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I don't have an iphone 6S, how accurate is it?
Now just you watch, as Apple removes JavaScript access to the 3D touch sensor data, hahaha :)
When the iPhone was launched back in 2007, there were parody videos that showed the "real" potential of iPhone e.g. using it as bathroom scale. Looks like they weren't all that wrong :)
Measurements from my device vs. Kitchen dcale: Small clementine: 48g vs 64g Apple: 78g vs 180g Pear: 125 vs 200
It is definitely more accurate than that. I made some changes to make sure it is compatible with all sensitivity settings.
Measurements from my device vs. Kitchen dcale: Small clementine: 48g vs 64g Apple: 78g vs 180g Pear: 125 vs 200
This is incredibly cool, even though I can only imagine one real-world use for it (measuring drugs).
Sort of works with my Nexus 6. The measurements aren't accurate, but there is a relative scale depending on how hard I press on the screen.
Interesting, it works on my Note 3 when I use the stylus.
Reminds me of Paul Graham's essay from 2010:

http://www.paulgraham.com/tablets.html

    Many if not most of the special-purpose objects
    around us are going to be replaced by apps running
    on tablets.

    I wouldn't be surprised if by playing some clever
    tricks with the accelerometer you could even replace
    the bathroom scale.
It's yet to be seen, how the bathroom scale will be replaced. But maybe the new touch sensitivity in phones (which PG includes in "tablets" in his essay) is one step into that direction.
Wow, pg is already at "delphi's oracle" levels already. Even banal passing comments that anybody with a minimum knowledge of technology could have formulated, are now read into like they were incredible prophecies...
Nice proof of concept, totally unreliable. It's interesting only because Apple rejected that scale app to weight stuff with a spoon, and now someone's done it on Safari. Is it from the same devs? All in all, this is just a bad gimmick, right now.