Koostetaan pieni tietoisku Move vs Kinect vs Wii - tilanteesta.
Video Camera
Kinect
The camera is key to Kinect as it’s the fundemental of how the whole system works. The Kinect bar has an array of three of them lined up which are able to track a staggering 48 skeletal points of the human body, meaning that it can sense motion down to the level of individual finger movements.
It can track four users at the same time, it includes face recognition software, runs at 30fps and can be used for video chats over the internet with other Xbox users as well as those on Windows Live on their PCs too.
Move
The PlayStation Move controller relies on working in tandem with the PlayStation Eye USB camera in order to provide tight gesture tracking and control. There’s just the one lens running at 120fps at a resolution of 320x240px or 60fps at 640x480px but you can still capture video and stills as well as edit what you store as well.
Wii
No video element to the Wii at all, so you’ll get no video chats and no image capturing either.
Voice Control
Kinect
Details on how it works and how many audio sensors there are, are light but, yes, there is full voice control with Kinect for in-game and menus and, of course, the microphone system can be used in the video chat as well.
Move
The PlayStation Eye accessory that’s needed to make the system work has a four-way microphone array that’s able to ignore background noise and focus in on speech as well as cancel out the effects of echoes. It claims voice recognition but whether that’s at the level of detail of specific individuals is not known yet. What Sony has said is that you can hold conversations with up to 6 people at the same time – presuming that you actually have that many friends, of course.
Wii
Talk all you like but the Wii isn’t going to listen. You can, of course, buy a microphone for specific voice games but neither the Wiimote nor the machine itself have any built-in.
Controllers
Kinect
There are no controllers needed for Kinect, or rather, the only controller you need is you. That’s the magic of it. If you want to drive a car, you put your hands on an imaginary steering wheel. You want to shoot a gun, you make like you used to with your finger when you were in the playground. You want to do the Funky Chicken…you get the point.
Of course, that does mean that you actually need to run furiously up and down on the spot in athletics games. Have fun with that.
Move
The PlayStation Move controller is more an evolution of the Wiimote than something entirely ground-breaking in its own right but that’s no reason not to be impressed. Looking rather like a toy microphone or baton for guiding aeroplanes, it consists of a grip with the four PlayStation buttons, a single Move button, a trigger button, vibration feedback, and an LED sphere, the top of which you can change the colour.
The exact size and lighting of the sphere is known by the PlayStation Eye and so the machine can easily track the position of the controller with high levels of accuracy and low latency. The Move itself contains two three-axis motion sensors – one an accelerometer for speed of movement analysis and the other a rate sensor for gyroscopic measurements – as well as a magnetometer for a reading of your position relative to the surface of the Earth.
It runs on a Li-ion battery which you can charge by a USB cable connected to the main machine and it sends its sensory input to the console over Bluetooth. You can connect four Move controllers to any one PS3 at a time.
As with the Wii, there is a supplementary controller for the off-hand known as the Navigation controller. There’s no glowing orb on top but there’s both a d-pad and analogue stick added as well as the X and O PS buttons and the L1 and L2 triggers too.
Wii
The Wii Remote has two-axis motion detection and a gyroscope for picking up rotational movement. It connects to the main box via Bluetooth and requires AA batteries to keep it running. For the non-motion games, it also has a full Nintendo d-pad controller and buttons on each one and you can extend the functionality with the Nunchuk which adds an analogue joystick and off-hand motion sensor.
Koko juttu:
http://thetechjournal.com/electronics/g ... -wii.xhtml
Good human, but sometimes if needed, a bad citizen.