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Displays Graphics Software Technology

A 3-D Holographic Display 53

ZonkerWilliam sends along a link to a Wired writeup on a novel 3-D holographic display developed at USC. Be sure to watch the video at the bottom of the page. "The process is not simple but can be defined through a few key concepts: Spinning mirrors, high-speed DLP Projections, and very precise math that figures out the correct axial perspective needed for a 360-degree image (even taking into account a viewer's positioning.)"
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A 3-D Holographic Display

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  • 3D? (Score:3, Funny)

    by tom17 ( 659054 ) on Friday June 27, 2008 @01:39PM (#23970323) Homepage

    It doesn't look very 3D in the video to me!

    • Re:3D? (Score:4, Funny)

      by MiceHead ( 723398 ) * on Friday June 27, 2008 @01:41PM (#23970365) Homepage
      Me neither. Try using http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/06/27/1551232 [slashdot.org] to display the video.
      • by tom17 ( 659054 )

        Ahh yes, that's better. Thanks!

      • What's the old adage, you can give a man two eyes but you can't make him see in 3D?!?
        • Not if you were born without stereoscopic vision. I've two, perfectly functional eyes (on their own) but they don't actually work together enough to produce 3D.
          • That's interesting. I haven't ever heard of such a condition. Are you able to describe how your visual perception works, then? Do you need to keep one eye closed to get a coherent view? Or do the eyes just not provide you with a sense of depth, but still work together well enough to use them at the same time? If it's the latter, I can't begin to imagine what that would be like.
            • It's called stereoblindness, I think. One eye is dominant (my right, I think everyone has a dominant eye) and usually I don't see double. Some people get stuck seeing double, especially if they weren't born with it. I can flip between looking through both (seeing double) and looking through (mostly) my right. I still perceive stuff in my left peripheral vision, but everything in front of me is taken over by my right eye. I wear glasses whose only purpose is to bend the light to try to line it up with my won
              • Indeed, there are rather more depth cues than 'just' stereo - that only works at short range. Other cues are what happens in time, which is why this 'desktop VR' hack works so well:

                http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jd3-eiid-Uw [youtube.com]

                I haven't seen it IRL myself yet, but I sure would like to play with it. And I think that once stereo kicks in (at shorter range), it won't work anymore because you can _see_ the screen is flat.

      • Re:3D? (Score:4, Funny)

        by steveo777 ( 183629 ) on Friday June 27, 2008 @03:12PM (#23971915) Homepage Journal

        I tried the link, but all it did was lead me to this [slashdot.org] page where some jerk set up a recursive link and now I'm all out of system RAM from all the tabs...

    • by morari ( 1080535 )
      That's what I thought. Reading the article, they seem to make a big deal out of everyone in the room having the correct point of view for the object. Thus, it kind of looks more like a videogame sprite than a 3D projection.
    • Technically it's called an autostereoscopic volumetric display. There was a lot of very similar patent activity on this in the early - mid 1990's.
  • by Emb3rz ( 1210286 ) on Friday June 27, 2008 @01:42PM (#23970391) Homepage

    You can't put your hand through the image and disrupt it!

    More accurately, if you try, your hand is likely to be destroyed by the mirror spinning at very high speeds. It's sort of like a force field...

  • by DRAGONWEEZEL ( 125809 ) on Friday June 27, 2008 @01:47PM (#23970469) Homepage

    Seems not new to me, but the idea of it in greyscale might be useful in medical applications if you could take a 3d Image, and manipulate it, however, seems gimicky to me. We do pretty well w/ two monitors and a pair of butter knives.

    • Actually there are company producing spinning mirror based holographic display (called volumetric display) that are used to display medical images.

      Stereo3D [stereo3d.com] has some references to these kind of companies.

      • is defunct, and the other is blocked by websense as a "social Networking" site!

        I've no Idea how I got modded up.

        The butter knives part of that comment comes from the instructions for "Descent", where they show you how to make your monitor split the signal, and use butter knives or mirrors on each side and align them till the ships "PoP".

        It was difficult, and I could never get the butter knives to stay in the right spot for long, but the effect was cool when it worked!

  • Ten MONTHS old (Score:1, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward
    From the YouTube page (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YKCUGQ-uo8c): "Added: August 31, 2007"

    Good to see Slashdot is up to date and timely as always...

    For much more detail and higher-res video / images, go to:

    http://gl.ict.usc.edu/Research/3DDisplay/ [usc.edu]
  • I saw this in person at the 2006 SIGGRAPH convocation in Boston. While it was an interesting device, it has been around a while. The device is sensitive to distortion if the mirror is not spinning at just the right speed, if the projector is off axis or if the projector refresh timing is off. It's a neat toy, but not the way to go if you are looking for precision in graphics. Too many moving parts; too many timing issues.
  • A spinning mirror? You could use that to vaporize a human target from space.

    And the big concern with this technology is: make sure to keep your optics clean.

    This has been a public service announcement from Real Genius Consulting, Inc.

  • Little taste of 3D (Score:2, Informative)

    by Tofof ( 199751 )
    The image in the middle of the article, with two pairs of TIE fighter images side by side [wired.com] appears to actually be two stereoscopic pairs, arranged for cross-eyed viewing.

    I didn't find a caption or any other explanation, but give it a try. The video is great at showing how real the object seems from a rotational perspective, but viewing the still-frame of the TIE in 3D really drove it home for me.

    If none of that makes any sense, try google's help [google.com].
  • I remember seeing something like this on the discovery channel in the early/mid 90's. It was a helical white corkscrew that spun really fast and had lasers/projector light up a spot on the corkscrew when it reached the appropriate Y-position at constant X/Z positions to make a 3D image.
  • Yet Another Whirling Nut

    This is a swept volume display, look up volumetric displays.

    It's been done before and is certainly nothing new.

    Much as I want my R2D2/StarTrek/RedDwarf holograms it will take a leap forward in our understanding and control of photons.

    • Or perhaps just more research into atmospheric plasma like this: Three Dimensional Images in the Air [aist.go.jp], video. [youtube.com]

    • Actually it's not a swept volume display.

      They used a type of mirror, not a diffuse plane. This should allow them to display images that appear to be in front of or behind the volume described by the mirror. Unfortunately they did not demonstrate this capability.

      At first when I watched the video I thought they had managed to do not just the horizontal but the vertical axis. However I was wrong, they cheated in that they are tracking the location of the viewer to do up and down. I think with the appropria

  • This is cool, if only I had a pair of green and red (anaglyphic) glasses I could have my 3d desktop [compiz-fusion.org] cube and wobbly windows and AWN pop out of the screen at me! Now that is cool!

Math is like love -- a simple idea but it can get complicated. -- R. Drabek

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