There's a guy on the Mission shuttle who keeps his laptop in a briefcase-y thing that keeps a large stabilization pad beneath the laptop.
I think the tricky part about stabilization is that you need to move the text pretty fast in response to a bump, and vision algorithms often have latency.
You need a mechanical damper with the same spring constant as your body. Just experiment with different thicknesses of foam. Either that or you need a helmet mounted projector...
API issues not withstanding, might be too much to ask.redhotpenguinJanuary 29 2008, 22:12:52 UTC
"In at least one model of Intel-based laptop, the MacBook Pro 15", Apple uses the Kionix KXM52-1050 three-axis accelerometer chip, with dynamic range of +/- 2g and bandwidth up to 1.5KHz."
1.5Hz should be well within the range of the bumps you are experiencing. The bumps are likely within the range of 50-200Hz. If your laptop is on your lap, your legs will act as a pivot moving the laptop up and down while your head experiences relatively little motion since it is rigidly attached to your body.
The problem though, is that your body will move slightly in relation to the laptop, so while you may be able to keep the text stable relative its previous position, you don't have an accelerometer on your body to measure the relative motion of your head to the laptop. If you put an accelerometer on your head, or can somehow use the camera to measure the relative displacement of your head, it might work. Another issue to consider is displacement. If a bump displaces your laptop 4 inches, the text may remain in the same place, but it will be
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I think the tricky part about stabilization is that you need to move the text pretty fast in response to a bump, and vision algorithms often have latency.
The person to talk to at work is Glen -- he made http://freelook.org/ .
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1.5Hz should be well within the range of the bumps you are experiencing. The bumps are likely within the range of 50-200Hz. If your laptop is on your lap, your legs will act as a pivot moving the laptop up and down while your head experiences relatively little motion since it is rigidly attached to your body.
The problem though, is that your body will move slightly in relation to the laptop, so while you may be able to keep the text stable relative its previous position, you don't have an accelerometer on your body to measure the relative motion of your head to the laptop. If you put an accelerometer on your head, or can somehow use the camera to measure the relative displacement of your head, it might work.
Another issue to consider is displacement. If a bump displaces your laptop 4 inches, the text may remain in the same place, but it will be ( ... )
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