Bikes turned into game controllers
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CycleScore is a MIT project that merges video gaming with a recumbent bicycle. The bike's pedals and handlebars are turned into game controllers, and the game program rewards steady effort and the occasional burst of speed. The game consists of steering a hot-air balloon over mountains -- might get a little old after a while, even if the balloonist can fire missiles at passing targets for extra points. But MIT students hope to eventually offer a suite of slam-bam action games and plan a version that'll let workout buffs link their bikes over the Internet and compete against each other. They should hurry up as a similar bike has been developed by Japanese company, the CatEye's gamebike allows you to control any Playstation 2 race game with the bicycle: steering with the handlebars and pedaling for speed.
From Boston.com, and La Repubblica. Update for those (like me) never read the comments sent by readers. Jonah Brucker-Cohen and Shii-Ann Huang did a similar project in 1999. An article from the New York Times mentioned Netgym, a system connecting stationary bicycles to computers that showed a virtual bike trail. The students were planning to create "an Internet-based game, where people on exercise bikes anywhere in the world could race each other in a virtual world while pedaling in their own homes." |
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![game_bike[1].gif](http://www.we-make-money-not-art.com/xxx/game_bike[1].gif)
jonah brucker-cohen and shii-ann huang did a similar project this way back in 1999.
from a New York Times article: http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/05/circuits/articles/20fair.html
"Jonah Brucker-Cohen and Shii Ann Huang created Netgym, connecting stationary bicycles to computers that showed a virtual bike trail. Connecting bikes to computers is nothing new, but the students hoped to create something more: an Internet-based game, where people on exercise bikes anywhere in the world could race each other in a virtual world while pedaling in their own homes."
Thanks for the information!
I'll add that in the article since I'm not sure everyone reads the comments.