From 5191be858bd96b2a2e5a5e715050aa4dc5ab9c38 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: David Runge Date: Fri, 7 Jul 2017 23:51:22 +0200 Subject: thesis/thesis.tex: Elaborating on network enabled head tracking. --- thesis/thesis.tex | 11 +++++++++++ 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+) diff --git a/thesis/thesis.tex b/thesis/thesis.tex index 9a3faab..0c7c47b 100644 --- a/thesis/thesis.tex +++ b/thesis/thesis.tex @@ -2150,6 +2150,17 @@ ssr-aap -N “server” -C “127.0.0.1:50002” \subsubsection{Network enabled head tracking} \label{subsubsec:network_enabled_headtracking} + Due to the higher availability of sensors, microcontrollers and + embedded systems in recent years, it has become very affordable to + build network enabled head tracking devices in small series. Many of + the conceived devices, such as the \gls{gpl} licensed \textit{Hedrot} + \citep{website:hedrot}, allow for \gls{osc} communication.\\ + Using the \gls{osc} interface, such a head tracker can be added as a + client to a \gls{ssr} instance. This would probably require + rate-limiting the sensor output, but would enable a networked setup, + that could prove to be cheaper, more reliable and flexible, than the + compile-time opt-ins (i.e.\ VRPN, Polhemus Fastrak/ Patriot, InterSense + InertiaCube3).\\ \cleardoublepage \pagestyle{empty} -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf