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#1
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I'm not sure that Natural Point doesn't have a point (no pun intended) in what it says about Freetrack. There's little objective and much subjective stuff available on the net and I do not feel qualified to make a judgement. However I do not believe that you'll get an answer. Natural Point is a business partner for 1C, Freetrack's maker isn't. And I do not believe "good" or "bad" thoughts of players about another company matter anything ... it's business after all.
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#2
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Anti-competitive influence? More like plain and naked anti-competitive practices.
Surely crippling any product that licenses trackIR so that the game can't interface with alternative head tracking programs is anticompetitive. This would violate anti-trust law if someone ever took them to court. It's one thing for a game company to fail to support a interface, it's another entirely for Natural Point to demand that a product that would work otherwise be crippled so only its product works on a game. This is sick. Last edited by fuzzychickens; 08-30-2009 at 04:18 PM. |
#3
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Note that I didn't start this thread to debate the merits of various head trackers. I want to know 1C's stance on the matter of excluding non-Natural Point trackers.
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#4
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I don't think that means a darn thing.
Everyone is somebodys promotional partner in gaming development, that doesn't necessarily mean anyone gets more than some promo. I doubt seriously, there is a locking out of freetrack in any upcoming releases. Nor do I think there hooks in the software application to only allow one headtracking device. There is plenty of support from CHproducts and they advertise plenty with all the sim games, but you can still use all kinds of equal products. I wouldn't worry about this too much. |
#5
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Honestly, this is like like getting snotty at Microsoft because you can't play a game on Linux. And as for competition, what's the competition between priced and free? If a company has been making a successful product for many years, and constantly ploughing profits into improved versions then they deserve the protection that copyright and financial clout brings.
B
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#6
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Nearmiss, according to an ED representative on the DCS:BS forum, ED are negotiating an agreement with NP, to include TIR support, and allow 3DoF support for freetrack and others. Stated without euphemism, non NP head trackers are being limited to 3DoF.
Discussion of freetrack is also suppressed on that forum. If you didn't already know, the current head movement communications between TIR and games have become encrypted, which excludes other trackers. It appears that if the game programmers allow the usual open protocols to be used, NP will not allow TIR to be used with the game. If you or 1C can show me otherwise, please do. Brando, your comparison is incorrect. Each joystick manufacturer doesn't and shouldn't use different communication protocols (that's the beauty of the USB interface). Head tracking should be the same, and we would be closer to this situation if NP wasn't making deals with game makers to exclude other trackers. You know how your joystick communicates each axis's information to a sim? That's how it was* (pre NP encryption), and should be with head tracking, just with 6 axes. So it's not as if it takes extra work to make other trackers compatible, but they're working to keep other trackers out. That's my gripe, and that's why your comparison is wrong. *The Freetrack programmers were wrong to program their software to communicate with games using NP's protocol. The above is why they did it. Calculating pose from 3 points is not new, and was not NP's invention, by the way. As far as I know, the freetrack developers used their own math to work out head pose. |
#7
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You may love it, and thats your prerogative. I think you'll find things are less paranoid with the IL2, and it's developer. Nothing you could say that ED was going to do would surprise me. |
#8
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Discussion of freetrack is also suppressed on the Ubi forums, and IIRC there are others too. This happens because Natural Point asks for it. I can only hope that they don't have the same influence on 1C. Should BoB be closed to non-Natural Point head trackers, I doubt I'd buy it. |
#9
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The reason that NP encrypted the communication between device and program is that Freetrack used NP's interface and "masked" itself as TIR. Wouldn't you be p*ssed if you wrote a specialized API for your product, invested loads of money into it only to see another competitor use it (without asking, if that is the gist of the stuff I found on the Web) for its own product? I mean, really ... NP's tactics may be questionable, but Freetrack isn't without fault here, either. Had they written their own interface/API for their product I'd have agreed with you but right now, with the information I have (and I avoided both FT's site and NP's site - wouldn't get the right answers there anyway) I must say that FT's tactics aren't sacrosanct, either.
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#10
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It's more like Microsoft shipping a browser with windows and making it so that all other browsers will run poorly or not at all on windows. What they are doing is anti-competitive. You think the flight sim market would survive if joystick makers were in the business of securing agreements to make certain flight sims only work with their controllers? Natural point is way out of line. If they are afraid of competition, they should be better than the competition - not by forcing licensees to dump support for other ways of tracking head movement. |
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