Thursday, November 29, 2007
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
Sunday, November 25, 2007
“Without a measureless and perpetual uncertainty, the drama of human life would be destroyed”
-Winston Churchill
don't know if the last 24 hours of work will get me anywhere!!!!!
don't know if the last 24 hours of work will get me anywhere!!!!!
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
Monday, November 12, 2007
Sunday, November 11, 2007
Saturday, November 10, 2007
Got the model Animated... IK in Blender!!!
Well I was up all night like usual... Tonight I Learned how to Animate a 3d model in blender. I'm Truly amazed!!! Free software and its producing amazing stuff. God bless everyone out there in the Open source community. Anyways I plan to combine this with blenders fluid dynamics and practice my modeling for the final cut. If there is time i would also like to learn some after effects and create a mini Sony commercial.
update: Just realized you can hear my radio playing in the background!!!
Thursday, November 8, 2007
Wednesday, November 7, 2007
Well, one late night of work and all I got was this cheesy video. I didn't do the material editor tutorial yet for yafray so this is the best quality I was able to get out of blender last night. I must say that the fluid animation might be my best tool in animating my blobject. the container properties are quite nice. I can fill an object with fluid without that object being present or represented until it has been filled with fluid.
Tuesday, November 6, 2007
Did my first array test in Blender this afternoon.
Well I'm pretty satisfied for the start. I was pretty scared upon first opening the program the layout was totally new, but I feel like I'm on my way to a decent start. Hopefully I'll be able to pull it off and have something good to show for next review. For now I'll just post my experiment.
Saturday, November 3, 2007
Swarms as particle flows in maya
I woke up late today after a great dream I had where a swarm of particles created a Virtual environment around me. So, I started playing with particle flows this morning. This is what I Have developed so far. hopefully I will be uploading something more developed by tonight.
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Ideas for a new virtual Sony Store
Virtual realms are becoming more and more real as they are integrated with our physical environment. Today, you can purchase a product online and have it show up at your door the next day. If we can begin to control both the virtual and the physical environments through each realm, each becomes more real to one another therefore blurring the real and virtual. My proposal is that in-store interactions will directly affect how products are viewed and interacted with online. The opposite will also be true. This will create a dialog between at-home shoppers and in-store shoppers where both will be aware of each others presence. The interaction and movement will be very similar to that of the Sony Rolly. Orbiting online will cause in store product to do the same. Orbiting a product in the store will cause movement online. The translation between the two will allow users to be aware of what products people are looking at online and whats being seen in-store.
This "swarm" of products has the ability to organize itself "on the fly" per user demands. Unlike traditional organization that involves hierarchies, the swarm has the ability to change its organizational structure by user preference. Organization can fluctuate between categories such as: price, latest product, most popular, product type, etc. This empowers users to quickly and efficiently navigate to the product they are looking for. Information on a currently active product is displayed along with a rotational control to see the product from all angles.
A virtual environment should be free of all gravity and notions of enclosure. There is simply no need for these things given that there are no natural elements that a user needs to be protected against. Therefore, a building doesn't need to have these performative aspects. instead, a virtual building should respond to a users needs of orientation, memory creation, and organization of information. My proposal for the Sony store is nothing more that a swarm of products that the user can interact with.
Trendy Swarm study.
From wikipedia:
Flocking is a common demonstration of emergence and emergent behavior, first simulated in 1986 by Craig Reynolds with his simulation program, Boids. It is a simulation of simple agents which are allowed to move, with basic rules governing their movement. The result is alike to a flock of birds, a school of fish, or a swarm of insects.
Basic flocking is controlled by three simple rules:
1. Separation - avoid crowding neighbors
2. Alignment - steer towards average heading of neighbors
3. Cohesion - steer towards average position of neighbors
With these three simple rules, the flock moves in an extremely realistic way, creating complex motion and interaction that would be extremely hard to create otherwise.
For further information please visit this thesis project by Calpoly alumni: German Aparicio
Sunday, October 28, 2007
Sony Rolly
I was conducting some sony product research and came across this, it's the rolly and I found the way it transforms music data into movement quite interesting and relevant in designing a sony store.
Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Guggenheim Virtual Museum Text
The Guggenheim virtual museum is a collaboration between Asymptote Architects and the Guggenheim museum organization to create a cyberspace museum. If it ever gets launched, it will be a continuously evolving project as new exhibits are brought in and old ones disappear. The project involves 3D, navigable spaces and interactive, physical spaces that can be accessed throughout the Guggenheim locations. The goal is to converge the way art is viewed through the museum locations and the cyberspace environment. Paintings and videos will be converted for display online but the most important aspect of this project is that it will exhibit projects that can only be displayed through the computer. The goal is to also inspire artist to create new forms of art; much like Frank Lloyd Wrights Guggenheim inspired a new age of artist.
The online museum is a space that is in constant flux. It morphs in accordance with the users movement from node to node. It has many metaphors that link the museum to actual space. The beginning animation looks like a representation of an atrium. The transformations are similar to what the eye would perceive if moving through a building. This creates an experience based on time and memory which is more like a real life experience. Events and exhibits are found in various areas; they are not listed or linked to. Although the ‘atrium” space does have and up and down orientation the rest of the model doesn’t. It maintains the precursors of an actual building but it removes any notion of gravity once the user actually “moves” through the museum. It provides some of the amenities found in an actual museum: special exhibits, archives, events, amenities, Cyber Theater, and shopping. The interface allows for simultaneous tasks. For example, work in an exhibit can be viewed while simultaneously participating in a lecture or watching a film.
The museum works through 3 main on screen objects. One is the morphing 3-dimensional representation of the Guggenheim. This model is designed like twisting corridors with nodes placed in various locations. As the space is navigated, this 3-d building morphs, rotates, and is reoriented on the screen. To ease the disorientation created by the buildings constant flux, a vertical bar is set in place to aid in navigating to the main areas of the building. Those main areas include the Artscape, Azone, Mediasphere, Virtual Architecture, and the GVM Archive. As it moves across the screen, like a scanner, it transforms the space it passes over to create the identity of the new space that gets “occupied.” The third element is a bar across the bottom of the screen that allows visitors to see the various states of the building at any given moment. This bottom bar is actually a table showing the angle of rotation in the x and z axis for orientation. It can be placed on the screen or hidden depending on user preference.
Asymptote designed the museum using Alias, Maya, Cosmo Worlds VRML, Photoshop, Premiere, and Flash.
The online museum is a space that is in constant flux. It morphs in accordance with the users movement from node to node. It has many metaphors that link the museum to actual space. The beginning animation looks like a representation of an atrium. The transformations are similar to what the eye would perceive if moving through a building. This creates an experience based on time and memory which is more like a real life experience. Events and exhibits are found in various areas; they are not listed or linked to. Although the ‘atrium” space does have and up and down orientation the rest of the model doesn’t. It maintains the precursors of an actual building but it removes any notion of gravity once the user actually “moves” through the museum. It provides some of the amenities found in an actual museum: special exhibits, archives, events, amenities, Cyber Theater, and shopping. The interface allows for simultaneous tasks. For example, work in an exhibit can be viewed while simultaneously participating in a lecture or watching a film.
The museum works through 3 main on screen objects. One is the morphing 3-dimensional representation of the Guggenheim. This model is designed like twisting corridors with nodes placed in various locations. As the space is navigated, this 3-d building morphs, rotates, and is reoriented on the screen. To ease the disorientation created by the buildings constant flux, a vertical bar is set in place to aid in navigating to the main areas of the building. Those main areas include the Artscape, Azone, Mediasphere, Virtual Architecture, and the GVM Archive. As it moves across the screen, like a scanner, it transforms the space it passes over to create the identity of the new space that gets “occupied.” The third element is a bar across the bottom of the screen that allows visitors to see the various states of the building at any given moment. This bottom bar is actually a table showing the angle of rotation in the x and z axis for orientation. It can be placed on the screen or hidden depending on user preference.
Asymptote designed the museum using Alias, Maya, Cosmo Worlds VRML, Photoshop, Premiere, and Flash.
Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Guggenheim Virtual Museum
Heres a video I Pulled of Asymptotes website on the GVM. I'm currently doing a case study on virtual environments and I thought this project had some provocative ideas.
Saturday, October 20, 2007
Finally the Long Awaited Video
Here is the video animation of my pattern. It involves placing bones in nodular tiles of the pattern to achieve the "rug" effect. The idea is to transform the space through the way these "rugs" fall and create partitions.
Pin Board Study
This is a study I did into scripted movement. Its the centipede game
with a few modifications to go with some programming I did, I
should have a preliminary video rendering of my 3d pattern within
the next few hours. I will edit this post soon with the rules I created. Stay Tuned...
Beta 1.01 Poster
Work Flow proGene
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