![]() I have only programmed in Java, so I think it will have to do, unless we can skip that step entirely somehow. I would be open to any other suggestions as well, for libraries or ways to accomplish this. What I need to figure out right now, is how I can write a custom extension in wiiremoteJ, and How to interpret the DJ Hero Table Data to fit that schema. No Solution exists yet, so we would be helping out a ton of people! ![]() If anybody would like to help me with this project, It would be pretty sweet. While WiiRemoteJ does not in itself support the DJ Hero Controller, It claims to support custom extensions, which is where most of my work will be done. My plan is to use WiiRemoteJ, a java wiimote library, to write a java program capable of translating DJ Hero table data to midi. I have nowhere near the experience nessecary for this undertaking, but It appears as though most of the work has been done for me. It now appears as though if I want to use these in a windows environment, I will have to write the drivers myself. which still relies on osculator to receive input from Turntable. (The program appears to have ceased development and supports every part of the Turntable accessory but the actual platter.)ĭid research into Pure Data as a Midi Controller program. (The versions of Osculator that are new enough to support the turntables won't run on either of my AMD computers.) I was able to hijack my moms mac for a few hours and get the setup working perfectly, but i decided I need to find a way to do it on my own computer. :(Ī few weeks of research and trial and error later, I'm no further towards the convienient setup I hoped for. I found out about osculator via youtube and immediately rushed out to get the DJ hero turntable, hoping I could begin to learn the basics of DJing with a pair of tables and Traktor Scratch, only to find out that there is no similar program/setup for Windows PC's. ![]() Im 19, Computer Science major, Huge techie and EDM fan. Its nice to see that all that reading and researching really paid off.I'll start with an introduction since i'm new round these parts. I had the idea of scrapping the laptop and going much faster with the Xbee’s and getting away from all the extra wii stuff that was getting in the way. Whats nice is that when i first did this i was using the johnny lee library and a laptop with a bluetooth (9600) module to transfer the data first from the wii to the laptop and then again from the laptop to the controller. Its definately working though and it is fast! Still a work in progress but its really coming along. I also have a small issue with the xbee’s losing part of the 2 byte readings every 20 or so seconds, makes the dot jump across the screen when it happens. i just averaged the last 3 readings and it gets rid of most of the twitching (which i think is caused by the resolution of the camera trying to make measurements on small dots that are 6+ feet from the camera). Yeah, i actually did that later (and put it in a smaller enclosure). Probably the: " + ADDR_SENSOR + " address is wrong ?", e) Throw new Exception("Can't communicate with the I2C bus. Private I2CDevice _camera = new I2CDevice(new I2CDevice.Configuration(ADDR_SENSOR, 400)) Return "X: " + x + " - Y: " + y + " - S: " + size Private const byte ADDR_SENSOR = 0xB0 > 1
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |