Gyro-Mouse? That'd be a seperate I/O device. In case of requiring or wanting such, one could always use a standard bluetooth mouse & keyboard, which's use is more common than those "free-flight-mouses".
Integrating such a gyromouse inside the photoframe-tablet seems of little use, either, as the normal accelerometers inside a tablet do somewhat the same as the mouses gyro's do. As the photoframe itselfs remains stationary on the wall, however, the only use of such sensors is to detect the orientation of the frame or sense whole- environment-effects, e.g. earthquakes. Something I don't wish ever to be told about by my tablet... The Gyromouses are for presentations, or as an intermediary between more sophisticated gesture recognition or spatial movement detecting devices and classical mouses and tablets. That's at least what I think they are for, as , so far, I never was able to check out one such device for myself and see which applications make proper use of the additional axes of movement. Am Sonntag 11 Dezember 2011 schrieb Phil Endecott: > > As for Buttons and I/O: > I use a Gyration gyroscopic mouse. > > (These devices are also great if you need to give a software demo or > similar on a projector.) > > > Phil. -- Rüdiger Leibrandt -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-arm-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/201112141149.10366.leibra...@tzi.de