Or indeed any touch-screen device. Baffled, I am. And while we’re at it, how does a light-gun work?
No big words, please.
Or indeed any touch-screen device. Baffled, I am. And while we’re at it, how does a light-gun work?
No big words, please.
From howstuffworks.com
My understanding of ye 'ole NES lightgun was that it essentially took a picture of the screen where it was pointed, and if the target shows up in the picture, you hit the duck (but not the dog).
I’m sure someone will be along shortly to correct and chide me.
What do you mean by light gun?
The light guns are cool because the way that they really work is such a mind screw.
Well, sorta, but not really.
The old NES light gun is a simple light sensor. It looks for a spot of light at the right brightness. When you fire the gun on the Nintendo, the whole screen went black for a moment, and the duck was colored white. So if the gun was pointed at the duck, it registered a hit.
So that was what the square around the target was, then. Pretty good WAG at 12 years old, though.
Re: the OP, what’s a DS?
Interesting.
I remember a friend asking me that three years ago, in connection to a new pocket PC I was showing him. I managed to guess a pretty good version of the resistive system. Didn’t realize there were other ways to do it.
I believe the OP was referring to the Nintendo DS hand-held game console.
Lightguns don’t work the way the old NES one did. The newer than NES but not cutting edge guns are connected to the tv signal cable (either directly, as in the case of the Playstation/PS2 GunCon guns, or through the connector as is the case with the Xbox*). When you pull the trigger, the gun compares the time of the sync signal sent ot the TV to the time where the light sensor first sees light. From that information it can figure out the point the gun is aimed at. It’s much more accurate and lets you do things like have on screen “laser sights” and the like (like the calibration screen for PS2 GunCon games).
However, that system only works on CRT TVs. Since these are going the way of the dodo, the newest “light” guns use acceleration sensors to tell where the gun is pointed.