[aprssig] New APRS virtual reality Idea!
Scott Miller
scott at opentrac.org
Thu Sep 20 15:34:55 EDT 2007
Oh yeah, and the compass has to be on your head.
Given hams' propensity for absurd head wear that might not be a big
deal. It doesn't have quite the same potential for loss of dignity as
my idea for a helmet-mounted anemometer for paraglider pilots.
Who knew a propeller beanie could actually be functional?
Scott
N1VG
Scott Miller wrote:
> I discussed this idea with a friend the other day, in the context of the
> Army's Land Warrior system. The biggest problem I see is in reliably
> determining the direction you're facing. A fast, accurate electronic
> compass that can tolerate a lot of tilt in two axes is NOT cheap. Last
> time I checked Honeywell had those for about $400.
>
> Other than that, I think the sound stuff could be done with
> off-the-shelf hardware. It's already done in video games.
>
> Scott
> N1VG
>
> Robert Bruninga wrote:
>> This is a NEAT idea if anyone wants a fun project.
>> That also knows how to write some DSP software:
>>
>> Imagine an APRS product that works like this:
>>
>> Imagine wearing a pair of headphones. Close your eyes and face north.
>> When an APRS user with a D7 HT speaks,
>> You HEAR him in the direction where he is.
>>
>> If he is to the East, you hear him to the right.
>> If he is to the west, you hear him to your left.
>> Anywhere in between, and the earphones are phased so that you
>> hear his direction.
>>
>> Now, too bad the APRS PTT mode does not put the position data at
>> the FRONT of a packet, but at the end. At the front, you could
>> know who is talking from where and you could then phase delay
>> his voice to create the correct virtual postion. But it isnt.
>> The packet is at the end.
>>
>> So, given this end-PTT limitation, then here is how I would
>> implement this and it also makes it simpler.
>>
>> 1) Pass the voice through both earphones in MONO.
>> 2) When the PTT mode packet comes in
>> 3) Send a "roger-beep" to the earphones.
>> (A) Phased to indicate direction (B) Tone frequency to indicate
>> distance.
>>
>> High tone means close. Low tone means far. Any other tone
>> inbetween...
>>
>> Once that is working, make it proportional to own-heading, and
>> now you can "see APRS in the dark"...
>>
>> Bob, WB4APR
>>
>>
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>>
>
>
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