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3-Dimensional Holographic Projector

NO WAY! writes: "Wired has a story about Dimensonal Media's demonstration of a holographic projection system at this year's Comdex. Apparently the damn thing can project 3-d videos or create a live projection of an object as it goes. This sounds unbelievable -- has anyone else heard of this? Check out the article." It does sound unbelievable, but then, so does the idea of thousands of tiny nanoprobes hidden in our food.

118 comments

  1. Re:Something's Fishy by fatphil · · Score: 1

    Please post a link inside the site - I can't do shockwave in order to get to the things you talk about. To me it's just a static page with one downloadable pdf file.

    --
    Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
  2. Holodeck by vico · · Score: 1

    Great, now I just need a few of these so I can build my own holodeck(TM).

  3. Re:is this like that coin trick by Zilch · · Score: 1

    How is the object lit but.

    I can't remember there being any holes in the mirrors or anything (but then it has been a good few years since I saw one).

    Light must light up the real object somehow.

    Zilch

  4. Re:is this like that coin trick by Ravagin · · Score: 1

    My ninth grade math teacher was fond of this. he had one with a small pig figurine, and he would amaze us with the floating pig (or flying pig; yikes, I just got that). But that depends on you looking at one of the concave mirrors. This new system seems to just generate the object in the air (using mirrors, of course). Marvelously cool.

    -J

    --

    Karma: T-rexcellent.

  5. Re:is this like that coin trick by handybundler · · Score: 1

    Srorrim emos teg uoy neht dna ~=ekoms=~ fo stol yub uoy tsrif.

    --


    a/s/l here. Sorry, adding domain tags to your s
  6. Re:Excellent Technology by Geoff · · Score: 1

    Are porn vids what made VCRs "famous"?
    Are porn sites what made the internet popular?

    Unfortunately, yes. Or at least, porn was the first commercially successful application of each of those technologies.

    I remember reading MacWorld way back when, and for a few years, every year was being proclaimed "the year of the CD-ROM." But it didn't happen. Then a CD came out called "Virtual Valerie." I recall an editorial (don't recall by whom, but it was one of the regular columnists) proclaiming that, now that there was porn, this would finally be the year of the CD-ROM.

    He was right.

    Sad, but true.

    --

    Computers are useless. They can only give you answers. -- Pablo Picasso

  7. hmm....not such new tech other than application... by elmegil · · Score: 1
    The simplest version of the technology is based on a system of mirrors and lenses. The object whose image is being projected sits inside a pedestal, which projects the object's light into space above the pedestal, where the image is reformed. The effect is as if the object itself is hovering above the pedestal's surface.

    This is the old penny pedestal trick (seen in science gadget catalogs since the 70's) taken to the next level. Certainly impressive, especially if they can do projection, but not quite as suprising as all that.

    --
    7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
  8. Re:I can't wait... by rizzo242 · · Score: 1

    ...'til I make millionz of bux0rz so I can buy one of these things. Maybe then Natalie Portman will come over. Then I'll sell her 3-D nude image to all of you other geeks for mucho $$$. I'll be richer than Gates in no time....

    Okay, let's get this right out of the way, shall we?

    Click here for a nude picture of Natalie Portman.

    Trolls...

    "Sweet creeping zombie Jesus!"

    --
    "Sweet creeping zombie Jesus!"
    -The Professor, Futurama
  9. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by SEWilco · · Score: 2
    "has your television presenter talk back to you and analyse points you made out loud."

    I've used a telephone, and video telephone technologies have been around for decades. It has been a couple of years since my last teleconference.

  10. Re:Something's Fishy - now have hard proof by effer · · Score: 1

    Because this is a mirror/optical effect, light (and subsequently shadow) will appear on the actual object.
    A simple analogy is using a periscope behind a wall. If i aim flashlght at the portion of the periscope I can see, it will also appear to you to be directly in front of you, rather than a foot or two up.

  11. This sounds familiar by MrProgrammer · · Score: 1

    I saw something like this at a science museum several years ago. The museum had a huge arcade room, which included a holographic game. The game did not require any headgear, but it displayed full color animation. Your character was a very realistic person, which you could move around with the joystick. Other character could come an attack you. It was really similar to an RPG, but it was projected in 3d.

  12. Re:i doubt it.. by Klowner · · Score: 1

    Have you never seen those little UFO shaped things that are shiney on the inside? You can drop a little toy pig inside and it appears like its standing in mid-air, its cool.. so yes its possible (and those things costs $20 at science stores)

    Klowner

  13. Actually this is rreally old. by CrazyRabbit · · Score: 1

    I went to the Ripley's Believe it or Not Museum back in 82 or 83, and they had 6 or seven of these things. I remember one display had a really vivid 3D image of a toy bicycle. The image was slightly transparent, but of good quality from any angle. Projecting these images without actually having the solid inside the projector, is another story altogether. Imagine working in CAD, without having to use viewpoint tools. Just point to an intersection or surface is space, and change properties.... O.K. I have to add the cursory "Yea, but does it run Quake!"

    --
    Monkey lover...
  14. I Saw This Technology in the 1960's !! by mrs+clear+plastic · · Score: 1
    Back in 1967, at the Museum of Science in Boston, they had an exibit that showed a bowl of coins inside a box. The exhibit encourage you to reach into the box and try to take the coins. They were not where they appeared to be.

    Inside the box (as pointed out by the poster affixed to the wall next to the box), was a series of curved mirrors. The real bowl was located elsewhere inside the box, out of reach.

    This was in the 1960's!!!

    If those guys try to patent this, I would hope that the Museum of Science would stand up and cry fowl that they had allready had this technology!

    One of the weaknesses of this technology, by the way, was that the whole game is spoiled when fingerprints started to accumulate on the mirrors themselves. The exhibit was a real headache for the musuem because the maintenance staff had to constantly reach in with Windex and clean the darn surfaces.

    I am a little suprised that this did not happen at the Comdex exhibit, unless of course, the box was kept well out of reach of the hands of the crowds looking at it. Someone standing by with a bottle of Windex would probably spoil the whole magic!

    --
    Cleara
  15. Re:Great! by Cactii · · Score: 1

    I tend to believe this is all possible. I remember going to an arcade and seeing this technology before...It was quite some time ago too, I'm talking in the early 90's. You would go up to the arcade game and your character would be a, careful here, TWO DIMENSIONAL hologram. You could walk 360 degrees around the game that was shaped much like a table and only ever see one side of your character. It was still quite impressive though. Actual location of the said video game: West Edmonton Mall Arcade in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

  16. wow! by djocyko · · Score: 1

    This is all fine and good, but the real question is, how did the rebels get the planet-moon of endor into one of these?

  17. Ohhh! Dimensional Media. by PhatKat · · Score: 1

    I thought the company's site was this page. Apparently not. I'm kind of glad I ran into it though, in a sick sort of way... but if you don't have java enabled, don't bother.

  18. Panoramtech Passive stereo projector by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Check this one out. PSP-DLP 1024

  19. Re:is this like that coin trick by DarkProphet · · Score: 1

    While I agree it sounds like an old trick, what makes that a bad thing, exactly? I mean, just because its some old magic trick (basically), is it impossible to build on those principles?

    I mean, if wierd mirror tricks do the job, maybe they aughtta find a way to make those mirror tricks work better.

    In any case, its still interesting enough to me.

    --
    What could possibly hurt the security of the American people more than giving our own government the ability to hide its
  20. star trek here we come by JesusOfNazareth · · Score: 1

    great! in a few years we'll have holodecks! then maybe we'll finally have transporters (as far as I'm concerned, transporters should already have been invented... I'm tired of travelling and having to sit around for 8 blasted hours to get to Seattle! and waiting for things to come in the mail!!!!! damnit I want transporters!!!!!!!!!!!)
    bye.

  21. Re:Star Wars anyone?? by mfnickster · · Score: 1

    > Luke: It's not impossible. I used to bull's-eye womp rats in my T-sixteen back home.
    They're not much bigger than two meters.

    Note: that's a damn big rat!

    In all seriousness, that sequence simply showed some 3D-projected images on a 2D screen. I am reminded more of the "Endor moon" sequence in ROTJ where the moon and Death Star are projected in 3D into thin air and rotated for all to see.

    That's where this idea falls flat - there is no way to draw in thin air, since photons don't interact with each other. You literally need "smoke and/or mirrors" to get this illusion. As with holograms, where you are actually looking at a piece of glass or plastic, giving the illusion of projecting an image into thin air.

    The best simulation of this that I've seen uses a spinning helical piece of translucent plastic under a dome, with a laser "drawing" on the plastic surface. Because it's spinning, it looks like the laser is drawing on air.

    Oh, and for all you hologram aficionados out there: a piece of a hologram does not contain the "whole image." It contains a portion of the interference pattern, or a range of views of the whole image. :)

    - MFN

    --
    "Slow down, Cowboy! It has been 3 years, 7 months and 26 days since you last successfully posted a comment."
  22. Re:Excellent Technology by Elendur · · Score: 1

    btw. would you even need a 3d accellerator? We wouldn't be computing 3d data to a 2d display anymore... just displaying the 3d data...

    Most likely, in the same way that we have 2d graphics cards right now. Most of us don't think about them, because almost everything these days can do everything you could possibly want in 2d. There will be a lot of effects you need to get combined to display in 3d to make it look pretty, no matter what depth the display is.

    If God wanted us to think, he would have given us brains.

  23. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by Elendur · · Score: 1

    You have missed the point, which is that lecturing in two places at once doesn't require 3d. You can do it just fine in 2d on a television. Of course, anything in 3d is much more fun that 2d.

    Also the interactivity you mention has nothing to do with whether it's 3d or 2d, but I'm sure that wasn't what you meant.

  24. Re:Excellent Technology by Stary · · Score: 1
    I doubt it... like video? no. like magazines? no.

    None of those technologies you mentioned have anything to thank to porn. They popped up, and then the porn nutheads just came and jumped onto it like leeches.

    Are porn vids what made VCRs "famous"?
    Are porn sites what made the internet popular?
    I'd answer no to those.

    --
    Tomorrow will be cancelled due to lack of interest
  25. Re:One obvious use. by cheekymonkey_68 · · Score: 1

    The closest you'll get that I know of is the 2D equivilent virtua girl.

    Where you can download animated virtual girls who strip on your desktop on demand or at vary intervals.

  26. Great Technology but there's a catch..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Look who owns the company... http://www.3dmedia.com about us->executives there's always a fucking catch..

    1. Re:Great Technology but there's a catch..... by Mawbid · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, I can totally see how the fact that an exec at this company was a chairman of the RIAA at one point constitutes a "catch".
      --

      --
      Fuck the system? Nah, you might catch something.
  27. Re:Something's Fishy by dfenstrate · · Score: 1
    --
    Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
  28. Re:Something's Fishy by vico · · Score: 1
  29. what bothers me . . . by glass_window · · Score: 2

    1) you have to have the actual object inside the device that projects it
    2) its inc. yet i cant seem to buy stock in them
    3) their site just screams "we did it! we made some awesome new technology! when its just a bunch of magician tricks with mirrors that they've been doing for some time now
    4) this statement: "To further extend the inherent advantages of 3D images, Dimensional Media(tm) can add a tactile force feedback interface to the Hypercube 3D Display(tm) This feature allows the user to not only see 3D images but to touch and feel them as though they were real objects. This quantum leap in capability can be used to . . ."

    basically you have to hold something to feel the feedback, in the medical example its a pair of forceps, wheres the "quantum leap" here? its just VR with the old volumetric display we've heard about since something like july with force-feedback forceps, nothing new to see here, just a few technologies coming together under the name "Dimensional Media(tm)" and then they boast that its "radical" and "new"

    i started out awed, but in the end i was upset at how stupid it is, they made it out to be something entirely new.

    1. Re:what bothers me . . . by iCEBaLM · · Score: 2

      1) you have to have the actual object inside the device that projects it

      No, if you read the article is says that is the SIMPLEST version, they also say they have 3D video projectors, now how are you going to show 3D holographic video with everything inside that little pedistal?

      2) its inc. yet i cant seem to buy stock in them

      Incorportated != publicly traded, as another commenter pointed out.

      3) their site just screams "we did it! we made some awesome new technology! when its just a bunch of magician tricks with mirrors that they've been doing for some time now

      3D Holographic video projectors IS an awesome new technology. Now all you have to do is make a 3D forcefeild projector and we can have holodecks...

      -- iCEBaLM

    2. Re:what bothers me . . . by AoT · · Score: 1
      you must have missed this line

      The company also demonstrated video versions of the technology, which projected video images in 3D.

      video version, meaning 3dvideo, 3d UnReal sweeeeeet

  30. Re:is this like that coin trick by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 3

    I remember seeing one of these at OMSI (Oregon Museum of Science & Industry). They used a coin or a screw or something.

    The image looked really good from certain angles (coin floating in midair), looked kind of distorted & hurt your eyes a bit (felt like they were crossing) from other angles, and if you actually looked into the hole in the top mirror, the resulting reflections REALLY hurt your eyes...

    (I saw this about 20 years ago, when I was a just a little squirt, but have some good memories of it.)

    These Dimensional Media guys are being real quiet about their technology, but from the vague details I've been able to synthesize from the various articles floating around the net, it sure sounds like they're using these kinds of optical tricks to create their "volumetric displays", although they're using larger objects than a coin and bolt, and the reviews seem to be impressed with the clarity of the objects, so they've probably improved the optics a lot somehow.

    As far as their dynamic displays were concerned, it sounded like they had a 12-plane video source which they used to create a 3D image using their optical techniques.

  31. Comdex Exhibitors' List by jdfox · · Score: 1

    Here they are:

    a href="http://myplanner.key3media.com/comdex/fall20 00/planner/ExhibitorDetail.CFM?ID=1276"& gt; http://myplanner.key3media.com/comdex/fall2000/pla nner/ExhibitorDetail.CFM?ID=1276/a&g t;

    1. Re:Comdex Exhibitors' List by jdfox · · Score: 1

      Grr. Sorry, posted as plain text. Trying again... a href="http://myplanner.key3media.com/comdex/fall20 00/planner/ExhibitorDetail.CFM?ID=1276"& gt; http://myplanner.key3media.com/comdex/fall2000/pla nner/ExhibitorDetail.CFM?ID=1276/a&g t;

    2. Re:Comdex Exhibitors' List by jdfox · · Score: 1

      Fuck it. Here it is in plain text:

      http://myplanner.key3media.com/comdex/fall2000/p lanner/ExhibitorDetail.CFM?ID=1276

  32. Old holographic video game by chrisatslashdot · · Score: 1

    I remember seeing a holographic video game in an arcade about 8 years ago. The player actually was looking at the reflection of a video image on a flat horizontal surface in front of him. The game was constructed so that you could not tell where the reflection was coming from and of course you couldn't see the CRT directly. The effect was 100% astonishing. Game control was primitive, one-dimentional (time). You pushed a button to make the cowboy shoot when an outlaw appeared.

    --


    Simple people talk of people, better people talk of events, great people talk of ideas.
  33. Re:Great! by SEWilco · · Score: 2

    First invent tractor and pusher beams.

  34. Re:Hmm... by Sourdough · · Score: 1
    I guess at a basic level they replaced the mirrored internal of the "sphere" with a complex 360 degree video screen you would have a similar effect.

    I don't think it's quite that simple. The hard problem is getting it to look different at different angles. (If you look at a video screen, it's not like looking at a mirror.)

    -John

  35. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by SEWilco · · Score: 2
    "lecturers would be able to speak from remote locations as if they were physically in the lecture theatre or could present simultaneous lectures in different locations."

    Something like television?

  36. Old news by Animats · · Score: 3
    This is just a spherical mirror illusion. You can buy a little one from Edmund Scientific. (On sale for only $29.95 this month!) Sega's "Time Traveller" and "Holosseum", arcade games of the early 1990s, used similar technology.

    Big versions of this are cool, but they're inherently big. The geometry of the thing requires a much bigger mirror than the size of the image projected.

    This has been discussed before on Slashdot. Editors, you've got to research your own backfiles more. Just because Wired doesn't know anything about technology doesn't mean Slashdot shouldn't.

    1. Re:old news by giberti · · Score: 1

      For those who are interested:

      Dimentional Media Associates is at http://www.3dmedia.com Its a flash site.
      The model M-40DV under products seems to do video.

      Hope that clears some things up.

      --

      AF-Design, web development.
  37. Snake Oil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3
    Because...

    - The demonstrations on Dimensional Media's site are Flash presentations, or computer generated simulations of their proported computer generated recreations. Why no real video of the device in action?

    - Under R&D is just more PR hype and broadcast clips from such internationally renowned scientific authorities as Fox TV and ABC News, and nothing else. The Fox clip makes no reference to Dimensional Media or visualization technology at all, but does have a couple of nice inserts from Star Wars and Robocop. Why no technical information about the device? No patents? No references to scientific papers?

    - For a person to see anything, light has to reach the eye. An object must radiate or reflect/re-radiate it. Point a flashlight away in a vacuum and you won't see the beam since the physical objects (air, dust, water vapour) necessary to re-direct the light back towards your eyes are lacking. So how does DM's device point light into mid-air and have it form an image?

    I'm not waiting for the IPO.

  38. "Thin Air"? Please. by Pentomino · · Score: 1
    There are, so far, no such things as holograms that project into thin air. They can use optical tricks to fool your eyesight into thinking that the object you're looking at is closer than it appears, but as the video proves, you can't look at it from a 90-degree angle and see it floating in the air, with other objects behind it. So the end result is the same frustrating thing about all contemporary holograms: it looks great, but only from a very narrow angle.

    This is why there's so much focus on surgery and computer-aided design, and not on entertainment. Look at www.3dmedia.com's website; all the news stories are talking about heart surgery. They're not talking about virtual lectures, where an auditorium full of students can watch a professor who isn't there. They're not talking about holographic user interfaces. And they're certainly not talking about ViRTüAL pr0n.

    In fact, neither their website, nor their people, use the term "hologram" to refer to this technology. That's because real holography is limited to those CD-colored printed holograms. Those are traditionally created in a process slightly similar to photography, and are so commonplace as to be used as counterfeit protection on credit cards and drivers licenses today. Even in the late 80's, I ate Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles cereal out of a box with a hologram printed on it. I also saw a TV news story once where they printed holograms on chocolates.

  39. heh by ShinGouki · · Score: 1

    the best part about this article isn't the unbelievable technology (altho it is really spiffy)

    it's the department it comes from...proving yet again that pr0n is the real reason for mankind's existence ;)


    -dk

    --
    -dk
    Dream with the feathers of angels stuffed beneath your head.
  40. Right. It's NOT a hologram. "done with mirrors" by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2

    Sounds like a souped up version of those mirrored sphere-ish (shaped more like two pudding dishes placed on top of each other - top one inverted) things that they sell in magic shops.

    Right.

    And it's NOT a hologram. (Take it from someone who worked under Leith.)

    A hologram is an interference pattern, in density or phase, that constructs a wavefront by diffraction. This is NOT that.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  41. Re:is this like that coin trick by kugano · · Score: 1

    This was, in my opinion, one of the coolest gadgets to be found back in my high school physics class. The device was simply two parabolic mirrors set on top of each other (one opening up and the other opening down on top of it). The light from the actual object, placed at the bottom of the device in the center of the bottom mirror, was reflected once off the top mirror and once again off the bottom mirror. This happened to align the light rays exiting the small hole at the top of the device so that your eye saw the rays to converge several inches above where the actual image was (causing it to appear to 'hover' in space.)

    The points of view where you see fuzziness are results of imperfections. Perfect parabolic mirrors are extraordinarily hard and expensive to manufacture, so these things usually use not-so-perfect flattened spherical mirrors.

    I suspect this is all their technology is doing -- they have some sort of system of mirrors that operates with a normal projector to cause the exiting light rays to appear to 'converge' from a different point in space. Still very cool, and I can't wait to try one out...!

    --
    kugano
  42. I SAW THAT! by rod · · Score: 1

    Hey, I saw the 3D on Comdex 2 days ago. It's really amazing. And look, it's not a computer effect - it's lens. They put a cilinder with lens around the monitor, and by 3 to 6 feet it looks like Obi Wan Kenoby (sic...).

    The guy in the booth showed me a real, solid state ball (a real object) showed as a hologram. Then, he put a business card over the ball and both became a hologram.

    Really good work.

  43. Excellent Technology by DaSyonic · · Score: 1

    Great technology, and it could really be a boom. VCRs, the Internet, and now this would all be a major technology thanks to porn. No doubt, if this goes mainstream, expect 90% of it to be in the adult entertainment business. Its a fact we have to live with.

    --

    Linux: Because a PC is a terrible thing to waste.
    James Brents
    1. Re:Excellent Technology by Xardion · · Score: 1

      If you really believed that, I don't think you'd be posting AC.

    2. Re:Excellent Technology by Mr+Z · · Score: 1
      Furthermore, their adoption of VHS over the superior Betamax was because VHS was _cheaper_. The reason people originally bought these VHS tapes was because there was very litle else to buy. legitimate companies imagined video to be a threat to their business. That wouldnt have been a factor for porn producers at the time (and now, for that matter) because "Fat Moe and his credit card" isnt exactly a business situation where the concerned parties need to sit on the facts pending further study.

      No, Sony wouldn't allow adult content on Betamax, plain and simple. I'm sure had Sony not placed any such restrictions on Betamax, the format would've thrived for much, much longer.

      --Joe
      --
      Program Intellivision!
    3. Re:Excellent Technology by jovlinger · · Score: 2

      It is still unclear whether it is feasable to compute holograms in real time. It might be that this system is limited to simulcasting live content only -- ie it may only be able to record and replay, not create content from scratch.

      The problem is that holograms are photographs of the interference patterns of two in-phase beams reflecting off an object. You project by illumiating the developed film with similar light.

      Now, replace the film with a ccd and the developed film with a high-resolution lcd, and we can see how to transmit them digitally.

      However, it is likely a bear of a job simluating the light rays needed to create the interference. You'd need to simulate a large subset of all the light beams in the system -- this would make ray tracing seem easy.

      So the specialised hardware you need to quickly perform these massive calculations would be completely different from your video card (indeed, are more likely to be called ASCI blue or whatever).

    4. Re:Excellent Technology by killalldash9 · · Score: 1

      Then you, sir, are an ass.

      --
      "My job is being right when other people are wrong." -- George Bernard Shaw
    5. Re:Excellent Technology by meebs · · Score: 1

      Are porn vids what made VCRs "famous"?
      Are porn sites what made the internet popular?
      I'd answer no to those.


      You would be wrong.
      We had this discussion in our History of film class. Porn has driven EVERY new technology. The first nickelodeans where nothing but softcore. Albeit, softcore back then was a bellydancer but you see the point.
      My history of film instructor got one of his first jobs at a mass vhs porn dubbing facility, back when VHS was starting to become availible. The funny thing though, is that it was also the dubbing facility for the Care Bears.
    6. Re:Excellent Technology by SergioB · · Score: 1

      I've seen movie on firms site. There are possible interactive manipulations. Even with hand, without any devices.

  44. Re:Great! by uknutter · · Score: 1

    State the nature of the medical emergency..

  45. To be fair.... by Kibo · · Score: 1
    In all fairness doesn't the article seem to imply that they can (with quality in the near term) render images?

    They even cite CAD/CAM uses. Naw, all they got is a mirror trick. They're just Edmunds Scientific for the infobaun.

    For Darwin's sake, they have a long long long way to go before they have a product that even does anything interesting, and usefulness...well that's dubious. They'll need a mess of LCD projectors, and even then the resolution of their object, which is spread over a surface area, will be questionalble.

    I'm afraid 3d TV and a Britney Spears you can almost touch is a little further off. The best canidate I've seen for that was from a EE research professor from Berkley (IIRC). She used LTZ glasses and pairs of lasers to get a "pixel" to flouresce. I really should have written something down, but it was a seminar, you don't have to take notes in those things. I anycase she had a special hunk of glass, shine 2 lasers, where they cross: a glowing monochromatic dot. She made a circle in a chunk the size of a sugar cube.

    But this is nice too.

    Phi lips 3d LCD (older but interesting)

    Science ain't for wussies.

    --
    --Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
  46. Hmm... by Zilch · · Score: 1

    Sounds like a souped up version of those mirrored sphere-ish (shaped more like two pudding dishes placed on top of each other - top one inverted) things that they sell in magic shops.

    You put a coin (or some small object) in the middle of one, and when you look at the top of the "sphere" the image of the object seems to be floating above it. (You are really looking into the small hole at the top of the sphere and seeing the real object, but your eyes are tricked, and the effect is quite real).

    I guess at a basic level they replaced the mirrored internal of the "sphere" with a complex 360 degree video screen you would have a similar effect.

    Cool. Now I want to see one.

    1. Re:Hmm... by SEWilco · · Score: 2

      Here is a link to one of those gadgets. The images of the devices at COMDEX bear a resemblance to it, except for the video screen device.

    2. Re:Hmm... by Zilch · · Score: 1

      Urr...yeah. Good point.

      Although due to the relatively small hole at the top, both of your eyes would be seeing a different part of the mirror (or screen in this case)...but that would mean that you couldn't walk around it.

      Dang. Now I need to know how it works.

      Zilch.

  47. Its used been trialled for use in Education by cheekymonkey_68 · · Score: 2

    I was at an ILT conference and someone mentioned that trials had been conducted in the US to use holographic projection to allow virtual lectures.

    The idea being that lecturers would be able to speak from remote locations as if they were physically in the lecture theatre or could present simultaneous lectures in different locations.

    Its sounds like a useful aid to distance learning in instances where a lecture is more suitable than say just using web based learning materials.

    For lectures and traditional CMC discussions it sounds ideal

    1. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by SEWilco · · Score: 2
      You're assuming a two-way 3-D link. But the article makes it sound like 3-D TV, so it's a one-way projection technology. If you want two-way to multiple locations then separate cameras will be needed at each location, and separate display screens around the lecturer, just as with TV.

      Unless, of course, it's just a direct projection system involving lenses and mirrors. Like the tabletop device that you put a coin in, and the coin seems to be resting on top of a bowl. But if the image can't be remotely transmitted then this remote lecturing can't happen.

    2. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by cheekymonkey_68 · · Score: 1

      Except the only time you normally have holograms is on television is Red Dwarf or Star Trek.

      Using it in the real world for lectures is innovative even if the audience is seeing something like television but more interactive.

      You missed the point...
      - have youseen many holographic newsreaders lately (max headroom excluded)
      - has your television presenter talk back to you and analyse points you made out loud.

      ...its television but not as you know it Jim

    3. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by King+of+the+World · · Score: 1

      Question time... it's all about question time.

    4. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by cheekymonkey_68 · · Score: 2

      I've used a telephone

      How quaint to find someone still uses a landline...

      Teleconferencing has been around for years and the only people who seriously use it in education are the University's Directors.

      Even something as primitive as First Class makes a better communication medium than a videophone.

      Videophones were just a big con instigated by the phone companies to wring some more profits out of their land lines before they go the way of the dinosaur

    5. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
      The idea being that lecturers would be able to speak from remote locations as if they were physically in the lecture theatre or could present simultaneous lectures in different locations.

      But that means you would be in several places at once... wouldn't that be a little disorienting? Has anybody tried being in several places at once yet? How does it look? Do the visual images overlap?

    6. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
      In the Museum of Film and Photography in Bradford, UK, there's a videoconferencing system set up either end of a room. There's a bed in each cubicle, with a video projector above it. You lie down on the bed, and the other person is projected next to you. A random background picture is keyed underneath - grass, water etc. - and the bedsheet is white so it shows up nicely.

      The whole effect is surprisingly realistic, partailly I think because we're so used to seeing 3-D images projected 2-D in any case, and also because of the subdued lighting.

      Much better than "face-to-face" conferencing.

    7. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by Ghornet42 · · Score: 1

      Why would you limit yourselves to just having these 3d projections in lecture rooms, why not put these displays in every house, you could take a physics class from a harvard professor in the comfort of your own home, or learn cooking tips from Marth Stewart, these things could be programmed for interactivity by providing awnsers to questions that were posed. We could all have our own pesonal 3d teaching machine.

    8. Re:Its used been trialled for use in Education by cheekymonkey_68 · · Score: 1

      But that means you would be in several places at once... wouldn't that be a little disorienting

      Yes you would in effect be in several places at once.

      I would have thought it could be disorientating when you get students in two locations wanting to ask questions at the same time.

      You would have to have some way of each group at least hearing the questions posed by the other, if not actually visualising the other lectures.

  48. I love 3d by Our_Lord · · Score: 1

    I have an Elsa Erazor 2 graphics card on my PC which comes with some dodgy glasses that make the screen look 3D. But they make you look like a complete idiot when you wear them. Maybe this holographic projection could save me from an attack by the fashion police?!?

  49. Re:is this like that coin trick by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 2

    Using the trick isn't bad (I'm all for using "old" technology that still blows people's socks off :), but hiding the technology, hyping it up as something incredibly new & sophisticated (and, if some of the news reports can be believed, filing patents based on the technology), that's kind of annoying.

    That doesn't mean that I wouldn't enjoy seeing a bunch of these displays in the local grocery store. The technology may be old, but I still enjoyed the effect.

  50. So much for my 24" Sony widescreen monitor... sigh by WarSpiteX · · Score: 1

    $2500 down the drain. ;) (I wish :)

    I remember the days when monitors were the constant in computer evolution. You'd buy a monitor for $500 and 3 years later it'd be worth $350. As compared to any other computer part which would be worth $50.

    Now? Jeez.

    Anyway, I can imagine some crazy uses for this. MRIs come to mind first. Or even using it to display the internals of a human being where a surgeon can get a good look before meddling around.

    I wonder when the first giant-floating-head image of the Emperor from SW will show up :D

    --


    I'm a little segfault, short and stout.
  51. Re:i doubt it.. by bradfitz · · Score: 4

    Dimensional Media
    22 W. 19th St., 2nd Fl.
    New York, NY 10011 USA
    http://www.3dmedia.com/ phone: 212-620-4100
    e-mail: info@3dmedia.com

  52. Re:I can't wait... by the+real+jeezus · · Score: 1
    Great. What a tease. Looks like taco forgot to do:
    chmod 0644 natalie_portman.jpg

    What's a perv to do???



    In 1999, marijuana killed 0 Americans...
    --

    Ewige Blumenkraft!
  53. i doubt it.. by crazney · · Score: 1
    I really think such a thing is possible.. feel free to prove me wrong, but i'd like to see some hard proof (eg pictures, it touring the world) before i believe it... The article doesnt even give the company's web page, which im sure they would have
    David.

    "Who is General Failure and why is he reading my hard disk ?"

    --
    stuff
    1. Re:i doubt it.. by Grab · · Score: 2

      Yeah, this is _seriously_ old news on the display front. Whilst it's a funky trick, the optics are nothing new. It doesn't even look like they've improved it from the basic "hovering coin" trick costing $1 in a toy shop - the object being projected is just concealed in the base. The buttons that you press will actually exist, full-size, in the base.

      If they ever got this to work with electronic displays then I'd be impressed. But as it is, all they've done is taken a very old bit of optics and added a laser grid to detect your finger breaking a beam. If you've never seen this done b4, you'll think it's impressive. But if you've ever been to a school science display, chances are you've seen this.

      So you're not going to have a true 3-D display anytime soon. What they're demonstrating has no use at all for displaying from a computer, since all it can do is project an image of an existing solid object. Sorry.

      Grab.

  54. Not THAT Unbelievable by LHOOQtius_ov_Borg · · Score: 2

    What will set Dimensional Media, and a company in Norway which I know the founder of that is working on a similar but improved project, apart is whether or not they can make these things robust, stable, cheap, and popular enough for them to take off. Integration with an IR grid for detection of objects (like fingers) entering the area for 3D UI's is, however, a pretty nice addition...

    Other companies have tried mirror-and-lens based holographic projectors before - I've even played a video game console, in an arcade, which used a similar system - though it only supported 180 degrees of viewpoint (the article says the DM system supports "full look around" which I will consider a claim that it does 360 degree views)

    Their plans to use this with NMR data and, particularly medical, volumetric rendering data is a good plan. I want to be able to go to a doctor's and watch my brain fully modeled in 3D, with real-time display of neural activity... can I bring popcorn? ;-)

    It's not that unbelievable, but if the resolution is as good as they claim, and it finally takes off commercially, then there are a lot of cool medical, 3D user interface, gaming, and, of course, military applications (hey, have the autonomous helicopter robot mentioned today send back 3D projections of the disaster / battle site to its home base...)

    --
    o/~ we are pissed, we are pissed, we have to resist... o/~ - ec8or
    1. Re:Not THAT Unbelievable by FreeMath · · Score: 1
      I'm gonna wait until I can play Quake with it.

      Also, How computationally intensive is it.

      --
      This sig intentionally left blank.
    2. Re:Not THAT Unbelievable by atrowe · · Score: 1

      I remember that. Time Traveller or Time Cop I believe it was called. If I recall though, the Sega arcade game was about the size of a small car. It was also very loud. It sounded like there was an internal combustion generator or an air compressor inside. I hope these problems have been solved in the new version.

      --

      -atrowe: Card-carrying Mensa member. I have no toleranse for stupidity.

  55. Can this thing do animation? by MN+Karthik · · Score: 1

    Wow! The technology sounds great. But can this do any animation? The article only talks of static objects, does this technology do any movement, simulate shadows, etc (I mean, a 3d raycaster for 3d!). Any idea? "....I said Innovate, not imitate!"

    --

    "...I said Innovate, not imitate!!!"
    1. Re:Can this thing do animation? by bomek · · Score: 1

      "The company also demonstrated video versions of the technology, which projected video images in 3D."

      nuff said

  56. Re:Great! by tang · · Score: 1

    It was Sega's Hologram Time Traveler. The interesting thing is that there is going to be a home version soon. Well, according to this webpage:
    http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/001017/digital_le.html
    excerpts from page for the lazy:
    "Oct. 17, 2000--Revolutionary hologram technology made Hologram Time Traveler an instant hit in the arcades in 1991 and now Digital Leisure has brought the 3D experience to your home computer or DVD movie player for the first time ever"

    Oh yeah, the company putting this out is at:
    http://www.digitalleisure.com/

    and

    "To maintain this hologram feel, Digital Leisure is including free 3D glasses with its CD-ROM, DVD-ROM and DVD-Video versions. A 2D version is included on the same disc that may be played without the 3D glasses"

  57. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  58. Elvis by theroge · · Score: 1

    I remember seeing a show a (not so long) while ago with Elvis also there, projected as a hologram. So, is this technology something new or did it already exist? Might this be a totally different product?

  59. Check this out! by Deosyne · · Score: 2

    Cruise over to Dimensional Media's website and check out the HyperCube 3D monitor in the R&D tab (no pics, unfortunately). The best quote from the description: "can add a tactile force feedback interface." You will actually be able to roughly feel the object as well! The applications for this kind of tech are endless, from surgery to 3D modeling to CAD to entertainment (gotta feed the pornhounds), etc. I'd say this isn't even possible yet, except for the fact that hundreds have seen it in person at Comdex. Love to know what their products go for, even though I'll never actually be able to afford them. I just can't help but imagine what computing will be like in 20 years (maybe even sooner!) when these babies are commonplace and operating systems are designed in 3D; you'll grab a file and drop it in a folder, literally! :)

    Deo

  60. Re:Something's Fishy by Accipiter · · Score: 5
    You know, it might be prudent for you to completely understand the technology before posting something like this.

    Funny thing is, it looks like somebody took a Volkswagen Passat toy and mounted it on a motor shaft. If you pause the video about 1/8 of the way through the movie, you can see the support holding the "hologram" up.

    Again, you need to understand how the technology works. The real Passat toy *is* being held up by the motor shaft. However, the real car is INSIDE the machine, and the mirrors are projecting it's image to where the people are watching. You seem to think this is a computer generated image. This isn't Star Trek. It's a real object being projected a few feet away. Do you expect the real Car toy to be suspended in midair? Something has to hold it up.

    Also, look at the car about 3/5 of the way through the video when then spokesman is supposed to be waving his hands through the car. He is actually casting a shadow on the car, which again leads one to believe there's something funny going on here.

    Take a closer look. Yes, he is casting a shadow on the car. The lights above are also reflecting off the car. The car itself casts a shadow. Why? Because the *real* car is in full view of the lights! If you look at his shadow when it passes over the car, it doesn't line up. His fingers appear in the middle of where his palm should be, etc.

    Kind of hard to believe that Wired would be duped by something like this.

    Wired wasn't "duped" by "this". They were at Comdex. They saw the machine in person. They didn't watch a video and write an entire article on it. *CLUE*


    -- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?

    --

    -- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
    (If you can't figure out how to E-Mail me, Don't. :P)

  61. Star Wars anyone?? by noz · · Score: 1

    They already have developed this sort technology; a long time ago in a galexy far, far away...

    Dodonna > Only a precise hit will set up a chain reaction. The shaft is ray-shielded, so you'll have to use proton torpedoes.

    Wedge > That's impossible, even for a computer.

    Luke > It's not impossible. I used to bull's-eye womp rats in my T-sixteen back home. They're not much bigger than two meters.

    Dodonna > Man your ships! And may the Force be with you!

  62. Re:Something's Fishy - now have hard proof by fatphil · · Score: 2

    OK, I couldn't see the support clearly. However, what I did see was not just the shadows, but the shadows moving _in the opposite direction_ to the hand moving. That means that the shadows are falling onto something solid, and that the image we are seeing is the virtual image of that solid thing. _Exactly_ like those coin/mirror things in magic shops.
    Their own video has convinced me of its fakeness.
    I guess all that they really want is funding, and then they'll do a runner with the money...

    Yes I'm a fscking cynic.

    FatPhil

    --
    Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
  63. Time traveler! by PenguiN42 · · Score: 1
    I loved that game!

    http://www.atarihq.com/coinop s/l aser/timetrav.html

    -------------
    The following sentence is true.

    --
    The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
  64. Re:Something's Fishy (A Clarification) by Automator · · Score: 1

    Just wated clarify on someting from my original post:

    Kind of hard to believe that Wired would be duped by something like this.

    ... can be taken two different ways. What I meant to imply is that I don't think Wired is easily duped, hence they probably saw the real deal at Comdex (as opposed to what looks like a mock-up), not that they were duped.

    I just figured I'd clear that up before I get more flames. (Thanks, Accipiter)

  65. Re:Can't read by PenguiN42 · · Score: 1

    - click on "visualizing" and "videos". There, there's some videos

    - It doesn't project in "thin air", it uses mirrors to create a projected image of a real object or tv screen.

    - under R&D they're working on a computer monitor that displayes animated 3d images, and some crude tactile feedback

    -------------
    The following sentence is true.

    --
    The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
  66. It think it�s good... by Lispy · · Score: 1

    ...that they are using an (old-fashioned) optical technology rather than something extremly high-tech. It could make these things a little more affordable and less vulnerable. Lispy

  67. degrees of 3D by peter303 · · Score: 2

    Certainly this technique frees you from viewing
    an image depicted on a flat window or screen. However a better form of 3D shows different views from different viewpoints, i.e. objects behind obscuring objects. Holograms and fresnel displays have this latter property.

    Nothing precludes one of these screenless displays updated dynamically depending on the position of the viewer.

  68. I'm not impressed by hlh_nospam · · Score: 1

    It's all done with mirrors and tiny wires.

  69. Validity of product by Tsujigiri · · Score: 1

    To all those people who are saying this is fake, or just another object projector, go to the company's site (http://www.3dmedia.com/) go to "visualizing" then "vidios" then "Virtual Touch". The operator there is interacting with a 3d image.

    --

    "I'll take the red pill. No! Blue! AAAaaaahhhhhhhhh"
    - Monty Python meets the Matrix

  70. Re:read the article! by MN+Karthik · · Score: 1

    "The company also demonstrated video versions of the technology, which projected video images in 3D. " Images as far as I know are static entities, and clips/animations are those which move! So what is a video image? It could also be that these guys projected parts of videos, each as images. That's what I wanted to know.

    --

    "...I said Innovate, not imitate!!!"
  71. The Catch by GSearle · · Score: 1

    Light can't bend. The entire 3-D image must have the device's aperture in back of it to be visible from any viewpoint. If any point of the image moves beyond the aperture frame, it will be cut off by the frame. This is a very disconcerting effect, since the frame seems to be in back of the image, yet the image is being cut off by that frame.

    You are really looking at something inside the device, but the optics trick your eyes into seeing it outside. You can only see those parts of the object that are visible through the aperature frame.

    This is a dual-concave-mirror system that projects a "virtual image" above the opening of the device. You can only see parts of the object that have a direct line-of-sight to the exposed area of the device's aperture. The image of the object is really reflected light coming from the mirrors within the device, so if you can't see the mirror, you can't see the object.

    This restricts the device to showing objects just above its surface, and restricting the viewing angle so the object isn't cut off by the frame. The optics require that the device be a lot larger than the image displayed. It's a neat effect, but we don't have true "Star Wars" type holograms yet.

  72. Isn't it a wow? by ishrat · · Score: 1

    Perhaps investors have just found something new. Imagine what all can be done if customers of various products could be made to see those images any and everywhere. This could provide the solution to the lack of interest in internet buying because the customer is put off with "can't see for real" attitude. Maybe that will take some time but certain industries could make immediate use of this. Like the housing and interiors industry.

    --

    There's always sufficient, but not always at the right place nor for the right folks.

  73. Something's Fishy by Automator · · Score: 1

    If you go to Dimensional Media's (http://www.3dmedia.com) and follow the links to the Visualizing page, you can actually see a "demo" of the M360 in streaming video. Funny thing is, it looks like somebody took a Volkswagen Passat toy and mounted it on a motor shaft. If you pause the video about 1/8 of the way through the movie, you can see the support holding the "hologram" up. Also, look at the car about 3/5 of the way through the video when then spokesman is supposed to be waving his hands through the car. He is actually casting a shadow on the car, which again leads one to believe there's something funny going on here. Kind of hard to believe that Wired would be duped by something like this. It's possible that video might be an old mock-up, but it still makes you wonder.

  74. Optical Tech by cr0sh · · Score: 2

    As noted, the 360 device appears to use the "dual parabolic mirror" trick, to display the virtual image.

    The other devices, though (based on the models shown in the flash anims), seem to use something different.

    What that could be is up to speculation - but I think they may use some form of either a parabolic lens trick (I remember a simple spring/shake hands with yourself display @ the Exploritorium in SF), or possibly using a fresnel lens.

    Sometimes, when you look at a fresnel lens at an angle, objects can appear to "float" above it. I wish I had one of my page magnifiers handy, I would play with it - to see if I could recreate the effect.

    I would imaging one of those, plus a small 14-15 inch monitor housed appropriately, could generate the effect...

    I support the EFF - do you?

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  75. hmm hoax? by sluggie · · Score: 1

    Can anyone tell me why Dimensonal Media is not on the comdex's exhibitors lists? Their website is not working (www.dimensionalmedia.com is under construction).
    I never trust articles without pictures, links or anything that makes them different from a commercial presentation...

    1. Re:hmm hoax? by glass_window · · Score: 1

      you want to point your browser to www.3dmedia.com

  76. L2526 by Zilch · · Score: 1

    ...at least that is what it says on their website.

    Zilch

  77. is this like that coin trick by lythari · · Score: 2
    OK, it's not really a trick, I've seen it in the shops before. You have a object shaped something like this

    ___________
    /___________\
    \___________/
    inside it is a coin and the inside surface is a mirror. There is a lense at the top and when you look at it from a certain angle, it looks like the coin is on top of the thing and not inside it. Sound familiar? Anybody know how these things work?

    1. Re:is this like that coin trick by HiThere · · Score: 1

      Oh. I thought that they were synthesizing the image somehow. If I'm reading you correctly though, it sound like the object has to be present in the room where it is being projected. That's nowhere near as useful.

      Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.

      --

      I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
    2. Re:is this like that coin trick by Zilch · · Score: 1

      Ahh. Cunning. That explains the hand in the video casting shaddows etc that some people have noticed.

      Zilch

    3. Re:is this like that coin trick by Zilch · · Score: 1

      It's all done with smoke and mirrors.
      (Well mirrors anyway)

      See my post above.

      Zilch.

  78. I was there by landtuna · · Score: 1

    I looked at it with some of my co-workers. It's the same device that you see making a 3D image of a penny in places like the Nature Store. (The guy working the booth even admitted it was similar technology.)

    It's just a really perfectly curved mirror inside a device that looks like a UFO. You put the object down in the device, and each of your eyes sees a different reflection of it.

    For real objects, then, it's not that impressive. For animation on the other hand, I couldn't quite see how it worked. It might not have been true 3D (i.e., both of your eyes saw the same image).

  79. Inc. != Publicly Traded Company by JiveDonut · · Score: 1

    Just because a company is incorporated (Inc.) does not mean it is publicly traded.

  80. 3D Hologram - I saw it at Comdex by jammcq · · Score: 1

    I was at Comdex last week and I saw the exhibit. I must say that I was impressed. They had several objects floating out in mid-air and it really looked good if you stood in the right spot.
    This reminded me of a talk I heard by Bill Joy of Sun about 15 years ago at Uniforum in Toronto, where he described that someday, we would be able to sit in our living rooms and watch a 3D football game taking place on the coffee table. You would be able to walk around the table and see the game from any angle. It's still a long way off, but never say never!

  81. Re:It gets worse by atrowe · · Score: 1

    At least with the tactile force feedback, you'll be able to reach in there and strangle that bastard.

    --

    -atrowe: Card-carrying Mensa member. I have no toleranse for stupidity.

  82. I can't wait... by the+real+jeezus · · Score: 1

    ...'til I make millionz of bux0rz so I can buy one of these things. Maybe then Natalie Portman will come over. Then I'll sell her 3-D nude image to all of you other geeks for mucho $$$. I'll be richer than Gates in no time....

    In 1999, marijuana killed 0 Americans...

    --

    Ewige Blumenkraft!
  83. Old trick by kubalaa · · Score: 1
    I might be mistaken about how this actually works, but this looks to me very similar to a toy that's been selling as long as I can remember for about $20.

    Can anyone comment; how is this fundamentally different?

    --

    "If you look 'round the table and can't tell who the sucker is, it's you." -- Quiz Show

  84. I think this has little to do with mirrors... by merkur · · Score: 1
    ...at least in the sense of what most preceding comments talk about. There's a technology(I remember already in the 80's) made with laser interference for displaying images of steady objects in empty air. No shields, screens, smoke, etc. It's a somewhat known optical (laser) phenomenon.

    Try, for example, www.holoworld.com/holo/demo1.html

    Their achievement would be in full motion and in computer generated images, probably.

    --
    ------ merkur (4T] berlin . c0m
  85. Opps...L6526 by Zilch · · Score: 1

    Make that L6526 (can't type)

    Zilch.

    (Damn 60 second posting delay...)
    (Dum...dee...dum...)

  86. Anyone remember the coin illusion? by fatphil · · Score: 1

    I remember, ~20 years ago or more, seeing a pair of facing concave mirrors, the downward facing one of which was annular and a coin sat at the bottom of the lower one. The mirror pair created a virtual image of the coin _above_ the device.

    Do a few search/replaces, and the story seems remarkably similar.

    FP

    --
    Also FatPhil on SoylentNews, id 863
  87. Sounds like a not-very-new Optics technique by waimate · · Score: 1
    I saw a similar thing a number of years ago (at Comdex, as it happens) - absolutely uncanny 3d objects. The mechanism for the projection was optics, and this sounds very much the same.

    IOW, yes, it is just a more sophisticated version of the coin trick. It looks fabulous, but it has little significance for arbitrary synthetically generated animations.

  88. One obvious use. by dfenstrate · · Score: 1
    So does this mean that I can get streaming 3D porno? I can actually have this woman doing a strip-tease on my desk, and I won't have to put a $5 down! Woo-hoo!

    And I've got just as much of a chance with a Hologram as I do with a real stripper, so nothing lost!

    --
    Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.