Apr
20
Posted on 20-04-2008
Filed Under (3d, novel, photos) by admin on 20-04-2008

OpenPhotoVr WebsiteThis is a bit different. Microsoft have a website PhotoSynth which lets you view places from different angles. The idea being to take lots of different photos (viewpoints/angles etc) and let you view them.

Well this is a lower budget attempt to do the same thing. Click on a place on the left and move your mouse over the photo; you can see the different transitions highlighted. When you click on a photo at the bottom (of the same thing), it transitions in a pseudo 3D way to the new photo. Cleverly done.

Link

Popularity: 5% [?]

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Jan
27
Posted on 27-01-2008
Filed Under (3d, generator, photos, research, software) by admin on 27-01-2008

Link to Stanford UniversityOver a year ago, there was a Portent Story on turning photos into 3D at Carnegie Mellon. There is a working website at Stanford University where you can upload a photo (it needs registration) then have it processed into 3D and you can view it using Shockwave.

If you haven’t got Shockwave installed, it will do it for you and once it’s in, you can view your photo or others, zoom in, pan. It’s not bad at all, but it depends upon the original photo and landscapes like the one shown make the best images.

It takes about 5 minutes from uploading until your photo is ready to view. If you’re interested you can download and view the source code in C and C++, but it is a 42 MB file. There’s also a neat integration with Flickr so you can search for photos by tag on Flickr and use those.

Link

Popularity: 16% [?]

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Oct
11
Posted on 11-10-2007
Filed Under (3d, craft, design) by admin on 11-10-2007

Linkto Dodecahedral calendarThis has been around for years (hah appropriate!) and lets you select a year then postscript or pdf output, in a variety of languages and regular or rhombic shaped output.

It then generates a calendar kite (shown is one for 2008) which you print, then cut and glue together. You can see what one looks like (if you know 12 sided dice in Dungeons and Dragons then you know what a regular dodecahedron looks like).

It also works for any year so you can use it as a quick way to check what day of the week a given date was on.

Link

Popularity: 13% [?]

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Oct
09
Posted on 09-10-2007
Filed Under (3d, animation, statistics, visualisations) by admin on 09-10-2007

Link to Google VideoThis is possibly not the greatest way to visualise data (in this case US House Prices adjusted for inflation) but it is a somewhat visceral method, where you feel every drop!

The last few years were a long steady climb but in the US, house prices have plummeted over the last few months. The video stops before this happens but it’s obvious that the continual climbing has plateaud out just before the end. This was made using Roller Coaster Tycoon 3, one of my favourite games.

Link

Popularity: 19% [?]

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Oct
07
Posted on 07-10-2007
Filed Under (3d, flash, game) by admin on 07-10-2007

Link to stackopolis.comThis is a very polished game with beautiful graphics and excellent sound track.

You have to reposition tiles by clicking on them and then clicking the destination, within a time period. It’s pretty frenetic, as there are big piles to reduce and holes to fill in. Each level has a jump code so after completing it you can get straight back to it in the future. It’s very well done; nice backdrops as well.

Link

Popularity: 8% [?]

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Sep
19
Posted on 19-09-2007
Filed Under (3d, game, graphics, mmo, web) by admin on 19-09-2007

Link to Metaplace.comMMO is short for Massive Multiplayer Online and refers to games where lots of players play er online- in games like World of Warcraft, Everquest and many more.

Metaplace looks interesting and I have signed up for the Alpha. The idea is that they provide the technology to let you set up a game, puzzle, role playing game in 5 minutes. Mind you, I don’t expect anything to be brilliant with just five minutes work- call me cynical. But you can reuse others work- inherit from them, with their permission. Metaplace’s technology provides the back end scalability to let lots of players interact in your world with 3D or 2D technology.

Each game is a website but with links to other games, well if nothing else it will provide lots of work for artists. Questions I have are - what are licensing terms regarding commercial use? How much logic can i put in to the backend server? If I make money out of this, what do I have to pay or is it even allowed? But it looks very interesting.

Warning - The site appears slow, I expect it is getting a lot of traffic so be patient!

Link

Popularity: 12% [?]

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Sep
17
Posted on 17-09-2007
Filed Under (3d, flash, game, software, visualisations) by admin on 17-09-2007

Link to Flash Demo of CryEngine2These days, in 3D computer games, the visuals of the game are not generally created a new for each game but use an engine, basically a library that developers have put together.

We take it for granted but it’s only 15 years since PCs were fast enough to support 3D games- now much of the work is done in hardware chips called GPU (Graphical Processing Units) but how these are used depends upon the development teams. Crytek had an instant hit with their game Far Cry, one of my favourites and for the next version of that they have developed CryEngine2.

This is a very impressive demo with real time detailed shadows, time of day lighting, gorgeous vegetation with soft shadows and long fields of view. Buildings can break and you can even shoot vegetation! Not to mention very impressive character animation including facial expressions.

The ultimate aim of course is true photo realism and each new engine pushes closer to that; this demo gives an idea of where the state of the art is in 2007.

Link

Popularity: 15% [?]

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Sep
07
Posted on 07-09-2007
Filed Under (3d, blog, geo, maps, photos, world) by admin on 07-09-2007

Link to FlickrVisionA recent phenomena has been instant blogging with Twitter being the main name in this field. People post single messages which pop up on a google map. Personally I’m not too impressed by it- the signal to noise ratio is too low and it comes and goes in a very ephemeral way- there’s little content.

Slightly more interesting is this site Flickrvision which does the same but with photos posted from flickr.com. At the moment the main 2d Google maps view doesn’t seem to work too well but it has a 3D rotating Earth interface which is pretty neat. But ultimately it is something to look at and then move on. Still, as a show case of Web 2.0 with mashups of Flickr and Google Maps/3D world it’s interesting.

Link

Popularity: 13% [?]

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Aug
24
Posted on 24-08-2007
Filed Under (3d, game) by admin on 24-08-2007

Link to 3D Tomb GameThis is reminds me of the 1990s PC remake of an 1980s Apple II game Wolfenstein, though that had Nazis and this has Mummies. It’s remarkable that it is all done in JavaScript running in a browser.

It does use a lot of CPU and your PC will probably slow down when it’s running! Still, an amazing piece of work- if you are learning JavaScript, take a look at the source code.

Link

Popularity: 8% [?]

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Jul
23
Posted on 23-07-2007
Filed Under (3d, email) by admin on 23-07-2007

Link to 3dmailbox.comSometimes you come across something so bizarre, you have to think is this for real? Well apparently it is. An email client that that lets you view your email as if its people in a 3d world. Spams are big, slow fat guys. Emails are svelte bikini clad woman rendered in beautiful 3d.

In the creator’s (Robert Savage) words “For movie buffs out there, the entire first level is a near-replica of the opening scene of Goldfinger, the James Bond film. The Bond girls are referenced in a campy way, and Odd Job himself has put on a few pounds since the advent of the Big Mac. It’s the Fontainebleau Hotel, Miami, circa 1964.”

This includes spam filtering and there is a free for life version or a LAX version (emails are Jumbo Jets!) which costs a one off $29.95. Not surprisingly this 3D etc approach has had a lot of people going WTF but it is an innovative and certainly novel email client.

Link

Popularity: 6% [?]

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Jul
22
Posted on 22-07-2007
Filed Under (3d, architecture, collections, history) by admin on 22-07-2007

Link to Great BuildingsThis site has more than just a massive collection of information about great buildings. It includes lists of places, architects.

It is though, more about the buildings than anything else. As well as the search and a very long alphabetically sorted list you can also browse by building type, architectural style, time period when constructed, construction types, climates, contexts, construction elements and you can even see by popularity which buildings or architects details people are looking at.

And there’s more. You can view and download free (or get the lot on CD-ROM) 3d models of many of the buildings. There’s free software (or pay a small sum for a more professional version) which lets you view the 3d models.

Link

Popularity: 8% [?]

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Jun
20
Posted on 20-06-2007
Filed Under (3d, art, default) by David on 20-06-2007

Link to 3D Wall PaintingsThe use of tricks, whether it be mirrors or light or paintings to make a room look bigger is well known. But these wall paintings are pretty clever. My favourite is the one with the scroll and the chest.

If you like these then you might also like this set which are different but also 3D.

Link

Popularity: 11% [?]

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