X-Bee
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Anyone used the X-Bee as a wearable tool for interactive dance? I need to track x, y and z from a dancer in a theatre space. Wii has a range problem
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You can use it to communicate, I did, it gets messed up with a room full of smartphones. It does not give you x y and z, this is tricky...
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@Fred thank you for your comment. So still looking for some wearable thing that transmits x,y and z. Other ideas than the X-Bee
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thanks for the feedback.There are 2 types of xbee, did you use the more powerful one?Why would xyz be tricky? -
surely xyz of a dancer needs to be relative to something?
is there a way of triangulating some kind of transmitter on the dancer to two or three receivers? (or ultrasound distance readers?)a couple of cameras could do it via blob tracking. (i guess a kinect would be too limited in range) -
Getting a rotation is easy, but I think track xyz means position. Why is that tricky?? It just is! If it is rotation, then no problem, but I would say just do this with a smartphone, no need for special hardware, touchosc will do it fine.
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I think he was relating this to wii data.. meaning a rotation on the X Y and Z.
I understand the positioning issues....Thanks Fred. -
I have used X-bee's with and Arduino to communicate sensor data into Isadora. It's not too tricky, but requires some light programming (arduino/processing) and soldering skill.
It was a while ago, but I think I used an X-bee series 1 attached to an arduino Fio board, which was in turn had a Sparkfun 9 degrees-of-freedom board attached to it. On the computer end, I had a second X-bee to receive the information that was connected to the computer via USB. I used the Serial in actor to parse the data in Isadora.I can dig up my old patch and give you more info if you want it.Craig -
you should check the boards from x-io
http://x-io.co.uk/