I heard they are great for killing billionaires in experimental deep sea rigs
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Controllers in shoddily constructed deep sea rigs donβt kill people, billionaires piloting with controllers in shoddily constructed deep sea rigs kill people!
Operating parts of multi million dollar navy ships, according to articles. Not joking
Also submarines, when heading down to see the Titanic
Because theyβre designed for controlling and people are familiar with them/can learn easily
Also helps standardize when taking bids from multiple companies
I wonder how many spares they keep around
And if you always get the shitty broken one until you're a corporal.
They use it to control a submarine
Not for long, though.
For sale: Logitech submarine controller, lifetime warranty.
The Steam Deck and Steam controller have touchpads which make them totally usable as a mouse for normal PC usage like web browsing
DualShock 4 and DualSense touch pads do this too! They even support multi touch so you can do left/right/middle click by using multiple fingers.
Hell, not optimal by any means but I even had a serviceable for light usage setup using analog sticks and a mapping program before Steam Input came out. Much better with the trackpads
Disneyland uses Steam Decks to remote control droids in Star Wars land.
ukraine was doing the same but to kill russians lol
"These blast points, too accurate for Russians"
They can be quite useful in hobbyist robotics
Actually yes.
I worked on a crew building pole barns in Colorado. For anyone unaware you basically dig a bunch of holes, set wooden columns in them and pour concrete around them, then hang the rest of the structure off those columns.
We had a dude that swore by the xbox 360 controller. We tried to get him to use a framing hammer to drive his nails but he would only use that 360 controller.
We also did a lot of acid. If you see a weird barn in Colorado, look for the microsoft logo pressed into the wood next to the siding nails.
So he literally, physically hammered the xbox controller into the nail?
He hammered the nails into the boards
In college I was on the robotics team. We used several different controllers to drive various robots. I made a little tank steering robot that was remote controlled from a PC with an Xbox 360 controller. I later rebuilt it to use a Raspberry Pi and added a pan/tilt mount for the camera controlled from the controller's D-pad. We also used a Wiimote to control our competition robot, using the accelerometer for steering which was pretty cool. This was in like 2010 when motion controls were still a relatively new and cool thing.
They are the OG electric vibrators for people who can't buy vibrators.
A vibrator was one of the very first patented electrical devices. 1880. It predates the first patent for the first electric iron by a decade.
I didn't know this!
Several modular synth modules use joysticks for control over parameters, but one of the coolest Iβve seen is one from Delptronics that uses a wii nunchuck controller to send out control voltage. Hagiwo I believe also has a similar DIY design.
I do recall a gaming controller being used to pilot the titan submersible that is now on the ocean floor. May their souls rest in peace.
We had a subcontractor drive a wired camera mounted drone through the sewers with it. Some use LIDAR or SONAR instead of just cameras. Game controllers are pretty common for these.
Some guys I used to know used them to make music, as some sort of midi controller.
In Ghostbusters 2 they rigged up a Nintendo joystick to drive the statue of liberty through the streets of NYC. Does that count?
All a controller is is just some buttons on a wire in a portable form factor.
If you want to use it for Excel, you can.
I used one on a Raspberry Pi to drive a self build remote car wirelessly.
I have one of mine configured as media controls when I'm wandering around the house (8bitdo controllers ftw)
Hacksmith on youtube uses playstation controllers for remote operation of their giant mechs.
I am working on getting my XBox controller to work with a Raspberry Pi/Astroberry setup to control my telescope.
I used to use a mini game controller for artwork. Like up on the dpad would zoom in the canvas. I had buttons for undo, redo, switch to eraser, rotate the canvas, flip it, etc.
For FRC robotics competitions, we use Xbox controllers to control the robot
playstation and Xbox controllers make good Kodi/XBMC remotes for a laptop connected to a TV.
I think it was med students who use controllers to control flash card decks for studying.
Also as PowerPoint remotes.
I've seen some people on YouTube use them to control their CNC.
Fire up halo 1
Get in the gunner seat of warthog
Tape right trigger down
Profit
On a very old computer of mine, the "y" key was completely missing and I couldn't replace it because the contacts were broken so I just use JoytoKey and a USB SNES controller.
I've also used a similar setup for navigating some image boorus but, for obvious reasons, I wont specify anything further.
I don't know if me talking about my Steam controller counts...
Some digital artists use Switch JoyCons for shortcuts in Clip Studio and other painting programs.
We used a ps4 controller as a mouse on our tv/media center. Its wired/Bluetooth and comes in as a mouse on our Linux box. No setup, just connect and it works.
Scrolling around LibreELEC to get to my gaming folder
I would also add VR controllers to the list and I had used them for painting.
Gave a presentation last year, using a joy con as a remote for switching slides.
Nice thing is you can have mouse with the joystick as well
I use my flight sim gear as a fidget toy, hope that counts.