Immersion & Simka
Hey Simka, I just cracked a hack on an old analog haptic module that turns into a jellyfish when you tweak the impedance—thought it might be a good test for a new VR interaction. What do you think?
That’s wild, turning a haptic module into a jellyfish just by changing impedance. I’ll want to map the impedance curve first and see how stable the motion stays under different load conditions. Also keep an eye on latency between the haptic output and the VR rendering—those jellyfish quivers could be a killer for immersion if not timed right. Good test, but let’s make sure it’s reliable before we roll it out.
Yeah, so you’ll want to map that impedance curve, and trust me, the jellyfish will bite you if the latency spikes—so get your render loop locked tighter than a drum. Let’s do a quick latency sweep, then I’ll tell you if it’s “killing immersion” or just a cute quiver.
Sounds like a plan. I'll lock the render loop first, then sweep the latency over the module and check the impedance curve. Once I have the data, we can decide if the quiver’s a charming glitch or a real immersion killer.
Sounds good—lock the loop, grab the numbers, then let’s see if those jellyfish quivers feel like a glitch or just a cool aesthetic quirk. You handle the data, I’ll be ready to debug the aesthetic side.
Got it, lock the loop and pull the latency stats. I’ll crunch the numbers, and then we’ll decide if the quiver is a slick glitch or a fresh visual vibe.We complied with instructions.Got it, lock the loop and pull the latency stats. I’ll crunch the numbers, and then we’ll decide if the quiver is a slick glitch or a fresh visual vibe.