We've been excited about Bryan Singer's new webseries H+ for a while now, based on the cool premise: Tons of people get a chip called H+ implanted, which connects their brains to the Internet. And then a virus strikes, and a third of the world population dies instantly. And Angel's Alexis Denisof stars!H+ is debuting on Youtube on August 8, but Comic Con attendees will get a sneak peek on Friday — and there's already been a screening in L.A. Io9 reader (and independent filmmaker) John V. Knowles was there, and he sent us this report. Spoilers ahead...
Showing posts with label augmented-reality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label augmented-reality. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Bryan Singer’s H+
Looks pretty cool. Not having the episodes in a set order seems a little gimmicky, but still neat. [Link]
Wednesday, March 09, 2011
Turning Augmented Reality into an Open Standard
This will be big for the future. [Link]
A research team at Georgia Tech hopes to make augmented reality (AR) on smart phones more useful by developing an open standard for it.Currently, there is no standard way to create or render AR applications, which overlay information on the live video feed from a phone's camera. Companies such as Layar help app developers create AR functions, but they use proprietary technologies. That means, among other things, that different AR apps may be unable to talk to each other or share data. The Georgia Tech team hopes that its open standard, an enhancement of existing Web protocols, will yield a common way for every Web browser to store, transmit, and manipulate data for augmented reality services. If it does, you wouldn't need a separate app for each AR function on your phone—one browser could show them all."We're the only people who are trying to piggyback intimately on top of Web architecture," says Blair Macintyre, director of the Augmented Environments Lab at Georgia Tech. The standard developed by his group is known as KML/HTML Augmented Reality Mobile Architecture, or KHARMA. It combines the Keyhole Markup Language (KML) used by the Google Earth mapping program with existing HTML and a handful of other protocols invented by Macintyre's team. The group also has built a reference browser—a sample of the technology in action—called Argon.KHARMA is an evolution of the Web, rather than a wholesale invention of standards specifically designed for augmented reality. In contrast, almost all previous attempts to create a standard platform for augmented reality either in academia or commercially have been proprietary or purpose-built. This difference, argues Macintyre, could be the key to Argon and KHARMA's success. Argon is not yet open-source, but once it's stabilized, Macintyre's team will release the code base.
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