Sony / Logitech PS2 EyeToy drivers for Windows 64 bit

eyetoy Following up on an old post about Sony PS2 EyeToy drivers for Windows, which got that old Playstation 2 EyeToy web camera working on Windows 32bit environments, I’ve finally managed to get drivers that work for 64 bit.

Available here (for now): http://www.filedropper.com/eyetoy64

And taken from here

“Unpack to Desktop.

To install, go to Device Manager, right click the EyeToy, and then Update Driver, then Browse, Let me pick, Have Disk, and then HCLASSIC.inf at the root of the supplied folder you put on your desktop. It will complain about the drivers not being signed, but it is golden! I included a small camera test program, which is labeled EyeToy.exe”

Works for me on Windows 7. Haven’t tried it on Windows 8 yet but in theory it should work.

BBC – Elite classic video games remake seeking backers

BBC – Elite classic video games remake seeking backers

The game that changed everything in the 8bit world and certainly had a huge influence on me. If at least for wasting so much time playing it. You could even argue that all the ARM chips in all our phones may not have existed had Elite not existed. Well maybe not quite that far, but how popular would the BBC have been without it and would they have still gone on to make the Archimedes which required development of the ARM chip and thus spun off ARM?

Anyway, not convinced by Braben’s attempt here. He’s tried to bring it back for years. Wasn’t impressed by the Frontier sequels. Ian Bell is still not involved. Kickstarter funding? Not sure.

He’s saying here, “give me all your money and we’ll make it” without anything to show up front. Publishers have obviously been asked if they’ll fund it and have said no.

Fair enough publishers and traditional investors may not see the vision, are looking just at quick commercial success, and it’s a nice idea to bypass them, going direct to the customer and ask them to fund it. I do feel this could lead to major disappointment especially where people have stumped up the money. Anyone donating needs to act like any other investor and should want to see progress and results, and a return for their investment. Not see the money wasted.

I’d love a decent new version, although it needs to be way more than just Elite with nice graphics. There are already versions that do that, like Oolite, and that’s free and open source.

Follow up on Mountain Bike GPS tracking issues and Strava

So following up on my previous post Fixing altitude data in Mountain Bike GPS tracking:

I’ve since got a Samsung Galaxy S2 and the altitude data on that is better. It’s still off, but no where near as much as the E72 was compared to the corrected elevation survey data from Sports Tracks. Although Strava apparently do correction also based on the same or similar survey data, but I’ve found this differs from the corrections in Sports Tracks. Sports Tracks seems correct for some areas I know are a particular height though (classic being the height of Leith Hill in Surrey, highest point in south east England, which I know is 932ft and I spot instantly something is wrong when I’m seeing heights in excess of 1000ft).

However, next problem is the S2 GPS chip has low speed filtering enabled to optimise it for car navigation called Static Navigation. This is to filter out inaccuracies to avoid navigation jumping to side roads. In fact it’s funny reading about this because this was exactly a problem I was getting with the old Nokia E72 when navigating in a car in the US. It kept jumping to parallel roads! (and as their roads are straight, this happens a lot).

Okay, I thought I’d go back to my old bluetooth GPS which perhaps has a better antenna. Turns out it has the same chip though that does Static Navigation by default, the SiRF III chip.

Anyway, problem with Static Navigation is Strava assumes the GPS is always tracking and if there are pauses in the plot points it just assumes you’re moving still and thinks you’ve gone crazy speeds to catch up to the next point. I’ve had many incorrect KOM from climbs that I’ve done slow (or even pushed up!) due using auto-pause on Sports Tracker or Endomondo in the past and imported to Strava. I don’t use auto-pause now, but I get the same from problems from the Static Navigation.

Anyway, for phone tracking with Strava, the Strava app is preferred it seems as it gets around various issues and doesn’t auto-pause, but I then suffer from horrible location spikes in the S2. Often sending me 100s of miles away when I’m standing still! Might be the Static Navigation again though. This can be turned off but the phone has to be rooted apparently. Bluetooth devices can apparently be tweaked through serial commands you send to them, but they reset with it enabled when you turn them off/on.

For now I’ve gone back to the E72 to track using Endomondo with auto-pause disabled. Elevation data is once again way off though and Strava itself doesn’t correct it quite right so I use Sports Tracks to do that and import to Strava. This is the most accurate I’ve got, but still things screw up Strava further if you’re in a wooded area and the plot points make big jumps due to lack of GPS lock I guess.

Actually I’m wondering if GPS tracking logs the actual time for each plot point, as surely if it did this should never happen, as a lack of logged points should not make it think you did the segment faster! Would seems odd to not log the actual time given that time is a critical component of GPS.

*So* – most accurate Strava option – probably a Garmin or similar. These are designed for low speed tracking for walking and cycling, have better antenna, and also have a barometer for the altitude (though a couple of Android phones now have a barometer apparently). Just a question of whether you are that obsessed with Strava to justify the cost. My Strava use is really just for fun, comparing with friends and seeing where I’ve gone, but thanks to the leaderboards on segments it’s highlighting so many inaccuracies with GPS tracking on different devices.

Generally the only trust I have with the leaderboards in Strava is knowing who the people are on there. If I know it’s likely they can achieve that time, then it’s probably right, but some are so dodgy, and not just mine.