Trucinorealfeelproject10var+work Today

Surgeons practice intricate procedures (e.g., suturing fragile blood vessels, palpating tumors) with tissue‑realistic compliance, adhesion, and thermal cues. The temperature variable is critical: cancerous tissue often feels warmer due to increased vascularization—a nuance replicated by the system.

The +work suggests a focus on functionality or "getting things done."

| Feature | Traditional Haptics | TrucinoRealFeelProject10var+Work | |---------|---------------------|----------------------------------| | Number of controllable parameters | 1–3 | 10 | | Texture granularity | Pre‑baked vibration patterns | Physics‑based real‑time from 10var | | Temperature simulation | None or single‑point | Per‑taxel active heating/cooling | | Adaptive to user sensitivity | No | Yes, via +Work Orchestrator | | Latency compensation | Basic interpolation | Predictive AI with motion extrapolation | | Typical use case | Gaming rumble, simple VR | Surgical simulation, tele‑robotics, pro training | | Developer learning curve | Low | Moderate (dedicated SDK, but well documented) | | Price per unit (glove + software license) | $500–$2,000 | $8,500 enterprise, $2,900 prosumer | trucinorealfeelproject10var+work


Continuous 10‑variable output draws ~8W per glove. Solution: hot‑swappable wrist batteries (60‑min runtime) or tethered operation for extended sessions.

[Trucino Lab – Log entry #10.4]  
RealFeel Project 10 – var build 0x7F +work

Today we integrated the 10th variable: "memory texture" – a material that physically changes its microgeometry based on past interactions. The +work flag means the model is now running live on the prototype glove. Surgeons practice intricate procedures (e

Issues:

Next: reduce latency in var 4 (viscous) and document +work edge cases. Continuous 10‑variable output draws ~8W per glove

-- trucino