As an Assistant Professor, I'm teaching Symbian OS at the University of Applied Sciences in Hagenberg, Austria. My company "Mopius" is developing mobile software with a special focus on Symbian OS.
mopius | 26 February, 2007 11:43
As the fellow Forum Nokia Champion Arto Holopainen pointed out in his Forum Nokia Blog-posting, the 3D accelerometer in the Nokia 5500 is very useful for detecting if a person falls down. I’d like to introduce two applications that were developed in this winter semester by “Mobile Computing”-students of the University of Applied Sciences in Hagenberg, Austria. Especially the first one is a bit similar to the fall detector, but the idea is situated in an entirely different genre. Both of them show intriguing things of what the 5500 is capable of.
gBoarder

gBoarder records fascinating statistics of your snowboard-trip, like the longest jump or the number of crashes.
The idea behind this concept is that the program monitors your movements while you’re going downhill with your snowboard. After your race, gBoarder will display statistics like the number of crashes you’ve had or your longest jump. This is a quite natural usage scenario for the 5500-phone, as it’s a robust sports device.
Like the integrated pedometer-application that comes pre-installed with the device, this is an ideal program that perfectly suits the usage scenario of a mobile phone. As both the sensor and the software are integrated right on your mobile phone, you don’t need any extra equipment. Instead, you just take your mobile phone with you (as always) and it automatically records the statistics. This means that you get an added value out of your phone, with no additional effort.
Also very interesting was the development process of this project. The students recorded the values of the acceleration sensor into a text file and imported the data into a custom MatLab-program. With that, they developed patterns and solutions for recognizing certain distinct acceleration features.
gBoarder was developed by Stefan Damm and Benjamin Gmeiner. Find more information here.
carMeter

CarMeter either displays the current acceleration forces in g, or the tilt of your car.
Instead of trying to find patterns in the acceleration sensor measurements, carMeter always displays the current acceleration forces. The setting is compelling: first, put your phone into the mobile phone holder of your car. Upon start-up, the application automatically calibrates according to its 3D-position and then continuously calculates your acceleration forces and displays them in g.
This is very useful to start with, and it’s fun to see how fast you’re accelerating, breaking or turning. Even more important is the additional safety aspect. carMeter monitors the forces and an audiovisual warning will alert you when it’s getting dangerous.
A warning is also implemented for the second off-road mode, which calculates the tilt of your car. If the hill you want to drive on is too steep and the car will most likely not be able to handle it anymore (for current off-road cars, the limit is about 23°), you’ll get a warning as well.
carMeter was developed by Alexander Erifiu, Grammer Mario and Martin Legath. Read more about this project here.
I think both of these applications are great examples of the new ways an acceleration sensor can be used in mobile phones. It’s not just about entertainment, but equally useful for sports and even safety. Many other areas like music would be possible as well, with still seemingly nobody to have taken up the idea of Tommi from the S60 blogs to develop a Star Wars light saber-application.
It’s surprising that so few applications are available for the Nokia 5500. But with all those possibilities, it’d be certainly be very interesting to see this sensor integrated into other, standard smartphones, as this would surely increase the number of available applications that realize all the great ideas!
mopius | 26/02/2007, 15:49
I'm not 100% sure if I understood your question right, but here is one possible answer :)coultonp | 26/02/2007, 16:13
Andreasmopius | 26/02/2007, 18:48
Paul,super gears | 15/04/2008, 23:08
Very interesting. As far as the idea is tested in practice?
Thinking about what mobile phones can do except messaging and voice calls is one of my main interests. At the department of Mobile Computing at the University of Applied Sciences in Hagenberg (Austria), I can work on those ideas every day by collaborating with students, researching and - well - thinking.
RDF Facets:
qfnZuserE5FtagQSxaccelerationX
qfnZuserE5FtagQSxsensorX
Re: New Concepts for the Acceleration Sensor
coultonp | 26/02/2007, 14:13
We have also done some projects with the 5500 but from our perspective the data output is 3D movement of the phone relative to its xyz not acceleration. Do you apply some signal processing to this or are you using the raw data