From: wtm@uhura.neoucom.edu (Bill Mayhew) Subject: Re: Illusion Organization: Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine Lines: 31 I missed the first article[s] on this line due to not having a chance to read the news for a couple of days... The idea is commercialized in at least one product, the Private Eye. That's a small cube-shaped device that the user straps around the head similar to a sweat band. There is a boom that comes from the side on which the device is mounted so that it is positioned in front of the user's eye. The Private Eye we had here for evaluation was Hercules-MDA compatible. The innards are a row (~400 LEDs) that are swept up and down by a galvonometer-like movement. The result is that the sweeping LED bar forms a fused raster. There is a virtual image projected in front of the user that the visual system tends to fuse with the background. I didn't like the device very much. I found it easiest to use if I looked at a blank white wall. I had problems with focus tracking if I glanced down to look at my keyboard for an out-of-the-way key. The unit also emitted a soft buzz and vibration which I found annoying. Some people didn't seem to mind the buzz. Properly used, however, the image clarity was quite crisp. I don't know if the company has taken the technology any further in the last year or two, but it did seem to have promise. -- Bill Mayhew NEOUCOM Computer Services Department Rootstown, OH 44272-9995 USA phone: 216-325-2511 wtm@uhura.neoucom.edu (140.220.1.1) 146.580: N8WED