Individual/Gyro
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Battery Level
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Battery Health
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Charging Via
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Available
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Not Available
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Vendor
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Sensor
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Device Info
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Battery
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Display
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Memory & Storage
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Not Charging
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Not Applicable
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An accelerometer is an inertial sensor which measures the linear velocity, tilt motion and thereby the orientation of a mobile phone. It also detects the shock/vibration/shake on the device. Basically helps in tracking head movements in VR.
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The gyroscope adds an additional dimension to the orientation determined by the accelerometer by tracking rotation or twist. While accelerometer measures linear acceleration of movement, a gyroscope in the mean time measures the angular rotational velocity. Presence of a gyro is absolutely necessary for a seamless VR experience.
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Proximity sensor in a smartphone is a hardware based sensor used to determine the nearness of an object. Common uses include detecting the face and locking the screen during phone calls.
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The gravity sensor measures the acceleration effect of earth's gravity on the device enclosing the sensor. It is typically derived from the accelerometer.
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The linear acceleration measures the acceleration effect of the device movement, excluding the effect of Earth's gravity on the device. It is typically derived from the accelerometer.
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The digital compass that's usually based on a sensor called magnetometer provides mobile phones with a simple orientation in relation to the Earth's magnetic field. As a result, your phone always knows which way is North so it can auto rotate your digital maps depending on your physical orientation.
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The rotation vector is a virtual sensor in Android that depends on the accelerometer, gyroscope and magnetometer (digital compass). Using all three it helps determining the orientation while the VR content is being rendered.
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