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HoloVizio 3D, Holodeck 1.0 to Some, Makes Its Debut

TaeKwonDood writes to tell us that another step towards Star Trek's Holodeck technology has been taken with the advent of HoloVizio 3D. Allowing users to see and manipulate objects in 3D without the assistance of goggles, this distributed system shows a lot of promise. "The HoloVizio is a 3-D screen that will allow designers to visualize true 3-D models of cars, engines or components. Better yet, gesture recognition means that observers can manipulate the models by waving their hands in front of the screen. The function offers enormous scope for collaboration across the globe."

5 of 127 comments (clear)

  1. Scoping Gestures. by camperdave · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The function offers enormous scope for collaboration across the globe.

    It looks like they need enormous scopes to just display the images, let alone collaberate. As for that guy "manipulating" the Rubic's cube... well, let's just say the gesture recognition needs a lot of work. It looked a lot like he was just following the movements of the cube, rather than the other way around.

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    When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
  2. Re:3d porn! WHOOO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    3d INTERACTIVE porn

  3. I'm all for 3D displays by Wavebreak · · Score: 3, Insightful

    But this article is light on the details. How does it work, what will it cost, when will it be available, is it even viable for mass production? 3D displays have been "any day now" for years, gonna need convincing to believe that this one's anything other than just another one of the numerous attempts that are hyped all over the place but never actually amount to anything.

    Hell, I'd be happy with head tracking, I mean come on, it's been demonstrated by some guy using a bloody wii remote, why can't we even get a proper working implementation of that for games and 3d modeling software and whatnot?

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    Nobody expects the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal.
  4. Re:Isn't it just a multitouch flat panel? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ...realistic animated 3-D images simultaneously to an unlimited number of freely moving viewers. I stand corrected. TFA is light on technical details, and the "more info" link seems to be the same text.
  5. Re:Isn't it just a multitouch flat panel? by somersault · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's quite weird how unenthusiastic people here are. I mean 10 years ago this would have made proper geeks cream their pants in excitement, but these days it's all about the criticism!? It's one step on the ladder to a holodeck, what's the deal with complaining all the time? You really expect us to generate the appropriate deflector and teleporter tech to do a 'real' holodeck with no intermediate steps between our current pure-2D displays? I didn't even think that we'd be able to make the type of display that is in TFA anytime soon, I'm well impressed.

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    which is totally what she said