View allAll Photos Tagged AugmentedReality
It's @bonstewart's week for #change11!!!!!
These are just some very rough notes.
I insist you go read all about it here:
theory.cribchronicles.com/2012/05/06/digital-identities-s...
The live session was Wednesday May 9 at 11am. It was excellent.
You can even watch the recording. Although a lot of the fun was in the participation so I suggest you keep a pen handy and make some notes.
{Oh, and please note that BlackBoard Corroborate (and most synchronous tools) can mess with audio. So although I didn't hear it from my end LIVE on the day, the recording has added deceptive pseudo sibilant sounds to Bon's speech. Really, she does NOT have a lisp!
I do know that when bandwidth varies and this can cause a variety of voice modulations, usually it's "the chipmunk", which I find particularly entertaining.}
I really appreciate when facilitators approach "their" week early starting from prior weeks and end with a closing reflection post. Accordingly, I suggest you go read her great summary: theory.cribchronicles.com/2012/05/12/fleshing-out-the-dig...
Photo taken at the Ars Electronica Center’s VRLab.
The VRLab in the Ars Electronica Center’s Main Gallery showcases the latest VR, AR and MR technologies. In addition to applications by filmmakers and animators as well as artistic approaches, the VRLab relates the history of virtual and augmented reality’s development.
credit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl
Ars Electronica Center Linz
Ars-Electronica-Straße 1
4040 Linz
Austria
National Archives caption to original photo:
Smartly dressed couple seated on an 1886-model bicycle for two
U.S. National Archives’ Local Identifier: 77-RP-7347-4
From:: Series Raising of the U.S.S. Maine from Havana Harbor, Cuba, compiled 1911 - 1912
Created By:: War Department. Office of the Chief of Engineers. (1818 - 09/18/1947)
Production Date:1911 - 1912
Persistent URL: arcweb.archives.gov/arc/action/ExternalIdSearch?id=519711
Repository: Still Picture Records Section, National Archives at College Park (College Park, MD)
Getting close to finishing the mural.....
I recently dropped by the “Trail Blazer” mural being worked on by artist Wendy Popko. She was quite busy, since the deadline is coming to finish. We had chatted earlier about the mural, that was commissioned by the city of Sterling Heights. It will be a very unique mural using AR - Augmented Reality, that will allow you to use an app on your cellphone to watch the mural come alive with movement. It is on the Ventimiglia Italian Market wall - near 15 mile and Dodge Park Roads @wendypopko @cityofsterlingheights #muralart #wallart #ventimigliaitalianmarket @ventimigliaitalianfoodsco #olympuspenepl7 #documentyourdays #macombcounty
Sterling Heights, Michigan
Michael Maxwell, with Lockheed Martin’s augmented reality team, wears a pair of augmented reality (AR) goggles to work on the crew module for NASA’s Artemis II mission inside the high bay of the Neil Armstrong Operations and Checkout Building at the agency’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida on March 18, 2020. Orion manufacturer Lockheed Martin provided the goggles to technicians to help place tapes where components will be installed on the crew module adapter for Artemis II, the first crewed mission aboard the spacecraft. Using the AR goggles saves significant labor and time to complete tasks. Manufactured by Microsoft, the goggles, called HoloLens2, are the second version used by Lockheed. Photo credit: NASA/Kim Shiflett
To mark the 10th anniversary of the NEXTCOMIC Festival, everything at the Ars Electronica Center will revolve around interactive comics, or more precisely Augmented Reality Comics from the Meisterschule für Kommunikationsdesign Linz. With the help of a special app, visitors can use their mobile phones not only to view the real environment, but also to see added new elements.
Fotocredit: Ars Electronica / Robert Bauernhansl
State-of-the-art HoloLens® glasses are used in a plant for intermediate products at the Ludwigshafen site in order to plan and implement plant modifications in a fast and cost-efficient manner. Andreas Ernst (right), Assistant Asset Manager, and Felix Volkmann (left), Asset Manager, can see a digital 3D model of the plant in their glasses, which is superimposed on their real field of vision. This allows them to check planned modifications, such as changes to piping, directly in the plant. They can see whether all parts fit together precisely or whether they still need to be adapted. The plant for intermediate products is made up of 16 plant sections and manufactures a broad portfolio of around 50 intermediate products such as amines or diols. BASF customers need these products for applications including the production of coatings for the automotive industry, pharma or crop protection products.
The modern control station in the intermediate products plant at the Ludwigshafen site is where all information relating to the plant comes together. Using numerous screens, the plant operators control and monitor the highly complex chemical processes. On the “Collaboration Board” (right), a large touchscreen in the center of the room, the employees call up all the important information at the same time and can thus work in an effective and concentrated manner. The employees also use the “Collaboration Board” for training, as the large, interactive screen is ideal for conveying learning contents. The plant for intermediate products is made up of 16 plant sections and manufactures a broad portfolio of around 50 intermediate products such as amines or diols. BASF customers need these products for applications including the production of coatings for the automotive industry, pharma or crop protection products.