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You are currently in Hardware, Internet, Networking, Comms and Security
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Mon Dec 18, 2006 6:04 pm Reply and quote this post
...when there's laptops. But, you say, you can't wave laptops around to control your videogame! Actually you can. Many laptops manufactured now come with motion sensors to suddenly freeze the hard disk when it gets bumped around. These sensors can be read by software, which you can use to control software such as computer games running on the laptop. Sorry, Macs only.

Motion sensing laptops are nothing new. Apple's patented Sudden Motion Sensor technology has been inside PowerBooks since 2005, and is now standard in all of their new laptops. IBM had this technology even earlier, called Active Protection System, and was in several brands of ThinkPads.

Daniweb.com wrote:
It didn't take developers too long to find out that the data obtained from the internal sensors wasn't just confined to the firmware/kernel of Mac laptops. They soon began writing software taking advantage of this, and so you can, for example, hack a laptop to switch desktops when whacked from the sides, as demonstrated in this video. But it didn't stop there. You can now download a program called AMS2HID, which allows you to use the laptop's sensors as an input device in any application. This would allows you to achieve similar feats to the ones made by Nintendo.


For some reason, this idea never really caught on in PC laptops. Perhaps it's the fact that it's not at all standard in any brand of laptops other than Apple. I only know of 3 laptop manufacturers that include a motion sensing device: IBM, Acer, and of course Apple. So PC laptop users miss out on all the fun.

But there's a lot of apps that take advantage of this on Mac... just for the record:

    * MacSaber, which allows you to use your laptop as a lightsaber, making all the usual noises when swung around.
    * SmackBook, a hack that allows you to switch desktops by whacking the laptop, as shown in the video previously.
    * StableWindow, stupid, yet interesting window that rotates as you rotate the laptop to keep it always facing in the correct direction.
    * AMS2HID, the program that allows you to use the motion sensors inside your computer as input devices for an application.

Contributed by Editorial Team, Executive Management Team
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