CES: Parrot introduces the ultimate iPhone flying machine

Jagi

True Fist of the North Star
OG Investor
CES: Parrot introduces the ultimate iPhone flying machine


This just looks like fun - a flying machine that’s completely controlled by your iPhone or iPod and comes to you from those wireless specialists at Parrot (makers of excellent Bluetooth devices).

It’s more than just a simple toy, this one, in truth it is an augmented reality gaming experience, so take a look at the Parrot AR.Drone, a quadricopter piloted with an iPhone or iPod touch, which allows users to fly in a real-world environment while simultaneously playing a video game from the device's screen.

The Parrot AR.Drone received a 2010 CES Innovations award for Electronic Gaming Hardware and will be demonstrated live throughout the week at the 2010 Consumers Electronics Show.

"At Parrot, we have been developing wireless concepts for video games for 4 years. Our first project was a Bluetooth race car. We've developed it, but I was not satisfied. A video game should contain a part of a dream that I missed with the Bluetooth car," explains Henri Seydoux, founder and CEO of Parrot. "It should fly! So I started the idea of the AR.Drone. With video cameras and a powerful computer, we have developed a very stable drone that is easy to control and flies like a dragonfly."

Picture%204_0.png

The craft consists of a central cockpit surrounded by four propellers, each driven by an engine. The heart of the machine contains all the electronic components and two cameras: The first camera, located underneath, connects to an Inertial Measurement Unit, which allows the AR.Drone to measure its speed and perform flawless stationary flight. Parrot Smart Piloting (PSP) technology compensates for wind and other environmental conditions during outside flights.

The second camera, at the front, broadcasts and streams exactly what the craft sees to the iPhone or iPod touch screen, it’s as if you were sitting in the cockpit. The Parrot AR.Drone generates its own WiFi network that simply connects to an iPhone or iPod touch for controls.

An unseen mix of captors (wide angle camera and high speed camera, MEMS (Micro Electro Mechanicals Systems), 3 axes accelerometer, 3 axes gyro, ultrasound sensor) associated with a powerful computer make the piloting easy and accessible even for the youngest or non-technologically savvy.

Better still. the AR.Drone is sensitive to the accelerometer of the iPhone or iPod touch that detects user's movements - pilot by leaning the iPhone forward to move forward or sidewise to corner or change direction. Command buttons also indicate actions such as rise, down, rotate, move back, move forward.

For use indoors the product ships with a hull which surrounds the propellers and protects the AR.Drone if it hits an obstacle. The Parrot AR.Drone is built on an open platform, accessible to game developers.

 
i remember they tried to attempt something close to this with a droid. and it failed miserably :lol::lol::lol:

figures :rolleyes:
 
Parrot brings Augmented reality game to their iPhone-controlled quadricopters



There are probably more than a few of you out there that want to see a quadricopter under the tree this year. Press release below:

New augmented reality game for iPhone-controlled quadricopter debuts


6c6ca46f10c0b991efbb67ebc21e4bcd.png

Parrot has announced the first augmented reality game for the iPhone-controlled quadricopter, the AR.Drone.

The new game, AR.Pursuit, is a two-player game where AR.Drones can shoot at each other in a virtual world on their iPhone screen. When they are hit by opponent fire, the AR.Drone will physically react to the hit.

AR.Pursuit will be available in the App Store at the end of November. Full details on the game are in the press release below and a video demo is available.

AR.Pursuit

SOUTHFIELD, Mich., Nov. 18, 2010 — Parrot, a global leader in wireless devices for mobile phones, announces the availability of AR.Pursuit, a game in augmented reality that takes advantage of the exceptional technical and flight capabilities of the Parrot AR.Drone.
Available end of November in the Apple App Store, AR.Pursuit enables players to measure and challenge their piloting skills.
The rules of the game
AR.Pursuit is a two-player pursuit game, where a player has to escape from the other one, as in the game of cat and mouse.
The “pursuer” has two kinds of virtual weapons to reach its opponent:
- Automatic machine gun: as soon as the frontal camera detects the pursued AR.Drone, bullets are automatically sent in order to slow it down. When it is hit, the AR.Drone will physically ‘react’ to the attack and the escape maneuvers will be more difficult for the pilot.
- Missiles: when the opponent is locked on the screen, the pilot of the pursuer AR.Drone has to shake his/her iPhone/iPod touch/iPad to send a missile.
When it is hit by a missile, the “pursued” becomes “pursuer” and so on. At half time, the roles are automatically reversed. The winner is the player who has the longest escape time during the entire game.
A technological first
Once the Bluetooth of the iDevice is on, each player connects to his/her AR.Drone in Wi-Fi and launches AR.Pursuit.
One of the players selects the “create” option on the main menu and indicates his/her opponent’s color and type of hull (indoor or outdoor).
The second player selects the “join” option in the main menu and also indicates the characteristics of his/her opponent. Then the game can start.
Each player can see on the screen of his/her iPhone/iPod touch/iPad what the AR.Drone is seeing. Each action, a shoot received or launched, will also be visualized on the screen via the magic of augmented reality.
Note: If the game is played with indoor hulls, players should place the colored stickers (sold with the AR.Drone) on it.
AR.Pursuit is an enthralling game that makes the most of the extreme maneuverability and stability of the AR.Drone, and which dives the players into a world where real and virtual are mingling… A first!
 
Back
Top