


Obscura Digital Demos "Minority Report"-Like Display 124
Barence and other readers sent along word of a demonstration by Obscura Digital of a new technology it's dubbed a multi-touch hologram — reminiscent of the display in Minority Report. The demonstration shows a man interacting with holographic images projected before him, moving them around and resizing them. It's only sort of like the Minority Report display, which used hand movements to control elements on a screen. Earlier, Obscura had demoed another take on the Spielbergian technology, a multi-touch wall.
ok, I want one (Score:2)
now please. That's one of the best displays that I've ever seen in any sci-fi movie. Even if it was just special effects, it had me drooling. That and the electric citroen DS from gattaca.
Re:ok, I want one (Score:5, Insightful)
And then you'll get sick of having arms that feel like wood. Mouse-elbow would be nothing compared to this thing.
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good point! I've recently started riding a recumbent bicycle and that's a pretty good description of what's happening to my feet. It took me a while to make the link, apparently suspending your limbs for longer periods in a horizontal position is *not* a good idea.
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Indeed. While i thought the effect was pretty in the movie, i knew from elementary school that waving my arms in circles is tiresome. There's also the virtual file cabinet from the movie Disclosure. Where Michael Douglas pulls open virtual drawers and rifles through the virtual folders. Neat to watch in a movie... terrible idea. Such a system would be no more efficient than the real thing. Technology should make things easier, not duplicate things we already (dislike) do. Computers should make file c
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And then you'll get sick of having arms that feel like wood. Mouse-elbow would be nothing compared to this thing.
Exercise never hurt anyone.
In fact... I think most of Slashdot could use a bit more.
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> Exercise never hurt anyone.
Except that guy who died while jogging.
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Jim Fixx [wikipedia.org]
Dennis Leary:
Jogged fifteen miles a day. Did a jogging book. Did a jogging video. Dropped out of a heart attack when? When he was fucking jogging, that's when! What do you wanna bet it was two smokers who found the body the next morning and went, "Hey! That's Jim Fixx, isn't it? Wow, what a fucking tragedy."
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I have something that feels like wood right now!
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Not to mention the fact that you look like a complete plank operating one too...
Oh, and the obligatory: think of the pron!
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Not really. A mouse and keyboard, the only weight you have to keep suspended is your hand. And even then, only barely so. Try holding your arms out without any weight in them for long periods of time. More than 10 minutes, even if you move them around. Just keep them up in the working position for this thing.
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Cool, but... (Score:5, Funny)
Somehow, doesn't seem as efficient as alt-tabbing.
Re:Cool, but... (Score:5, Funny)
alt-tabbing
My brain initially interpreted that as "air-tabbing" and I pictured legions of nerds engaged in some kind of fierce air-keyboarding competition.
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Or worse; "air tapping"... can you imagine all those nerds clicking with their metal-heeled shoes?
One step closer to my holographic dream (Score:2)
Someday, when holograms are commonplace, I will drive down the street, and instead of seeing my car, you will see a giant snake breathing fire on everything around me.
I applaud every bit of research and technology advancements that bring me closer to that future.
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Someday, when holograms are commonplace, I will drive down the street, and instead of seeing my car, you will see a giant snake breathing fire on everything around me.
A snake? Pfft, give me my damn holographic shark that bites by-passers. You've got 7 years.
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A snake? Pfft, give me my damn holographic shark that bites by-passers. You've got 7 years.
A shark with a fricken laser beam.
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Re:One step closer to my holographic dream (Score:5, Funny)
But not in our dreams. No sir.
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+1 Futurama Reference
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+1 Modpoints for explaining joke
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Someday, when holograms are commonplace, I will drive down the street, and instead of seeing my car, you will see a giant snake breathing fire on everything around me.
How likely is that? Once we have holographic projectors for cars, all the kids are going to default to screaming, angry penises. "Hey, that dick just cut me off!"
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Innovative (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, but can we lay it down on say, a table? [microsoft.com]
Re:Innovative (Score:5, Insightful)
You're starting to show your age... or just being an ass, the Surface is a good idea with our current technology, and will remain for quite a few years yet even if holographic stuff became popular/accessible because it doesnt interfere (think about schools and offices).
But, this is entirely different from the Surface, and I don't really mean just tech-wise, think about "there is no spoon", its almost a spiritual tool, the (possible) freedom is almost limitless in what you can do, almost as good as having your brain directly linked into the computer.
Having said that and probably some already stopped reading, depending on how (or when) portable it is, this could be a major problem, especially in the beginning with people walking around terrorizing young and/or old people, or causing traffic accidents etc "I swear Officer, there was a car there!".
There could also be problems with subliminal things, although it could be argued that its possible (and in some cases does happen) with current technology, it would be much easier and far less noticeable to embed slight alterations, and hidden messages into the the hologram/projection, I'm thinking about this in the context of later on when there might be people who have it on permanently (think of Strange Days [imdb.com]).
However, as much as I am fond of Trains, Gas Guzlers, CRT's and Physical arts, I for one welcome our new holographic overlords.
This could double (Score:4, Funny)
A few technical steps away from "Minority Report" (Score:4, Funny)
The researchers did state that their tech would need to be scaled up before it could work with straight actors.
Re:A few technical steps away from "Minority Repor (Score:1)
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Sounds great and all, but.. (Score:1)
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Hmm....
The Problem (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem with this is that your arm gets tired! The Nintendo Powerglove [youtube.com] from the 80's had this problem. A more natural interface would occasionally let you use your hands for rapid-fire intensive input or precision adjustments, but would follow your eyes and verbal instructions.
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Powerglove != Wii (Score:5, Insightful)
Using the Powerglove is not like using a Wii. Try making a fist and waving it back and forth and up and down in front of you with the back of your hand level. Try this for hours. Eventually, you wind up trying to rest your elbow on something. With the Wii, you usually make specific gestures, after which you are free to go back to a more restful position. It's more like holding a sword/racquet/frying pan. The Powerglove is more like using a giant-sized air-joystick. There is no chance for resting. The Wii is much more "natural."
If the interface in the article allows you to make momentary gestures, then it won't be tiring. If your hands are way out in front of you for hours, it will be a drag.
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I welcome our new simian overlords? Not simbian, you pervs. I can see the evolution picture now....apes to man to apes again (or at least the hunched big arm posture because of the screens, assuming proliferation in the future).
(I like parenthesis) or "quotes".
-fragbait
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Oh come ON! (Score:2)
You don't resize with your eyeballs, NOW. You're looking over someone's shoulder saying "okay, make it just a bit bigger. Okay just a smidge too big. Okay split the difference." Then you get frustrated and "grab the mouse" and do it yourself, which is when you'd do the hand gesture thing.
Meh.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Well first of all, it's shot from one angle, saw another movie like this where some random blogger (also the case here it seems) thinks its "holographic" when it is in fact a projector shooting on clear plastic.
Also it looks to me that he interacts with the system through sensors in each hand, clicking them when he wants to "grab" something - and they are poorly calibrated, quite a lot of the time the system clearly isn't responding the way he wants it to.
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And the hand positions just seem unnatural. He has his hands curled around something the entire time. Granted, some sort of pointing device isn't bad, and real buttons can be nice in that the system really knows when you pushed it and doesn
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I can do all of that now with a projector, a clear screen and a Wii.
Just have one sensor in each hand (wiimote+nunchuk) and project on a transparent screen in front of you. How is this "new" technology exactly?
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Well not exactly, you are bound to end up with a better result than the guy in the movie.
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They put it together.
The automobile is just wheels, an engine driven by expanding gases, and some seats bolted to a chassis.
I think you'd hardly argue that the concept of an automobile wasn't new when they first sold one.
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Not to sound too cynical, but the same not-quite-responding-right issues could also happen if the "holographic" images were completely prerecorded and the person merely an actor miming the corresponding hand actions (and occasionally being a little bit off in his timing).
photo collection app... (Score:3, Insightful)
Boring.
Hasn't anyone figured out a more interesting application of this "multi-touch" input form?
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Boring. Hasn't anyone figured out a more interesting application of this "multi-touch" input form?
Multi-touch.. interesting... mmmh.. is it okay if it involves the Olsen twins? :-S
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If moving, rotating, and resizing photos is your primary responsibility this technology may be useful. It is still just an extension of "touch" interfaces. I love new technology but I'd take a numerical keypad any day over a touch screen to enter my PIN at an ATM; old, reliable tech is more dependable in real-world applications than new, interesting tech.
Um, (Score:2)
So how exactly does this work? I'd hate to find out that it is just a hyped camera trick that looks awful from any other angle.
Fake? (Score:4, Informative)
From the blog comments [blogspot.com]:
This guy is not controlling anything with his hands. It's a pre-recorded sequence and he is "hand-syncing". Look closely.
Still, I'd like to know what technology they used to create the holograms... *IF* indeed they're real.
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There are technologies in the works to create a true hologram, that has actual depth and appears different from different viewing angles, but this is incredibly performance intensive and expensive.
Link please? :D
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MIT has a prototype [mit.edu].
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Get Off My Lawn! (Score:2, Interesting)
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I mean, sure, it makes posting to Slashdot kinda tricky, but [dogt-82-4yh2ht08y]0h]ef[p {A;
Obligatory... (Score:2)
Imagine the ungodly interactive porn!
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ok.. (Score:5, Insightful)
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For christ's sake, learn to f-ing swear, gawdammit.
More than that. (Score:2)
More than that, have you noticed that the primary organizational concept used for all of these "advanced" systems is the pile?
If all I wanted to do was move things from one pile to another I'd ditch the computer and go back to the piles of paper on my desk.
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This is primarily because f-ing moving/resizing/rotating actions are f-ing fundamentals of the f-ing way f-ing interfaces are currently f-ing designed. Now, for f's sake, you f-ing can't expect them to have f-ing developed f-ing applications for what is currently a f-ing theoretical method of f-ing input. This is f-ing new, after all, and no f-ing designers or f-ing coders have had a f-ing chance to work their normal f-ing magic with it yet.
However, with f-ing simple examples like these, the f-ing non-res
Presenter probly can't see the holograms directly (Score:1)
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Indeed. I've seen holograms in tech museums, but they're only viewable from one angle. And worse, they're always BEHIND the glass with the imprinted interference patterns.
I've yet to see a hologram that can be displayed in any point in space (and could be viewed from nearly all angles) with just one or two projectors. THAT would merit a Nobel Prize.
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Johnny (Score:4, Interesting)
All this is a lot like what Johnny [cmu.edu] did with the Wii-mote. He effectively turned the Wii (aka OLD technology by this point) into a tracker so he could manipulate items. He even used a screen to make images appear 3-D. In fact, his system is a lot more like Minority Report because, iirc, Cruise was touching a kind of screen, moving pictures and images across it, not hanging in mid-air.
Minority Report (Score:2, Redundant)
This had me confused for a while, since I haven't seen the Tom Cruise movie. I can recall no such thing from the 1949 short story by Theodore Sturgeon [wikipedia.org], or from the 1959 PKD short story [wikipedia.org].
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Realistically... (Score:1)
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No Privacy! (Score:1)
I saw a commercial with a girl using a holographic display and I realised that there is no privacy in it, unless she uses Public Key encryptions built in to her special glasses so only she can see the display unencrypted.
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Remember the fad of consumer-level push-to-talk features on cell phones? That feature where you could have a conversation effectively as if you were on speakerphone, anywhere you wanted to go? And the people who were (or still are) eagerly willing to do just that, blaring both sides of their conversations to anyone else within earshot?
I have this sad feeling gimmickiness will win out over privacy in the hearts and minds of people with far more money to burn than you or I.
The technology (Score:1)
This technology isn't new...
The film and video game industry have been using it forever, notice he is wearing black (in the video) and has a spotlight on him (whitening his skin). It's using the same motion capture software.
Looking at their site also shows the specialize in projection technology. Meaning there is likely a fine mesh in front of him for the projection to land upon. That doesn't seem very advanced to me.
Everyone sees gesture applications and thinks... oh thats innovative...
Predates Minority Report (Score:2, Insightful)
Although that show had its problems, especially after the 1st year, they got a lot of tech right. Mobile phone video with flexible e-paper type displays, etc.
Utterly Lame and Useless (Score:2)
Will the public ever tire of this kind of crap? I'm willing to sit with the next guy and admire some cool-looking input/manipulation device just like I'm willing to flick though the National Enquirer for laffs, but there IS a limit.
Do they think this is impressive? Do they think it has an actual use? I suppose they do, but right here, right now: this. is. shit.
Free floating display ideas (Score:1)
I've been playing around with a few ideas for a free floating display for some time, though I imagine the actual physics involved in making it work would be tricky.
My first idea was to set up a series of intersecting lasers of identical wavelengths to act as a sort of "polarizing" filter on which a third beam could be reflected off the areas in the grid where the third beam was unable to pass through. The "grid" would also be warped slightly on both the horizontal and vertical axis to allow the beams to z-s
Mod parent +1 Crackpot! (Score:1)
almost as good as the movie (Score:2)
I've been looking for something like this - I have this collection of weird, blurry nonsensical poloraids that I've been wanting to slightly change the size of, rotate, and punch around.
for the rest of you though, this technology seems to have far greater promise for gaming purposes. not sure why they didn't tailor their demo to that sort of application.
let me guess (Score:2)
I need to wear black.
Hold 'fists' all the time (unless to zoom, which will be seldom)
and work in a dark room.
All to prove that I can use all my body parts to do what? Move a freaking 2D window across the screen. Inefficiency at its best I guess?
Where do I sign up? (too cool!)
It looks very staged.... (Score:2)
This is an interesting theatrical trick, but isn't real because the guy can't actually see the images in front of him that he is supposedly manipulating. If you look carefully, the guy is looking down the whole time, at the projection scre
s/mouse/hamster (Score:4, Interesting)
Minority Report sucked. The sensitivity on that wall-sized display was set to the level where it required a Shatneresque facial tick to get anything to happen at all. Cruise was doing Swan Lake just to accomplish a simple fade. Just what we all need: a 10,000 pixel wide display with a 20dpi gesture camera.
New Event (Score:1)
Ok, let's get practical. (Score:1)
Please, sit down, calm down, and see how useless is this.
- no contact feedback (seems few things, but makes typing nearly impossible.)
- PAIN, PAAAAAIIN ! (torture, suffering, tears, suicide...)
what about longtime use ? what about using this for..let's say... 3-4 hours a day (even 1 hour !) there is no way your arms, your legs, your back can handle it. Even if you sit down the weight of your arms will hurt your back...
(no utility for any geek, any nerd, any professional any "IM-kid"... and 80% of games ma
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Instead of shit canning this, how could we fix it.
OK. It's not a hologram. It's not really multi touch, but as an interface it has potential.
A mouse is good. Why? It's usable with minimal effort. Fix the sensitivity so you don't need
to gesticulate wildly like a bonobo to effect something. A flick of the wrist or finger instead of waving the
whole arm.
Another good things about this interface is potential portability. Yes, the screen needs to be transported, but
you don't need to carry around a mouse or keyboar
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Confirming the teeth? (Score:1)