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originally posted by: jtrenthacker
Am I mistaken, or did the "hologram" of the whale only appear to those looking through their handheld devices? Didn't look like an actual hologram floating over the audience that could be seen with the naked eye. Or am I wrong?
You are correct. If you were there in the audience looking up above you, there would be no whale. It was added by CGI.
If you were lucky enough to be in the audience for Intel CEO Brian Krzanich’s keynote at CES 2014 you would have witnessed the spectacle of a gigantic whale flying over your head, a demonstration of the storytelling world ‘Leviathan,’ developed by the USC World Building Media Lab in collaboration with Intel.
“It’s a traditional cinematic experience,” she said. “But then it then transitions to an augmented reality mode, where an audience member can pick up an Ultrabook, can point it at the screen and register the marker, and once they got through their position in space then we can make the whale fly out of the traditional cinematic two dimensional screen and fly into the audience space itself.”
The “Leviathan” experience involves a core set of technologies that project the whale, the key character in the narrative on a screen. Then, through the use of either an Occulus Rift helmet, 2 in 1 device or a tablet, you are able to see the whale as if it were right in front of you.
“You have a server (computer) that’s running the whale itself, which is a very large and complex animated object flying around in an environment,” said Schlieski. “Then we use Metaio 3D Augmented Reality to scan the physical environment we are in, whether it be the auditorium or booth at CES, and then we fly the whale inside the virtual environment.”
The net effect is that it appears, if you are looking at a device like a tablet or 2 in 1, as though the whale is in the room with you. When you consider that the whale is a 1,000 feet long, in virtual reality, that sensation can shift how you feel about the intertwining of the digital and physical worlds.
originally posted by: eisegesis
a reply to: Soylent Green Is People
You are correct. If you were there in the audience looking up above you, there would be no whale. It was added by CGI.
Not exactly...
Leviathan - A Whale of a Tale
originally posted by: jtrenthacker
Am I mistaken, or did the "hologram" of the whale only appear to those looking through their handheld devices? Didn't look like an actual hologram floating over the audience that could be seen with the naked eye. Or am I wrong?
originally posted by: eisegesis
To retain the illusion, if you had an Oculus Rift headset on you would still see the stage and audience as though you weren't wearing it. Except there would be a giant whale flying around you. Nice catch and apologies.
originally posted by: eventHorizon
Why do we need all this ?
originally posted by: pheonix358
I don't think it will last long! I give holographics two decades before being reduced to a small and specialized market segment.
What is on the horizon is direct sensory input to your brain. All five sensors engaged and you will not be able to tell it from reality.
Many movies have had this theme and it is an interesting one. Yes, porn would be amazing but so to, going to work without leaving your house.
The future of humanity is either very bright or very bleak, depending on your choice to look at tech being used to benefit or enslave.
Such is our future, assuming we don't have a mass extinction event.
P