Archive for the 'visualization' Category
Monday, July 31st, 2006
From July 19 to 21 the annual conference “New Media and Technologies of the IT Society” (“Neue Medien und Technologien der Informationsgesellschaft”) took place under the title “Film, Computer and TV”. (more…)
posted by nad | 3d, animation, art and design, berlin, communication, Film, games, perception, software, visualization | 2 Comments »
Tuesday, July 11th, 2006
Yes we did it: Finally there is a public jReality release (BSD license). jReality is a 3d graphics library written in Java. It is developed at TU Berlin, University of Munich and Citty College New York at the moment. it has already been used in several of our daytar projects like seidesein, ADDeye, or vitruman.
posted by timh | 3d, animation, art and design, math, visualization | 1 Comment »
Saturday, July 8th, 2006
In the blog post “LaTeX and Metafont” two projects which massively scan in books were mentioned. Another mentionable project is the Gutenberg project. Here one can find e.g. the book of (more…)
posted by nad | 3d, art and design, math, perception, physics, visualization | 1 Comment »
Tuesday, July 4th, 2006
subsequent entry made on Sept 17, 08: title of artwork: “guck es mit blumen bevor sie durchsagen”, artist: Einar Fälltig
…because it’s summer in Berlin!
I am not sure wether this scientific study mentioned in the previous post used the right images. :-)
posted by nad | perception, visualization | 1 Comment »
Saturday, June 17th, 2006
but popping ball lightning (or at least ball lightning like plasma clouds). These are generated by an underwater discharge of a lousy 60 Ampere (so not for pocket use). Experiment (and image) are from Max-Plack-Institute für Plasmaphysik (german). An englisch translation is available at physorg.com.
posted by timh | 3d, physics, visualization | 2 Comments »
Tuesday, June 6th, 2006
I had the pleasure to give a talk at the Days “Data processing and Geometry” (this is what google makes from the title) at Lyon the first two days of june.
It is quite an experience to attend a scientific meeting when having only a faint idea of the language (the spoken one, not the scientific) :-). While lasting only two days the conference covered quite a widespread range of topics. Especially interesting to me was some introduction into the design of the CGAL library — a collection of robust and efficient algorithms for geometry presented by Sylvain Pion and Raphaelle Chaine. An other interesting talk was from Alain Daurat on discrete tomography of convex sets. The question here is about algorithms that allow the reconstruction of the shape given the sample values along some finite number of directions (and what are the conditions on the choice of directions to ensure a reconstruction is possible). The complete reconstruction of any set given sample data along any discrete straight line was turned into a game by us recently. Many of the talks dealt with (re)construction of shapes: like arithmetic definition for Bresenham circles (Jean-Luc Toutant), a modeler based on the topology of discrete objects (Alain Daurat), or an algorithm for implicit surfaces (Christophe Raffalli)
I myself tried to draw the attention to the Berlin grown software jReality and oorange.
posted by timh | math, Uncategorized, visualization | No Comments »