View allAll Photos Tagged AugmentedReality
What determines human life and when does it begin? At fertilization as claimed by the ultra-Orthodox, at the stage of embryo, at the first fetal movement felt by the mother or at the first cry of birth? None of them (movements cannot be associated with a sign of life as a brain dead man can still move). Therefore, only consciousness can determine what is alive or mere object.
Finger Food Studios, a small and mighty tech firm based in Port Coquitlam, BC, is creating jobs and radically evolving how businesses work with mixed reality in a real-life Holodeck.
The 25,000 square foot warehouse allows holographic design engineers to converge physical and digital worlds and build life-size holograms that provide a platform to help solve their clients’ most challenging technical issues, a process that has never been done before at this scale.
Photo credit: Finger Food Studios
Learn more: news.gov.bc.ca/stories/bctech-firm-finger-food-studios-la...
Just downloaded. New iPhone app points me in the right direction of my
closest tube station. Pretty cool!
The new Yelp iPhone app has snuck in a nifty "Augmented Reality" view. This shot is taken from out of the window at Slide.
So much to learn at the 2018 Museums and the Web conference in Vancouver!
See yourself in the photo? Tag it!
Photo by Roz McNulty
VLUU L100, M100 / Samsung L100, M100
What if objects can show their metadata.
And why is metadata only useful for buying them?
Found Connections at the 2009 TV of Tomorrow Show.
by Michael Ang, Karl Channell, and Joshua Dickens
(music for video: actungfigure by logickal)
Fabrizio Angelini, AD di Demoskopea durante il suo intervento all'interno di IAR Business
Tavola Rotonda: "I fattori chiave e i trend nelle tecnologie digitali, che cambieranno il nostro modo di interagire con le persone e l'ambiente circostante"
Virtual reality and augmented reality related image. Follow us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/vrreporter
This cool outdoors art installation by artist Vishal Dar adds a virtual layer over the landscape of the Marin Headlands, by using an augmented reality app on your smartphone. As you walk around former artillery batteries overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge, the Edge of See app overlays abstract light sculptures, or “engines,” that spin, turn, and tumble in response to the environment. This experimental art installation aims to push our senses of vision, scale, motion, and time.
And it’s a fun way to go hiking in the beautiful Marin Headlands. My son Adam and I could only see the first exhibit, before a huge storm descended on us and sent us back into our car. We headed back to Project Space at Headlands, where Dar gave us an overview of the project. He had installed wooden architectural models of the batteries that also displayed his virtual art with their app. Though this art form is still in early stages of development, I expect it will provide new transformative experiences in coming years.
This augmented reality (AR) technology offers a very promising new medium for artists, with a wider palette than virtual reality (VR). Instead of limiting yourself to VR's isolating experience, you get to play in both the physical and virtual worlds, which makes for a more social and multi-layered experience. That said, this art form has not yet reached its full potential, partly because it is trying to superimpose two worlds that are very different. Can’t wait to see where it evolves in coming years. Many thanks to Adam for introducing me to this new medium!
Learn more about Edge Of See:
www.headlands.org/event/edge-of-see-twilight-engines/
Learn more about augmented reality:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augmented_reality
See more photos of our Augmented Reality expeditions:
www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157706536164215
See more photos of our other art expeditions: www.flickr.com/photos/fabola/albums/72157660492108727
VLUU L100, M100 / Samsung L100, M100
What if objects can show their metadata.
And why is metadata only useful for buying them?
Redwood Library, 29 July 2016.
File Reference: 2016-07-29-Redwood-Golduck
From the collection of Christchurch City Libraries
Photo booth application developed for Museum of Literature Kids Event. During this event we also installed a multitouch puzzle and a Kinect physics app.
Pfc. Shante Sapp, assigned to Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 35th Engineer Brigade, squats down while wearing motion-tracking equipment at Fort Leonard Wood on June 16, 2015. Soldiers used the Dismounted Soldier Training System to translate their movements into a simulated deployed environment. (U.S. Army photo by Pfc. Samantha J. Whitehead)
Fendalton Library, 19 August 2016.
File Reference: 2016-08-19-Fendalton-Screenshot-Horsea
From the collection of Christchurch City Libraries
Photo booth application developed for Museum of Literature Kids Event. During this event we also installed a multitouch puzzle and a Kinect physics app.
Photo booth application developed for Museum of Literature Kids Event. During this event we also installed a multitouch puzzle and a Kinect physics app.
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The man waiting at the lockers in the video projected on the fogscreen strikes the same pose as Andrew, his 'real' counterpart. Meanwhile Preethy is immersed in Coat Check.
Mardi 20 janvier 2015
Séance de brainstorming pour les apprentis pâtissiers impliqués dans le Parcours culturels scientifiques. Objectif : imaginer une application de réalité augmentée utile pour leur futur métier.
Crédits : Relais d'sciences/V. Klauser (2015).
This is a screen shot from an interactive webcam flash thingy that GE has made called "augmented reality". I'm very impressed how smooth the tracking is and how interactive it is. However, as Chris Mikesell points out, it is very ironic that they are promoting engery conservation by making you waste paper.