PDA

View Full Version : Amazing 3D Digital Display - Mind Control Potential



jackovesk
31st October 2010, 06:34
Ukrainian Spectacle...

Lights projected onto a building make for a cool light show with 3D like special effects.

I have no idea how this is done but it’s certainly very unique and fun to watch. The Grand Finale is done with simulated Fireworks.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3KrFanNOmwM&feature=player_embedded

If you like this be sure to check out Prague Astronomical Clock.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjWJHEmFfPA&feature=player_embedded#!

Project_Buggy_Beach
31st October 2010, 07:06
If 3D was a pack of smokes, "you've come a long way baby..."

Zook
31st October 2010, 07:33
Ukrainian Spectacle...
Lights projected onto a building make for a cool light show with 3D like special effects.
I have no idea how this is done but it’s certainly very unique and fun to watch. The Grand Finale is done with simulated Fireworks.
[...]
If you like this be sure to check out Prague Astronomical Clock.
[...]


If they can manipulate light like that; I wonder how far they are from manipulating atoms? I'm thinking wave-particle duality. How many simple folk in rural parts of the world will submit when Project Blue Beam draws from legend and/or myth?

Who'da figured all this was possible back when 8-track tapes was the newest technology?

:typing:

Swami
31st October 2010, 10:14
Amazing... :thumb:

Makes one think what more they can do with this technology...

McMaster
31st October 2010, 12:27
It's simply done with high power projectors. First they use simple program to make a 3D model of the building from a normal video footage, then it's simple 3D programming/modeling and movietheater class projectors, easy, but looks nice and impressive.

tone3jaguar
31st October 2010, 18:06
Easy my ass.

pilotsimone
31st October 2010, 18:18
Maybe he meant simple, rather than easy.

McMaster
31st October 2010, 18:25
Yeah, well maby not easy as such, simple yes. Easy if you know what you're doing :p

TigaHawk
31st October 2010, 18:34
i can see it being sorta easy, in THEORY :P

its all about aiming the lights and realising that shadows are a major part of you're work, and lights + angles?

You'd have to know where the projectors are, then program all you're own shadows in to make it look like stuff was coming off, or moving around on the building as it has its own shadow.

still, amazing

Carmody
31st October 2010, 22:58
If they can manipulate light like that; I wonder how far they are from manipulating atoms? I'm thinking wave-particle duality. How many simple folk in rural parts of the world will submit when Project Blue Beam draws from legend and/or myth?

Who'da figured all this was possible back when 8-track tapes was the newest technology?

:typing:

Break out the Lear Jet 8-track car deck! Get that Deep Purple 'Highway Star' tape in there!

Carmody
31st October 2010, 23:06
It's simply done with high power projectors. First they use simple program to make a 3D model of the building from a normal video footage, then it's simple 3D programming/modeling and movietheater class projectors, easy, but looks nice and impressive.

He's right, it is easy. to me and to McMaster, the technologies involved are known quantities. I mean, the display must be 'put together' so to speak, but in this day and age of digital projection, it is quite straightforward.

You'd need, oh..about 8 15k-20k lumen 1080P DLP or LCOS or similar projection units. The software and the hardware to run that created imagery is now quite cheap. If I had the projectors I could draw images that large for under $10k of axillary hardware. Set up is not necessarily all that precise, either, so it can be set up relatively easily. This area of projection of images has really advanced quickly in the 'blending' and 'rendering' end of things in the past 5 years.