i could never do this but a thought for how to make a Wii...
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- MESAJARJARBINKS
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portable. Someone like ben could do this im geussing.
shrink the sensor bar and put it on the screen inside. Split the controler so half goes on one side and half the other (with nunchuck attachment) also keep all the gizmos inside so to turn the wii's controller using motion sensing you move the handheld. Might be hard at first but after playing it for awhile im sure it would become second nature.
shrink the sensor bar and put it on the screen inside. Split the controler so half goes on one side and half the other (with nunchuck attachment) also keep all the gizmos inside so to turn the wii's controller using motion sensing you move the handheld. Might be hard at first but after playing it for awhile im sure it would become second nature.
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- atari2600a
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Remember, there's a gyroscopic sensor in both the WiiMote & the Nunchuck attachment; this could really cause problems software-wise...
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- Turbo Tax 1.0
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dont think that would work, because no matter how you move the controller it would always be in the same position as far as the sensor bar could tell.
a wii portable just isnt to practical with out carrying around some stuff, unless you just wanted to use it to make a smaller GC portable and to take advantage of the virtual console
a wii portable just isnt to practical with out carrying around some stuff, unless you just wanted to use it to make a smaller GC portable and to take advantage of the virtual console
- Metroid fan
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- NES_fanatic
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Here's how you make a Wii-p
(All ideas (C) Me. Don't be fooled my imitators!)
I had this brainstorm in the shower, where I remembered a balancing eagle figurine that my grandpa used to have. It's beak rests on a small cone and that's all that touched anything, and by clever placement of weight, it stays balanced on top.
No, the eagle is in NO WAY attached to the base, I swear.
I thought about making a similar thing that has the Wii sensor that can be put on top of a handheld Wii. If the guts for the wiimote were inside the actual system and you tilted it, the bar would detect the tilt just like the real system because even though you turned the system, the floating eagle mechanism (or whatever it should be called) keeps the sensor parallel to the ground.
Genius, no?
(All ideas (C) Me. Don't be fooled my imitators!)
I had this brainstorm in the shower, where I remembered a balancing eagle figurine that my grandpa used to have. It's beak rests on a small cone and that's all that touched anything, and by clever placement of weight, it stays balanced on top.
No, the eagle is in NO WAY attached to the base, I swear.
I thought about making a similar thing that has the Wii sensor that can be put on top of a handheld Wii. If the guts for the wiimote were inside the actual system and you tilted it, the bar would detect the tilt just like the real system because even though you turned the system, the floating eagle mechanism (or whatever it should be called) keeps the sensor parallel to the ground.
Genius, no?
- kidw/32+systems
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I just dont think shaking the thing while it is trying to read a disc but I could just be thinking about prehistoric CD players. That is another good point about the sensor bar. So it would be like what Turbo Tax said. But why would you want to hack up your wii, if you screw up your wii-less.
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If you move the base, the eagle will still wobble about a bit before it becomes stable again, and if you tilt the eagle too far, it'll either fall off or swing violently to and fro, like a pendulum, for a fair amount of time.NES_fanatic wrote:I thought about making a similar thing that has the Wii sensor that can be put on top of a handheld Wii. If the guts for the wiimote were inside the actual system and you tilted it, the bar would detect the tilt just like the real system because even though you turned the system, the floating eagle mechanism (or whatever it should be called) keeps the sensor parallel to the ground.
Genius, no?
But even if you could get this to work, you still would only be able to get a response from rotational motions. This doesn't account for vertical, horizontal, and depth motions (by depth I mean towards and away from the screen), because the center of the axis--the bar's base--is still moving with the system. The sensor bar has to remain stationary in relation to the movements of the controls in order to make it work properly, so any design that fixates the bar and controls into a single setup will never work. The only way it can work is if the sensor bar and the controllers are independent upon each other's movements, such as in a laptop design. Plus, the Wii manual recommends that you be at least 3' away from the sensor bar.
- NES_fanatic
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All I can see is a screen with the guts on it with a slot to stick the Wii mote in with the sensor bar over the screen. Then you just pull out the controller, and nunchuck and play. It could also have the GC buttons on it too for GC play. That way, you're not shaking a CD player around, and you can still have the Nunchucks and any other weird attachments that will no doubt come out.
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- Triton
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you all seem to be forgetting the infrared pointer dealy, the sensor bar has to do with the gyroscope orientation data and infrared tracking so you can use the "light gun" type stuff with lcds too amirite?
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- ganonbanned
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that is a good Idea, and That eagle is real. I used to have one.NES_fanatic wrote:Here's how you make a Wii-p
(All ideas (C) Me. Don't be fooled my imitators!)
I had this brainstorm in the shower, where I remembered a balancing eagle figurine that my grandpa used to have. It's beak rests on a small cone and that's all that touched anything, and by clever placement of weight, it stays balanced on top.
No, the eagle is in NO WAY attached to the base, I swear.
I thought about making a similar thing that has the Wii sensor that can be put on top of a handheld Wii. If the guts for the wiimote were inside the actual system and you tilted it, the bar would detect the tilt just like the real system because even though you turned the system, the floating eagle mechanism (or whatever it should be called) keeps the sensor parallel to the ground.
Genius, no?