Quote:
Originally Posted by amateurrobotguy
Hey, we are not playing GTA 4 here, we are DRIVING A ROBOT! If your game controller was SOOOO hot, then why wouldn't the military use it in a tank? Oh yeah, maybe a 1 millimeter thumb movement is not stable enough to drive $60 million worth of equipment? Or how bout why they don't use it in controlling autonomous planes? Hmmm, looks like they use joysticks too.
"Woops my thumb slipped and I dropped the floatie" will be common words.
I have grown up with game controllers, me and 95% of our team agrees that a joystick is far superior to a game controller. Like I said before, the game controller was designed to emulate a real joystick, so just use the joystick and stop thinking you are playing a video game.
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Well... your problem might be that you are basing your statements on speculation; Mike is basing his on something a little more concrete, like the facts.
I ordered chicklets on day one because my team was planning on hard wiring the xbox controller anyway, and this allowed us to use unmodified controllers which saves a lot of time, and also allows the process of finding a spare at a regional much easier.
All the kids on our team unanimously agreed that an xbox controller is more familiar to them than joysticks; The freedom of movement Mike mentioned would also be very beneficial. I figure if people can be uber snipers in Halo 2 and Call of Duty with it, why can't we drive a robot with it.
Also, if you have nothing positive to say about something Mike put so much hard work into (thank you mike, you allowed our electronics to spend time pursuing higher goals, rather than hours of repetitive yet easy soldering) then I ask you to simply stop posting in this thread.
Another thing that bothered me a little bit. They don't use joysticks to control autonomous planes; They wouldn't be autonomous then.