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Friday, December 10, 2010

Visumotion Changes Name to 3D International Group



3D International Europe Sd. Bhd.,
a unit of Malaysian state-owned Malaysia Venture Capital Management Bhd, based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. View on map.
has aquired Visumotion GmbH,
a Jena-based manufacturer of [autostereoscopic] 3D equipment, with offices in Jena and Orlando.*1
Jan Hübner will continue his role as Head of Content Creation and Training with Ambros Nari as Chief Technology Officer.

Visumotion made software that was capable of plugging into most current 3D modelling programs including 3ds Max and Maya and using that scene including models in its own proprietary software which would let you edit the objects in autostereoscopic 3d. Its software would also enable playback of autostereoscopic 3D video on autostereoscopic monitors.


Markus Klippstein is CEO at 3D International Europe and Manuela Fischer is CEO and President at 3D International of America




Article by
Ben Hale
Orlando, FL
12-10-2010


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*1 Quoted From: http://www.alacrastore.com/deal-snapshot/3D_International_Sdn_Bhd_acquires_VisuMotion_GmbH-607226
*2 http://depthbeyond.com/news/2010/09/visumotion-gmbh-becomes-3d-international-europe-gmbh/

Thursday, November 18, 2010

Microsoft Kinect - A Look at the Implications of this Amazing Device.

I've been following the recent developments in the news about the new Microsoft Xbox Kinect, and this camera strikes me as an absolutely amazing piece of hardware. The Kinect Wikipedia article is a good place to read up on what it is.

The fun part is that the Kinect has been hacked, and with its hardware free to breathe, the implications of what can be done with the Kinect are wonderful, since it is such a powerful 3D camera for relatively very little cost (retails now for $150.00).

The first hack was shown in this YouTube video: Adafruit First to Hack Kinect

This UC Davis researcher shows his hack here.

A Windows-based Kinect hack is talked about here.

This site is dedicated to open-sourcing the Kinect: www.openkinect.org

The neat thing about the Kinect is that it has a pair of infrared stereo video cameras that produce a depth-map in real time. The depth map looks similar to what Philips was using with their WOWvx A3D video standard.

If the Kinect can be hacked on a PC and you can get a real-time feed of both the Kinect's video (2D video from one camera) and also the real-time depth map which aligns with the 2D camera feed, then the possibilities are endless with amazing new 3D applications you can expirement with at very low cost. Big thanks to Microsoft for such a nice piece of equipment.

Ben Hale
Orlando Digital Media | B3N Media | Production Companies

Since the Kinect is brand new and it seems like new cool uses are coming out every day, I'll just list the newer info in links below:
(1) Interactive Puppet Prototype

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Guest Post: The Autostereoscopic 3D Industry courtesy of Matt Ho and...

I present an exclusive guest-blog article by the 3DTV Team in Entreprenuerial Management Class from Boston University. 


Autostereoscopic Industry
by
BU MBA 11’
3DTV Team in Entrepreneurial Management Class

3D Displays

The booming “3D frenzy” in the TV and the movie industry has garnered significant public attention in recent years. To take advantage of this opportunity, the major electronics manufacturers are now all pushing 3D TVs to the market. DisplaySearch forecasts that the total stereoscopic 3D display market will grow from 0.7 million units and $902 million in revenues in 2008 to 196 million units and $22 billion in revenues in 2018, a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 38% for revenues and 75% for units (See Exhibit 1).

However, the need to wear special glasses hinders adoption of stereoscopic 3D displays, as the units are only expected to reach a penetration of 3.6% in 2018. In a recent Nielsen survey, 57% of respondents indicated that the need to wear glasses would deter them from buying a 3D TV. Auto stereoscopic 3D (A3D) technology provides a glasses-free 3D experience and is considered the next generation of the 3D display market. 


Auto stereoscopic 3D Technology

When a person views a 3-dimensional object, the person’s left and right eyes see the object from slightly different angles. The person’s brain receives the images from both eyes and is able to perceive depth and see the object in 3D. 3D displays simulate this process by providing slightly different images to the viewer’s left and right eyes. Prevailing stereoscopic technology uses glasses to filter different images to the left and right eyes. A3D technology, on the other hand, uses lenses or barriers within the screen to project different images to different eyes without the help of glasses. The two main methods for providing auto stereoscopic vision are the Parallax Barrier and Lenticular Lens (See Exhibit 2 for details on the different A3D display technologies). 

A3D displays currently face a number of obstacles to broad consumer adoption. Viewers can only see the 3D images at a certain range of distances (depending on the screen size) and within a very narrow viewing angle (around 20~40 degrees).  Another barrier is the high cost of making an auto stereoscopic screen; the cheapest 22” A3D monitor is priced above $3,000 and a 42” A3D monitor can cost as much as $8,600. (A 46” SONY stereoscopic 3DTV, on the other hand, retails for $1,999.) Most importantly, A3D and stereoscopic 3D content are not interchangeable (content produced for one kind of display cannot be viewed on the other), and there is currently no common platform for producing A3D content. For all of these reasons, the application of A3D monitors has been limited to business-to-business markets such as advertising and digital signage, gaming and entertainment machines, and scientific and medical visualizations.


The Auto Stereoscopic 3D Monitor Industry

The A3D monitor industry is very fragmented with five relatively large players controlling most of the market (See Exhibit 12 for a list of the major players.) Due to the lack of A3D content, manufacturers usually have to provide the entire solution to their customers; including content creation services, editing and playback software, and A3D display hardware (See Exhibit 13 for a typical A3D solution offer). As a result, each player has its own proprietary file format and software that are only compatible with their hardware. There is no universal standard for A3D content. 

Sales of A3D displays are primarily project-based, as A3D manufacturers have to provide customized solutions and service for each customer. For example, Magnetic 3D has deployed a dozen 42” A3D monitors and customized 3D videos in the “Suites of the Future” campaign at Sun Life Stadium for Super Bowl XLIV. Currently, most major players focus on advertising and digital signage projects or special events like the Super Bowl case. For secondary markets (such as 3D engineering or medical visualization), manufacturers often choose to partner with 3rd party software company to provide A3D solutions for those applications. 

Most display manufacturer sell through a direct sales force, as sales involve heavy customization and services which cannot be provided by value added resellers (VARs) and distributors. Some manufacturers do partner with 3D contents creating studios as their VARs. In these cases, technology and training support are very important for those VARs. 





Source: http://www.displaysearch.com/cps/rde/xchg/displaysearch/hs.xsl/100104_3d_display_revenues_forecast_to_reach_22_billion_by_2018.asp


Monday, October 4, 2010

Toshiba set to launch No-Glasses 3D TV by end of 2010 in Japan

PCWorld is reporting that Toshiba is going to launch a No-Glasses (Autostereoscopic) 3D Monitor this year in Japan.

As readers of this blog might know, their are two different ways to achieve a "no-glasses" 3D effect. Both methods are by placing a screen over your monitor. The different types of screens are: a parralax barrier, or a lenticular overlay.

A video of Toshiba's new consumer autostereoscopic 3D monitor is on YouTube here:




It is not directly stated which type of autostereoscopic display this consumer monitor is, but PCWorld says, "Toshiba's new TVs have a thin sheet of small lenses in front of the display," which implies that it is a "lens" which implies that it is a lenticular lens.


I create autostereoscopic 3D media with the AudioVisual company, APCO AV, using lenticualr-based autostereoscopic lenses, and tools from 3D International Europe GmbH, formerly Visumotion.


Ben Hale
Orlando, FL

Read the PCWorld article here.

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Exporting Models from Max into Autostereoscopic Animations

To get models created in 3ds Max to export into a format that can be imported into an autostereoscopic 3d (A3d) compositing program, I use an A3D camera plug-in, which you can download from 3D International Europe GmbH, formerly Visumotion.

This special camera is actually 9 cameras side-by-side (you could actually make one if you have max ninja skills). [3D Artist, #19 has an artical on how to create a lenticular 3D camera setup in 3ds max] Each camera sees the frame from a slightly different horizontal perspective - but all focused on the same point.

You can then export the scene by saving it a a TGA image sequence. What you are doing is saving 9 separate images per one frame of video. So, for a video with 30 fames per second (fps), multiplied by 9 full-scale images per frame, you have 270 frames per one second of autostereoscopic video.

When you want to combine the nine separate TGA image-sequences back into a playable format, the next step is to compress all the video streams using H.264 and wrap them in an MP4.

Another Player-like software package will read all nine perspective frames per frame and rasterize them together according to the rule of the lenticular overlay. The image it creates, when seen through the special lenticular overlay, appears as 3d to human viewers.

I think this technology is amazing. Sure, there are still some issues with the technology (one being that you need to be viewing the monitor in certain spots, and if you move your head left or right while watching the 3d monitor, the image will go out of focus. I explain the 3d viewing planes in another post).

Thursday, May 27, 2010

3D TVs - All About the New 3D TVs

Yahoo Shopping describes the new 3D TVs that are being offered in stores such as Best buy.

Everything you ever wanted to know about the new consumer 3D TVs:




***These TVs should not be confused with auto-stereoscopic 3D Tvs, which APCO AV produces content for. The consumer 3D TVs for sale at Best Buy require you to wear glasses. The APCO AV autostereoscopic 3D TVs produce 3D images that do noit require you to wear glasses.

Walter Funk - A Digital 3D StoryTeller

Walter Funk uses no-glasses 3D display systems alongside music to create a digital storytelling experience. Out of San Francisco, Walter Funk describes the 3D setup: