Yeah, this came out during the last few weeks of my time in high school. It is a major reason I got into computer science and became a programmer. Good Times!
Wow, thanks for sharing, that really takes me back. I was so hyped when I saw this as a kid, my dad and I made a mount for my glasses with two IR LEDs and a battery. I remember that I was super impressed with the effect.
I also went to Maplins (UK Radioshack) and bought some infra red LEDs to hack together something to achieve this same effect. In the end I just taped the Wii Sensor Bar to my glasses!
After watching his videos, I went out and bought an IR pen so I could mimic his digital whiteboard. I think over the years, the bluetooth stack changed, so I could no longer pair with windows.
I tried implementing this with face detection-based head tracking after that demo (or maybe before; I can't remember). I got it working but the effect was very underwhelming. It looks great in that video, but it kind of sucks in real life.
I think the problem is in real life you have an enormous number of other visual cues that tell you that you're not really seeing something 3D - focus, stereoscopy (not for me though sadly), the fact that you know you're looking at the screen, inevitable lag from cameras, etc.
I can't view the videos because of their stupid cookie screen, but I wouldn't be too excited about this. The camera lag especially probably impossible to solve.
this (and several of his ideas) were the reason I value simple solutions so much in my work along with optimising for low cost. "If Johnny Lee can do this crazy thing in cheap, I can think something creative too"
Thanks for posting, I was sure I recalled something like this form a long time ago. I also build my self a FreeTrack headset (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FreeTrack) around this same time to play the Arma / Operating Flashpoint games using IR LED's attached to a hat that my webcam would track.
Came here to say the same. I remember playing around with this back in the day, but using two candles instead of the sensor bar. Yes, it works. No, it’s not a good idea to hold candles that close to your hair.
Yeah, this came out during the last few weeks of my time in high school. It is a major reason I got into computer science and became a programmer. Good Times!
Wow that's really cool!
Wow, thanks for sharing, that really takes me back. I was so hyped when I saw this as a kid, my dad and I made a mount for my glasses with two IR LEDs and a battery. I remember that I was super impressed with the effect.
I also went to Maplins (UK Radioshack) and bought some infra red LEDs to hack together something to achieve this same effect. In the end I just taped the Wii Sensor Bar to my glasses!
After watching his videos, I went out and bought an IR pen so I could mimic his digital whiteboard. I think over the years, the bluetooth stack changed, so I could no longer pair with windows.
Good memories
I tried implementing this with face detection-based head tracking after that demo (or maybe before; I can't remember). I got it working but the effect was very underwhelming. It looks great in that video, but it kind of sucks in real life.
I think the problem is in real life you have an enormous number of other visual cues that tell you that you're not really seeing something 3D - focus, stereoscopy (not for me though sadly), the fact that you know you're looking at the screen, inevitable lag from cameras, etc.
I can't view the videos because of their stupid cookie screen, but I wouldn't be too excited about this. The camera lag especially probably impossible to solve.
Probably also the fact you just don't move much while sitting in front of a screen, so the stereoscopy effect is much more relevant.
this (and several of his ideas) were the reason I value simple solutions so much in my work along with optimising for low cost. "If Johnny Lee can do this crazy thing in cheap, I can think something creative too"
Have you seen the video of the guy who built a camera to film light moving in super slowmo? The things people build amaze me.
Do you have a link?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o4TdHrMi6do
Well worth taking a look at
This is really cool, thanks for sharing!
yes agreed! very inspiring.
Agreed!
Thanks for posting, I was sure I recalled something like this form a long time ago. I also build my self a FreeTrack headset (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FreeTrack) around this same time to play the Arma / Operating Flashpoint games using IR LED's attached to a hat that my webcam would track.
You're probably recalling OG Johnny Lee video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jd3-eiid-Uw
That's cool, what were the benefits/drawbacks of that compared to other VR headsets would you say?
That was a blast from the past! Many, including me, surely still have those Wii sensors/controllers around. Fun times!
Yes - he's the OG who also inspired us! Credit where credit is due!
Came here to say the same. I remember playing around with this back in the day, but using two candles instead of the sensor bar. Yes, it works. No, it’s not a good idea to hold candles that close to your hair.
This is all a severely underutilized technology
Amen - let's change that!