Optical Camouflage Puts Kinect Into Stealth Mode
UgLyPuNk writes "Takayuki Fukatsu, a Japanese coder who works under the name Art & Mobile, has done a bit of trickery with Kinect and openFrameworks. The peripheral will still track your movement and position, but turns your image nearly transparent. Take a look (it's particularly obvious at about 1:30):"
The article states that he hasn't said how it is filling in the gaps, it's really easy to fill in the changes in the background with a static image and this may be how he is doing it, I could achieve the same effect with a regular webcam.
I dream of a nation where a man is not judged by his skin color but by an number assigned by a credit rating agency.
I would say it's similar to the recent hack that uses TWO kinect devices working together, but this time the programmer has used to to simulate a "predator-like" effect. I might be wrong about it, but if you watch carefully there's an obvious alignment/sync problem inside the "predator" shadow with the actual background (possible due to the image coming from a different angle).
Cheers!
http://www.engadget.com/2010/12/02/kinect-now-offers-a-stealth-mode-courtesy-of-optical-camouflage/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qhXQ_1CQjg
It's camouflaged by work's firewall :P
Griffin? Is that you?
The problem with Slashdot memes is that YOU INSENSITIVE CLOD!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPV2jmgecfU
In case you don't get it Predator . This video is not about doing the greatest CG. It's kind of obvious that the distortion was on purpose.
How do I uncompress my MD5 archive?
effectv has this effect for years. http://effectv.sourceforge.net/predator.html
no specific kinect feature needed btw
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qhXQ_1CQjg
--I thought I was wrong once, but I was mistaken.
This was something I proposed as a good use for a kinect, thinking of weekly or more-often scifi/fantasy series and children's shows with CG presenters. Production schedules are tight on those, very tight, and it could be a lot faster to have a person act the part of the desired CG character and overlay using this low-cost motion capture than to have a character animator position every joint. It's a technique already used in making movies, but kinect technology brings the cost down greatly.
looks like their site has also been well camouflaged.
Pretty simple trick. He took an image (static) of the empty scene, then he just overlays that over any part that the kinect detects is more than certain distance closer than it used to be (radar like). You can tell it's a static image because when we walks in front of the self-playing piano, the keys you see "through" him are stopped (in up position).
Really don't see *any* use to this what-so-ever. The only difference between it and a live feed is that anything "not" covered up is live (as long as it doesn't move too much).
In fact, you could achieve this EXACT same effect with a single regular webcam and dressing in all green.
..are you playing a game? Or did you just render your Xbox 360 obsolete?
He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
I salute Steve Balmer for giving us the Kinect - perhaps the greatest pr0n device ever invented. Well done, Steve!
Why make useful applications when we can make cool applications.
This is easily done with a regular webcam (apart from the extra depth-data). This story is lame, even if it were on a M$ fanboy game-blog...