View allAll Photos Tagged Visualization
VISUALIZE IT!
A. Hoffman Awning Company in Baltimore Maryland, has been designing awnings and canopies for 100 years. This is an example of a rendering shown to customers and architects as to how their awning is actually going to look on their building or house. We design awnings and canopies and serve Maryland,
Northern Virginia, Washington D.C. and Pennsylvania. (York and Lancaster Pennsylvania)
Hoffman Awning Baltimore Maryland
5113 Belair Rd.
Baltimore, Maryland 21206
410-685-5687
E-mail: info@ahoffmanawning.com
5113 Belair Rd.
Baltimore, Md. 21206
Created/submitted by: Christine Valenza
Location San Francisco Bay
Bio Archivist, Visual Thinking Specialist, Artist, Writer, World Traveller, Houseboat Dweller
Revolve's photo exhibition launch at the Halles Saint Gery in downtown Brussels on July 1, 2014. In the presence of the City of Brussels, the Brussels Environment Agency (IBGE) and REScoop.
The combination of live motion-capture, 3D stereo projection with ballet and contemporary dance transforms choreography into a spectacular 3D event. The creative team at the Deakin Motion.Lab combined the live motion-capture of performers’ movements with 3D images that extrapolated the dancers’ pathways, actions and movement. The technology behind Deakin’s Motion.Lab has many industry applications from animation to human movement, sports, and materials science but its fusion with dance provided an unforgettable audience experience.
For more information, please visit: The Deakin Motion.Lab at www.deakin.edu.au/motionlab
Storefront visualization for an installation I'm doing at Machine Project gallery in late January. I just launched an indiegogo campaign for additional funding -- please contribute if you're so inclined: igg.me/at/eyesarealwaysthere/x/9007901
Plotting the relationships between microbes as a force based graph (using traer physics). Although some types of microbes cluster together, there is a lot of gene sharing between groups. (this is the same graph as the previous picture at a different angle)
Visualizes the ironies of living in urban Manila. With limited job opportunities, many Filipinos from the rural areas migrate to the city in search for work or better opportunities in life. As the population density increases and competes with the built environment, urban structures are used for more than their intended functions.
© Dennis Rito. All Rights Reserved.
When teaching about the anatomy of the brain it works well to have a mock up. I am showing the class the left cerebrum. The model comes apart to reveal the inner sections of the brain
On August 21, 2017, the Earth will cross the shadow of the moon, creating a total solar eclipse. Eclipses happen about every six months, but this one is special. For the first time in almost 40 years, the path of the moon's shadow passes through the continental United States. via NASA ift.tt/2rRirhl
Takern whilst I was on holiday in Tenerife with my brother, on an excursion called "Teide by Night".
I'm doing pretty good. In the afternoon I drank too much coffee - now I am a little nervous and disordered.
HOLOGRAPHY - How it Works - With our visualization solutions you can produce images/ video in any sizeor shape, front or rear projected, spherical, cylindrical, conic or flat screen, from small screens to large-scale dome configurations. bit.ly/2cKiRtX
These videos were taken inside the Eluminati's immersion dome using universe visualization software.
The Physical Visualization consists of layered 2D plots, in which the x axis represents energy sources, the y axis countries and the z axis (layers) time. Each data case is represented by an engraved circle in the respective acrylic glass layer.
Alisa Singer images and imagines changes to the major Atlantic AMOC current.
I took this not very good photo of her work, hanging at Georgetown University, courtesy of their Earthcommons.
More info: library.georgetown.edu/community/exhibition/environmental...
You might be familiar with Buza's amazing twitter visualizations from a few months ago. He recently invited me to test a system he has been putting together to let anyone generate the same kind of images based on their own web data.
The system works as follows: First, the user crawls the web and prepares some data ahead of time (images, graph structures, etc). Using a python script, the user feeds the data to an OpenGL context that is running an instance of the Bullet physics engine. Live interaction with the visualized data can happen there in a manner similar to E15,. When a desired view is produced or found, the system can generate a Sunflow scene file, that can be later used to render an image similar to the one featured here.
I haven't done much, just grabbed some data I harvested a while ago from openstudio and the tiny icon factory, and threw it in there to see how it looks. I hope to help Buza tweak some bugs and reach some design decisions while experimenting with Sunflow and rendering some coolness in the process.