KalebFenoir, on 11 October 2012 - 05:25 AM, said:
Lately, I've been kind of picturing a Gyro like that giant ball bearing they have in that one enormous skyscraper in Hong Kong (or was it Thailand? I can't recall). When the building leans one way in the wind, the ball moves the other direction (or rather, it stays perfectly centered in its cradle while the building moves away from it), and ends up forcing the building to bend back a bit. If you removed the ball bearing from the building, the higher-level winds would eventually snap or bend the structure, and it'd come down.
Course, when I actually PICTURE a Gyro, I keep thinking of a really incredibly complex version of the gyro toy you buy in shops. That one you tie a string around and then let loose like a top. XD Just way more complex.
Gyros might be a form of losTech, but one that can be reproduced easier. It took them a very long time to even think of making a Heavy Duty gyro, but that might be because no company wanted to take responsibility for retooling their construction lines to create a hypothetical and possibly costly mistake.
wait... HUH?
one of the MOST basic use of gyroscope that we have is to DO EXACTLY that?
ie: tells which way is up
the virtual horizon instrument in aircrafts? yep they can be made using gyroscope.... in fact many are... so i am confused here as to why the gyro would not know which way is up or left and right... since one of the gyro's purpose is to tell PRECISELY what the attitude of the gyro (and hence the machine the gyro is attached to) currently is...
Attitude includes the pitch, yaw, and roll... so the gyro knows EXACTLY which way is up, EXACTLY which is left and right and it knows this regardless of what the attached device or vehicle does after you set it (you can set whichever side as the reference when calibrating the gyroscope reading).
ExSlyder, on 11 October 2012 - 07:24 AM, said:
uhmmm, just as an information Battletech neurohelmet doesn't control the mech... they use it in lore as a security interface, and SUPPOSEDLY to help the mech balance (which is what we've been arguing for the last few pages) and... well that's it really...
the mechwarrior does NOT have control over the mech limbs and what not through neurohelmet... they needed the neural interface for that in BT, ie: the INVASIVE neural interface with ******** feedback and what not which makes no sense...
incidentally in the real world: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BrainGate
for the commercial side..
meanwhile NASA had the control experiment on flight through the brain signal reading since years ago, and with some practice the pilots essentially had all the attitude control of the aircraft with just thought, at first it was not very precise, but the subsequent development (and with more practice on the pilot) gave it a control that had impressive finesse.
We NEVER NEEDED thought reading in the form of reading precise interpretation of words or what not that the brain is thinking in order to use it as a control system... all we needed was to determine what signal that the brain is emitting to use as the control signal, preferably one that can be controlled easily by the user... and how to detect it reliably.
Edited by Melcyna, 12 October 2012 - 12:12 AM.