I tried it out on a whim and it was really fun actually.
The only immediate improvement I could think of (which may be is there in the settings) is to change the zero point so I don't have to have the camera pointed at the floor.
Edit: can "zero" by clicking "begin" with phone pointed forward.
There was a project from 15 years ago where you could put an iPhone on a desk and if someone was typing, you could determine the keys being pressed via the accelerometer in the phone.
which reminds me of building breadboard RF sensors (using fixed caps with variable for calibrating parasitic capacitance) and since these are just oscillators you can calibrate a beat frequency (heterodyne mix) in audible range that has the theremin timbre of a squarish sine wave that you can plug straight to a speaker
I tried it out on a whim and it was really fun actually.
The only immediate improvement I could think of (which may be is there in the settings) is to change the zero point so I don't have to have the camera pointed at the floor.
Edit: can "zero" by clicking "begin" with phone pointed forward.
I did NOT know the motion sensors on my phone were THIS precise, that’s surprising
There was a project from 15 years ago where you could put an iPhone on a desk and if someone was typing, you could determine the keys being pressed via the accelerometer in the phone.
The original page seems to have died but you can still find the HN entry here; https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3203402
Found the original article on the archive.org
https://web.archive.org/web/20111021122406/https://www.wired...
This is the full "vibe code rabbit hole" I went down, with trying to understand what is possible with the sensors. https://tautme.github.io/phone-sensors/
Even just the plain etch-a-sketch using motion sensing is cool enough.
I suppose this might have been done already?
Is there a reliable way to trigger percussion?
tap the side of the phone, it responds to accelerometer sensor.
Tapped very hard, never worked once. Using android on pixel phone.
Same, also on a pixel
change paint brush size -> whistle
change color -> put finger in front if camera
make drum sound -> tap side of phone
A digital theremin! Very fun.
which reminds me of building breadboard RF sensors (using fixed caps with variable for calibrating parasitic capacitance) and since these are just oscillators you can calibrate a beat frequency (heterodyne mix) in audible range that has the theremin timbre of a squarish sine wave that you can plug straight to a speaker
It seems to make the user dance, would fun to see video of people using it for the first time. haha