this post was submitted on 29 Sep 2024
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It's gonna be a camera on a stick. Physically, that's about all it can be.
The hard part of bringing back lightguns has been going from "here is an image of somebody's living room" to "there's a screen in this image, and the camera is centered on this specific pixel." Complex input - simple output. Neural networks are great at that. (Especially when being a little bit off is perfectly fine.) So namedropping "AI" in this product isn't just trend-chasing nonsense, or a pointless unrelated feature.
But it is still taking pictures of your living room.
The old technology was able to work flawlessly with just a point in the screen and light detection. Why would we need something more complicated now?
Because the old technology had a point on the screen. LCDs light up all-at-once. All the pixels change color at roughly the same time. The whole image is there, the whole time. There's nothing to detect besides the entire bright rectangle.
Why do you think these peripherals have been gone for twenty years?
OLEDs can light up one spot at a time.
But they don't.
Nevermind that I don't own an OLED TV, and I'm betting you don't either. LCDs won. And if you've got a simple way to make LCDs and lightguns "just work," there's a niche retro community waiting to throw money at you.