure.
- iPad? Shiny! Success.
- Microsoft Sidewinder mouse? Dull, no lights. Failure.
- Razer Boomslang? Shiny! Has bright light. Success.
FYI - that w
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Why not? RAM not. (Score:2)
I'd have bought a Wii (and installed Linux on it, because why not).
Why not? Not everybody was born in a country where homebrew is legal. And once Nintendo introduces Wii Menu 5, not everybody's housemates know not to install Wii system software updates until after the HackMii Installer update.
That and Skidborg is right that even an ION nettop beats the Wii console. I'm not entirely sure about Atom vs. an 0.73 GHz PowerPC G3, but I believe the GeForce 9400M beats a Radeon-9000-class GPU on the "Hollywood" northbridge. And PCs have an order of magnitude more RAM than the
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As a former game developer I think 60% is way too high for a single core atom, perhaps 20%. The CPU from the GameCube was my favorite to program. Very fast RAM (used MoSys 1T SRAM) where the delays going through the cache actually hurt the performance. If the data was already in the cache it was faster but the ram had about 8 cycles delay before data came out. There also are special instructions for doing fixed/float conversions that are essentially free. The GC was the best console of the generation
Old school (Score:4, Interesting)
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[...]so the games aren't a "One-play-per-copy" game.
To me, that sounds like a Publisher's wet dream... They'd just need to come up with the marketing to "justify" it, I'm certain the gaming community would swallow it whole.
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3d headset for under $1,000. [i-glassesstore.com]
Add some LEDS and the Wii controller will be able to do 3d tracking, or just throw a couple accelerometers on it.
Quake is open source, just code in to render two scenes from two different POVs and put them together into some acceptable 3d format.
Voila, quake in fully immersive 3d. Personally I'd like to add separate aiming and viewing so I don't always have to shoot in the center. This is only necessary if you are holding a gun that's being tracked as well.
Pass (Score:4, Insightful)
While motion controllers are becoming a staple for console gamers with the release of the Wii, PlayStation Move and Microsoft Kinect, PC gamers have been left wanting.
No, not really.
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Indeed. The only thing I sometimes miss is vibration from controllers, but I trade it gladly to use a mouse.
Have a +1 and a nice day.
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I had one of these circa 2002.
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Indeed. The only thing I sometimes miss is vibration from controllers, but I trade it gladly to use a mouse.
Have a +1 and a nice day.
Heh. Try playing more than just shooters.
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Strategy games? Trying playing Starcraft with a motion controller.
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How, exactly, does one play an RTS with a controller? I can't even begin to imagine it.
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There have been numerous RTS's that work just fine with controllers. "Halo Wars" was a particularly successful example. PC snobs who say you "can't play such-and-such type game with a controller" remind me of my roommate who used to say that consoles would never have a decent FPS because no controller could be possibly ever handle one. Then Halo, Gears of War, Bioshock, et. al. came out and he had to eat his words. Today he's probably saying the same thing about MMO's, even as DC Universe Online is starting
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Yeah the last thing my gaming PC needs is fucking motion control. It's bad enough that an Xbox 360 controller is basically required to play today's shitty console ports, but at least I can sit down and play with that.
Doesn't Razer get that a PC is supposed to be the anti-console?
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PC isn't supposed to be anything, especially nothing defined by consoles.
Computers are versatile and are hundreds of things depending on the user, the software and the hardware. They are not the "anti-console", and console-like gaming fits the PC just as well as indie games, boring shooters and office tools.
Don't define yourself by what you're not. And more importantly, don't use that to define others.
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The reason a lot of PC gamers hate consoles is straight up because of the thumbstick. This thing has thumbsticks but obviously the motion controls will be the primary pointing device.
There are plenty of things this COULD be great for if it's as accurate as they say. The problem is simply whether or not they can get enough game support. Going by past products I'm going to guess no.
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yeah.. we already tried motion control sidewinders, headtracking mouses.. touchscreen hacks for sniping and all that were common ages ago.
fact of the matter is that it sucks for long term playing. it's only good if the user will use the application/game for a total of 1 minute, eliminating learning curve. also minority report style ui's really suck and have been tried for years and years. i don't want to be a conductor in a shitty band.
millimeter accuracy (Score:2)
Not from a magnetic field from any reasonable distance, not by itself, liars.
You need a whole slew of additional sensors to even get close to such accuracies.
Re:millimeter accuracy (Score:4, Funny)
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...Why is this modded informative? I didn't even read the article.
What is wrong with you?
It can be done with only magnetic fields (Score:2)
Yes, you can do 6 DOF, with only magnetic fields, with sub-mm precision. Ascension and Polhemus are two companies that sell such products.
Look at the stats for Polhemus' Patriot. About 0.01 mm resolution at 1 foot. That beats your "liars" stat by about two orders of magnitude.
http://www.polhemus.com/?page=Motion_Patriot [polhemus.com]
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I said reasonable distance.
For me, that's just over 10 feet away, like I sit right now from my monitor.
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I said reasonable distance.
For me, that's just over 10 feet away, like I sit right now from my monitor.
I doubt that many people sit that far away, and I doubt that many people would find that "reasonable" because that fact. Right now I'm about 3 feet from my 24" display, when I'm typing I'm less, when I'm watching a movie I'm a bit farther. But I'm never 10' (in my den its only 10' from my monitor to the back wall). Sure, on my HTPC I sit back a bit (as far as 7'-8'), but I don't think a television is considered a monitor, even when connected to a PC.
To me a reasonable distance would 3'-4'. For a console
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Re:millimeter accuracy (Score:4, Interesting)
Not from a magnetic field from any reasonable distance, not by itself, liars.
You need a whole slew of additional sensors to even get close to such accuracies.
The Polhemous Liberty and other devices have been around for a while now and offer 0.03" accuracy with 6DOF: http://www.polhemus.com/?page=Motion_Liberty [polhemus.com]
These only use a single sensor (for a single location, can use many with one base station for multiple points tracking), I've used them for motion tracking and they seem pretty accurate to me. I'm not sure what you consider reasonable range, but considering the Razer system is supposed to be used with a PC, I'm guess you're not counting in the 10s of metres. This system has an optional source which can get you 5 metres of accuracy from the base station.
These are quite expensive (in the thousands of pounds sterling) so would be interesting to see how Razer managed it on the cheap.
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You do realize that it would be more practical just to mount a touch screen with a camera hidden separately next to it, right?
Anyway, this tech sounds like another 3D mouse technology, as soon as you drop the remote, you're tracking free.
Obligatory ZP (Score:3)
Obligatory Zero Punctuation on Motion Controls [escapistmagazine.com].
Magnets? (Score:2)
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what about my 1983 apple // disks?
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TFA: "Razer says the magnetic field put out by the Hydra base station is 20 times weaker than the Earth's magnetic field, so it shouldn't affect objects such as credit cards, HDDs or speakers in the surrounding area."
If it's weaker than the earth's magnetic field, why not just use earth's magentic field?
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I figure it's what APK posts when he stops taking his meds.
Judging by their Razer Megalodon... (Score:2)
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I just built a gaming rig, this past summer, and I ordered a razer mouse and keyboard off newegg to go with it, both died due to manufacturing defects within 6 months. I checked around on google and it looks like a bunch of other people had the same problems with those products and then some got RMAs and the replacement units did the same thing... I saved myself the UPS fee and put it towards a nice logitech mouse and keyboard, sturdy as heck.
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razerd on linux + qrazercfg. Works great now that I figured out how to compile it.
3500dpi on my Lefty DeathAdder's very nice.
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Where did you find a lefty-version? I scoured their site and didn't find any reference. I'd love to replace my aging wired Copperhead, it still works fine but the scroll wheel is a getting a bit sticky, but I hate mouse shopping since decent mice with any functionality are largely only right-handed, and most ambi models kind of suck.
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They've so far only made one mouse in a left-handed version, and that most likely as an experiment(Their founder being left handed might also have something to do with it...)
You can buy it here: http://store.razerzone.com/store/razerusa/en_US/pd/productID.182251700 [razerzone.com] or on Amazon etc.
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Fight the good fight my left handed brethren.
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Heh. I've always used ambidextrous or /right handed/ mice with my left hand... in right-handed button mode(well, once I started using actual mice - I used TrackPoints before that most of the time). Adjusting to the left-handed deathadder was quite a bit of a retraining for me, but does seem to have increased my accuracy and such.
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UP, UP, DOWN, DOWN, (Score:1)
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But yes, it was a joke
PC Gamers left wanting for motion controllers? (Score:1)
Oh, here it is [slashdot.org], and on Slashdot no less. The Asus Eee Stick, released circa 2008. My, how soon we forget.
Lol! "MAGNETIC FIELD"! (Score:2)
Standing by for all the frivolous and completely ignorant lawsuits and claims that these devices cause cancer, disturb sleep, cause depression, etc etc etc.... ...gotta love watching people who have no grasp of how things work start coming up with 'reasons'. Sure, its a pain that actual trials are held and so many people get pwned by science, but its sure fun to read about!
Wii Controllers and Bluetooth (Score:1)
Or you could just use your Wii controllers with your pc using bluetooth. I love playing Assasin's Creed on the big tv, with surround sound, and my wii-controllers so I can jump around instead of being hunched over in front of the computer screen. Also works great for controlling your pc's media player like a remote control.
There are some products out there (Score:2)
(In)famous Razer QA (Score:2)
OTOH, Razer build quality is atrocious and Razer software matches the sloppiness of their hardware QA. It's ridiculous. I've had several Razer products fail within weeks or just never work properly at all. I'm talking about stuff like keys on the keyboard rubbing together and sticking combined wit
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Someone also wasn' thinking when they made the charger for my Razer wireless mouse USB (I forget the model). When I am using the mouse the PC is on, so the charger is on... but the mouse is not in the cradle. When I stop using the mouse and put it back in the cradle to charge, the PC is off, so the charger is off...
I realise some PCs supply USB power when switched off, but I can't see any BIOS settings to allow it on mine.
So I have to use my wireless mouse in wired mode (at least that feature is a good idea
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the PC is off
Ah. That'd be yer problem right there.
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If it does have to be connected, many powered USB hubs, if plugged in to their wall wart, will continue feeding downstream devices regardless of the power state of the upstream host. Since those also start at und
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I'm not terribly enamored of Razor's ergonomics given how horrible the side-button design is on most of their gaming mice (requiring WAY too much pressure to generate a click, making those buttons useless for frequent use).
Then there are Razor's Linux drivers... oh wait, no there aren't. The only way to bind actions to the mouse buttons for their newer mice under Linux is to do so while running a Windows VM in VMware or VirtualBox and running Razor's configuration tool. And even then the tool allows for onl
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Euro price? (Score:2)
The Razer Hydra will be available standalone or as part of a special edition Portal 2 Bundle that includes the Hydra system, that Portal 2 game and some Hydra-specific DLC. The Portal 2 Bundle will retail for US$139.99 and EUR139.99 – which seems a little unfair to European buyers
As a European gamer, that does sound tempting - except it should be around €100 ($140), not €140 ($200).
It is called virtual reality (Score:3, Funny)
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Suddenly images of the WII mote meets tv screen fail videos came to mind, cept with the people hitting walls instead of jumping through a portal.
Kudos for the Firefly reference.
All this talk of Motion Control... (Score:1)
I own one, and it is an awesome little device
Wanting? Hardly. (Score:1)
The only thing I want is a mouse that doesn't agitate my wrist with prolonged use. Motion controls tend to agitate my wrist more so than conventional controllers.
Still a mouse for FPS (Score:2)
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Will people really use this? (Score:1)
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