About 2 years ago I completed my first Nintendo NES PC. A Nintendo NES PC is a gutted Nintendo with a computer running inside. Check here for instructions on building your own. All the lights work and the originial controllers work thanks to some NES to USB adapters that I ordered online. I think it even has a 10 gig hard drive! I was really into emulation at the time. (I also have had multiple MAME projects).
I have recently decided to dust it off (unfortunately I don’t even use it) and bring it in for show and tell at an enrichment workshop I am presenting next week.
I am taking my Computer Club to a secondary school Computer Science competition where we have to recreate the original Super Mario. Pretty sure this got me thinking about the NES PC.
And thanks to GlovePIE, I can use my Wiimote on my NES PC!!!
Well, who knew you could make your own interactive whiteboard for under $100! Thanks to one Johnny Lee, you can turn your laptop into a touch screen, or even manipulate your desktop through a projected image on the wall! How? By using the Wiimote and some infrared light.
Ever wondered why there is a sensor bar for the Wiimote? It certainly doesn’t detect the motion of the Wiimote. Instead it projects IR light which is detected by an advanced camera in the end of the Wiimote.
My computer club and I have successfully connected a Wiimote to a laptop through bluetooth. Using the computer app GlovePIE, you can run scripts which gives you computer control through the Wiimote.
Useful in the classroom? I can see myself using Johnny Lee’s app in the gym, where there is no SMARTBoard, especially for top secret sports plays. Other than that, I would use the Wiimote to advance my SMART Notebook slides from the back of the room, allowing me some freedom to move about the room and not stay beside the SMARTBoard clicking “Next” every few minutes. Also useful (and just plain fun) with Google Earth and simple paint programs. (getpaint.net)