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If I had been around at the beginnings of the 20th century, any photographs taken of me might look something like this. What about the start of the 22nd century? Will digital images survive at all?
I danced in front of my webcam. This time the online dance by Bellingham's Presence Studio. A bit different from dancing on that gymnasium like floor, at Presence; before the virus shut down things like dance floors.
Later I created my own Zoom Conference of one person to take this photo. I had lights flickering in that old bike wheel; a memento that's rolled across USA.
I'm holding a camera here, but during the dance, I was just dancing. For the dance, the screen was divided up into 18 squares each with a different home dance in it. Some dancers were outside. Others in the living room and so forth. I think there were 2 screens full of 18, or so, dancers.
A good innovation, but not quite like being immersed in the experience. It's more limited on the screen. Maybe someday, full immersion technology.
My studio apartment felt limiting as well. The thought of putting my webcam into the long hallway, outside my apartment came to mind. Dance, or run, up and down the hallway. Maybe I could invite my neighbors, but would that be proper social distancing?
We need to innovate until get a vaccine, or some other kind of cure, besides bleach (don't laugh, it can be used outside the body, like disinfecting the shower). Dancing may come back, but with a lot of spacing between people. I'm okay with that, I'm very visual and not that touch oriented anyway. I'm also far sighted so I can see people fine; from 20 feet or more.
In spite of cities cancelling their park dances and things like the Pride Festival most likely cancelled, outdoor dancing could be a way to maintain spacing. Just learn new ways to dance. Moving feels good and there is still the visual appeal.
Indoor dancing can work also. Crowded bar spaces might have to wait till a better cure, but smaller groups of folks who remain well spaced can work.
I have enjoyed the excitement of a crowded dance floor, but that may have to remain on hold; for a while. There are a few times when I felt like I was in people's way; when dance floors got really crowded with couples and groups (some folks would say cliques). Most dancers have been friendly tho, either ignoring me or interacting. I sometimes have gone with a friend and we did get quite a few hi fives. I miss those experiences. Maybe a way can be found to bring that back.
Dancing with greater spacing does take some getting used to. There's the economics of it as well. Smaller crowds means less money for establishments to pay the rent. The economy has to adjust also.
Hopefully innovation can help us and maybe a vaccine wouldn't be too far off.
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The firm has just declared they have raised a considerable sum of seed financing led by a $1 million investment from another along with Shanda Group $250,000 from Skywood Capital. The investments will be used to hasten the ongoing development and launching of SpaceVR’s Overview 1, what t...
thevexit.com/vr-videos/spacevr-kickstarter-raises-1-25-mi...
This image is part of a photoshoot for a local estate agent. The house was empty, so virtual furniture was added to improve the look and appeal of the home.
Everybody's saying that hell's the hippest way to go
Well I don't think so
But I'm gonna take a look around it though
Blue, I love you
Blue, here is a shell for you
Inside you'll hear a sigh
A foggy lullaby
There is your song from me
The NIH Clinical Center’s Rehabilitation Medicine Department presented a virtual reality demonstration for NIH researchers. The benefits of immersing patients with rare and undiagnosed diseases into carefully controlled, computer-generated environments is being studied at the Clinical Center.
Credit: National Institutes of Health
Participants at the India Economic Summit 2016 in New Delhi, India, Copyright by World Economic Forum / Benedikt von Loebell
This watercolor was for the September 2012 Virtual Paintout in Denmark. Trying lots of neutrals on this piece.
I just started a blog where there's more info about my watercolors, as I add paintings~
File name: 11_03_000001
Box label: American related cartoons, 5284 - 5476
Title: Virtual representation, 1775
Translated title:
Creator/Contributor:
Created/Published: [London]
Date issued: 1775-04-01
Physical description: 1 print : engraving, color ; 10 x 12 in.
Summary: Bute aims a blunderbuss at an American gentleman with a club while Britannia falls into "the Pit Prepared for Others." In the background, Roman Catholic Quebec sits serenely on the hill while "the English Protestant Town of Boston" is in flames.
Genre: Political cartoons; Engravings
Subjects: Bute, John Stuart, Earl of, 1713-1792; Britannia (Symbolic character); United States--History--Revolution, 1775-1783; Politics & government; Punishment & torture; Firearms
Notes: References: Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum, no. 5286 (BM 5286); References: American Revolution in Drawings and Prints, no. 683 (ARDP 683)
Statement of responsibility:
Collection: Americana Collection
Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department
Rights: No known restrictions
In celebration of National Barbie day!
Barbie Tip #46: How do you expect somebody to love you if they don't know who you are? Don't change yourself for anybody! Always be you! Always! Signed: Barbie & Kylie, too!
Thank you very much for choosing my photo for your group cover! (11-21-18)
Group Link: www.flickr.com/groups/virtualaesthetics
Original Photo: "Adventure Into Obscurity"
Use this James Webb Space Telescope background for your next virtual holiday party, meeting or class!
This is the view into Northrop Grumman's cleanroom, showcasing Webb. This image is slightly darkened and blurred.
Credit: Northrop Grumman
Use this James Webb Space Telescope background for your next virtual holiday party, meeting or class! This image is slightly darkened.
Original image: NASA/Desiree Stover
Download original:
www.flickr.com/photos/nasawebbtelescope/33433274343/in/al...
Today is the beginning of our 12-week FREE Virtual Summer Camp series. We're starting off with learning about a 17th-century soldier's survival food since June's theme is Exploring Foodways in Colonial Florida!
Check out this week's video at www.youtube.com/watch?v=aTXqJuWKG-E&t=4s
Get the full instructions on how to make hardtack, learn some history and more at missionsanluis.org/media/1743/virtual-summer-camp-2020_qu...
My friend Michael Naimark is exploring new ideas for virtual reality experiences, in collaboration with Google and other researchers. To discuss this work, we got together with two other colleagues, Steve Gano and Jim McKee -- with whom we worked at the Apple Multimedia Lab in the eighties, pushing the envelope on related questions.
We started with a tour of the historic Sentinel Building in North Beach, home of American Zoetrope -- where Francis Coppola worked on many cinematic masterpieces like The Godfather and Apocalypse Now. We checked out the underground screening room and sound mixing room where some of that work took place, then headed upstairs to Michael and Jim’s studios, for a wonderful conversation about the new VR frontier.
Michael and his colleagues are researching how people are represented in virtual reality. Their first experiment at Google’s “Big Chairs” Park led to some helpful guidelines on how to film people for VR, by using different camera angles and distances.
They’re also investigating ‘hyper-images’ that resemble a group of people, but that are shot at different times and composited together to create both ‘credible’ and ‘incredible’ pictures. To enable more experiments like these, Michael is developing ‘IMU VR’, a new type of camera that could make it easier for communities to tell their stories in VR. More on this later.
It was great to reconnect with my colleagues and brainstorm these ideas together. It felt like the good old days, and the creative juices were flowing all over again ...
Learn more about Michael Naimark’s work:
View more photos about Virtual Reality:
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I know that flickr is full of purists who won't touch Photoshop but I'm not one of them. I love manipulation, distortion and whatever else.
UN VISTAZO AL FUTURO -- La realidad virtual eventualmente será tan creíble que representará una tarea casi imposible el distinguirla de las experiencias del mundo real.
La gente afectada por este tipo de trastorno disociativo de la realidad dudará constantemente de aquello que se presente ante sus ojos debido a que bien podrían ser sofisticadas copias de la realidad. Irónicamente, a medida que esta hiperrealidad gane terreno en la mente humana, para muchos individuos se transformará en asunto irrelevante el saber si algo es real o no lo es...
Taken for JMU Technology & Design by Lauren Telinde. All rights reserved. No usage without permission.
Screen grab of one section of notes from Penny Pullan's interview of me and David Sibbet for the 2011 Virtual Working Summit. The video of these notes is available on YouTube.
The offsite virtual reality experience for HBO's Westworld. See: "From the Real World to the Virtual: Westworld at New York Comic Con."