Results 1 - 4 of 4
Project Persons Year Tags
Coraline Interactive Store Front (Total Immersion, Inwindow Outdoor) 2008 screen, shape recognition, video, still, multi-user, small field of view, reactive to head position, non-linear, any shopping window, ARvertising, movie, hologram, shopping window
These “Storescapes” ran for a month in fourteen locations across seven major US markets featured holographic images of ghost children. Other displays incorporated augmented reality which superimposed images onto pedestrians. Onlookers could see their reflections in a screen with animations including button eyes covering their real eyes. In other locations, there were elements that responded to human gestures such as clearing away frost to reveal parents pleading for help.
Generative Graffiti Theo Watson (Eyebeam's Graffiti Research Lab) 2006 spacial projection, lit window recognition, Maritime Hotel, generative abstract animation, multi-user, 180 large field of view, natural eye movement, non-lineair animation reacts to the lit windows in the hotel, space- specific, outdoors, hotel, generative, graffiti, projection, architecture
In collaboration with Eyebeam's Graffiti Research Lab. A particle based drawing system that spawns particles from the lit up windows of the Maritime Hotel. The particles are attracted to one another but will repel away from the non-lit windows.
Laser Tag Theo Watson (Eyebeam's Graffiti Research Lab) 2007 spacial projection, laser, hand-drawn graphic, generative abstract graphics, multi-user, 180 large field of view, natural eye movement, non-linear graphics generated by the public, anywhere, quick setup, laser, outdoors, generative, graffiti, projection, architecture
During a cold week in February, armed with several high power lasers, two hardcore projectors and a camper van, the Graffiti Research Lab and I went about turning the back of a large office building in Rotterdam into a massive laser-tagable space. Writers from all over Europe came down to have a go at writing their tags 140 feet high. Kids, old people and random members of the public all enjoyed being able to write messages on a building which could be seen across the whole city.
TINMITH Wayne Piekarski (University of South Australia) 2006 head-mounted display, gloves, Markers, pinch gloves, videofeed, generative stills, single-user, 360 large field of view, generative non-liear narrative, could be programmed anywhere, Metro, geometry, outdoor
We have written a number of applications which use Tinmith technology in order to perform outdoor augmented reality tasks. The Tinmith-Metro application is our main application, demonstrating the capture and creation of 3D geometry outdoors in real time, leveraging the user's physical presence in the world. Tinmith-Metro is also capable of easily rendering existing 3D models such as VRML, 3DS, and DXF for visualisation purposes. The true power of our software is experienced when using the 3D modelling capability to make changes in the environment, which is the most advanced of its kind available.