[quote name='CoffeeEdge']Uh, no, that is exactly NOT it. You completely ignored the concept of what I was expressing.
What pisses me off, is that someone who literally did something over five years AFTER it was already
commercially available as a packaged product, got an absolutely enormous amount of recognition and acclaim, which endures to this day. He gets called the "Wiimote hacker," when he literally did nothing (in technological regards to the Wiimote itself) except
use the Wiimote for what it's already used for (aka IR tracking). He did nothing to "hack" or modify the Wiimote; all he did was use it in tandem with some demo software that he wrote, that apes an idea that was commercially introduced back in 2001.
And yes, I blame him, not the uninformed people who were, due to their ignorance of TrackIR, impressed by his non-invention; he never did ANYTHING to indicate that his demonstration was not a new concept, or based on existing ideas.
How the

you read that as me being jealous that I didn't think up perspective-correcting motion tracking a decade ago (as, make no mistake, the concept has been around even longer than that) is beyond me.
Johnny Chung Lee is a hack, and gets heaps of praise and credit for the most ridiculously no-brainer shit imaginable. He
honestly thinks that attaching some weights to a piece of pipe to make a homemade Steadicam is an invention worthy of a top-level domain. Ugh.[/QUOTE]
He got his name out there which is a good thing. Obviously, he can do his job or he wouldn't still be working for microsoft. He didn't do anything wrong, he got his foot in the door. No big deal.