When you start the game, you find yourself on the surface of some asteroid. A small green circle hovers in your view, indicating the location of your ship. Using normal WASD controls and the spacebar to jump, you can navigate to your ship and approach the airlock.
Friday, December 27, 2013
Rodina: A Free-Roam Space Exploration Title With Promise
When you start the game, you find yourself on the surface of some asteroid. A small green circle hovers in your view, indicating the location of your ship. Using normal WASD controls and the spacebar to jump, you can navigate to your ship and approach the airlock.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
On procedurally-generated universes
The first thing I found out about today is a game called No Man's Sky. I'll admit, their website doesn't show a whole lot, but they demonstrated their game engine at VGX earlier this month. The premise of the game is exploring a universe. Fairly simple start, but the thing about it is that the entire universe is procedurally-generated, supposedly from the atom all the way up to galaxies. The following video gives a glimpse of the power of this engine and an idea of the gameplay.
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
On META's AR headset
Highway to the AR zone |
The META software is designed to be used with Unity 3D, which, as I've mentioned before, is basically a video game creation program. I've played around with Unity quite a bit and I really like the interface. You basically can create 3D worlds without ever writing a line of code, though if you want stuff to move around and interact, you'll need to be a proficient programmer. But this means that it's not terribly difficult to start making applications for META, and there are so many possibilities. The video depicted the user shaping the cone of a rocket engine and adding it to an assembly. Already on the website there are hundreds of app ideas, and since META has decided to allow 3rd party companies to develop software for their device, we can expect 100s more as time goes on. Some of the ideas are pretty cool. I've always loved the concept of using AR for LARPing so you can have computer-controlled enemies, give the mages some actual magic, even produce a scene that can't be easily created IRL.
One of the ideas I had (and posted on the website) was to incorporate the glasses with a flight simulator. Many people build their own simulator cockpits with varying degrees of complexity, which is pretty neat, but there are still only two options, each with limitations.
First, you use monitors in place of windscreens. This allows you to see the interior of your cockpit, use cool digital indicators and the like, but the problem is that the image won't be 3D and even with decent head tracking, it won't mimic the feel of actually being in an airplane since looking around won't provide the same changing direction of view.
Second, you can use a VR headset like the Oculus Rift. This gives you a 3D image with good head tracking, but since you can't see anything besides what's on the screen, why even bother building a sim cockpit except to have the feel and the location of the controls? Plus you can't see your hands unless you wear motion tracking gloves and have the program show you an approximation, so you'll spend time fumbling for switches.
My concept allowed you to build a fairly simple sim cockpit with just the controls and the actual interior, but with a reference pattern printed on any surface designed to be a window or windscreen. Then the AR glasses display the rendered game image anywhere they see that reference pattern. That way you can still see your hands and the interior of your cockpit, even your instruments, but you also get a 3D view with proper head tracking. The software could render the exterior view in a sphere around the player location so you'd be able to look all around, even stretch or lean to the sides and see just like if you were in a real vehicle.
Obviously the list of possibilities is pretty long. This kind of tech opens up many new doors, even doors we didn't know existed, and that's absolutely fantastic.
Friday, December 13, 2013
In which I discuss FTL
Lately I've been playing several sessions of the game FTL. If you haven't heard of it, FTL is a roguelike spaceship management simulator game. Kind of a mouthful, but the long and short of it is that FTL gives you the experience of being a starship captain in a procedurally-generated universe, tasked with the mission of carrying important information to your superiors, 8 sectors away from your starting point. The roguelike nature of the game means that if your ship explodes, that's it. You have to start over from the beginning. There are no checkpoints, no way to save the game in case you make the wrong decision and want to go back.
The game is actually fairly simple, on the surface. The interface is a top-down view of your ship, which is divided into different rooms and systems. You have a number of crew members that you can control, ordering them to man different systems, make repairs, or repel boarders. Each sector is divided into procedurally-generated systems of planets. You jump from system to system and at each system have a random encounter. Sometimes you run into pirates, sometimes you find people in distress, sometimes there's a sun or an asteroid field or a store. Combat consists of aiming and firing weapons, using different drones, or even teleporting to the enemy ship to fight it out face to face. As you go, you acquire material to make upgrades to your systems or purchase new equipment.
There's something extremely satisfying about ordering your crewman to man their stations while launching missiles and lasers at an enemy ship. I've also experienced a visceral pain as I've watched a particularly good ship and crew break apart under the onslaught of an enemy ship. Like I said, immersive. Even though the interface and graphics are simplistic, the gameplay, story, and random nature of the game makes it feel quite real.
One thing I don't recommend for gamers that tend to get very immersed in games is naming your crewmen after people you know, unless you want those people to die horribly. Crewmembers can and will die in fires, from boarders, by suffocation, from space diseases, and just from a straight-up direct hit from a missile to the room they're currently inhabiting.
I think the takeaway from this is that it doesn't require the latest and greatest graphics technology or a 3D virtual reality headset and tactile interface to make a game immersive. I've felt more immersed in a book or a well-made movie than I ever have in Skyrim or similar current-gen games. The real immersion comes from creating a believable universe, an experience that is plausible enough in and of itself that you don't doubt it while you play. FTL manages this, and while I'd love to have a similar experience with a more complex game, but until I find that more complex game, FTL serves to temporarily scratch that itch.
Thursday, December 12, 2013
On Procedurally-Generated Space Systems
One of the major issues with space games actually comes from the limits of computer precision. I know that sounds ludicrous, since consumer computers these days are incredibly powerful, but it's true. To put it simply, the variables that are used to hold location data can only hold the kind of precision that games need out to a certain number of digits. The end result is that most game engines can't handle distances larger than 100 km or so before the accuracy makes the game unplayable. 100 km sounds like a lot, and for games like Halo and Half-Life, 100 km is more than sufficient. However, for most space-type games, 100 km is practically nothing. 100 km is the distance from the surface of the earth to what is considered the lowest border of "space." However, the International Space Station orbits the earth at almost 4 times that distance, and the moon orbits the earth almost 1000 times further.
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
on the concept of self-driving cars
Tuesday, December 10, 2013
In which I discuss the value of space exploration
But seriously, there is some neat stuff out there beyond our atmosphere. There are earth-like planets to be explored, (and I highly recommend checking out that wikipedia link), nebulae and supernovae and new stars and the frickin hexagon on Saturn, planets and planetoids in our own solar system, etc etc.
So
Much
Cool
Stuff.
I actually just watched The Europa Report yesterday, and while it wasn't exactly the sci-fi romp I was hoping for, it was actually really good. Basically a team is sent to Europa, one of the moons of Jupiter, and the most likely candidate in the solar system (except for Earth, of course) to have evidence of extraterrestrial life. Europa is covered in ice and possibly liquid water, which makes it really interesting. I'm not going to go into details of the film, of course, but it was a fun look at what an expedition to Europa might be like, using more or less current technology.
And that brings me to my point: current technology. Humanity has done some pretty impressive things, of course. We sent men to the moon using less computing power than most teenagers carry around in their pockets. Obviously most teenagers wouldn't know how to even start using their smartphones to control an Apollo rocket, but that's besides the point. We've sent a probe out beyond what is generally accepted to be the border between our solar system and interstellar space. Took us 35 years to get there, but we made some stops on the way, ok? We also have astronauts living in a space station 230 miles above the surface of the earth, and a fleet of satellites surrounding our little planet that do everything from give us internet to tell us where we are. We live in a really cool age. We can do some REALLY cool things.
But the problem is Space. We're hesitant about sending people to Mars, much less Europa, and much MUCH less Tau Ceti E, and with good reason. To quote the good doctor "Space is disease and danger wrapped in darkness and silence." Outside of the protective region afforded to us by our home planet, space is a dangerous and lonely place. Similar to the explorers of old, setting off into space means abandoning all thought of help or rescue from home. However, to make it more difficult, space explorers can't catch space fish for food, or evaporate sea water for drinking water, or even find a convenient island to restock the supplies. The vehicles we make that seem so mighty, so powerful, here on earth, are egg-like in their fragility in space. One little speck of space dust, the size of a grain of sand, can punch through the hull of a spacecraft like a needle through a bubble, with similar results. A solar flare kicks up and shoots high-energy particles through the radiation shielding, cooking the crew. Even mechanical failures that would be minor in an Earth-going vessel can prove catastrophic in the vastness of space.
Additionally, ships in space can't rely on natural forces like wind and tide for propulsion. Yes, we are working on things like solar sails to harness thrust from photons from the sun or laser arrays on earth, but those things will barely provide enough thrust for tiny sensor packages. We're not anywhere close to seeing solar sails being implemented on a manned vessel. This means that, with current technology, we're limited to vehicles that can carry their own fuel with them. For rocket-type vehicles, this generally means doing one large burn to get going and another to slow down once the destination is reached. With some new types of thruster technology, such as ion thrusters, the force per unit of fuel is much higher, and the engine can be run for longer, achieving much higher speeds, though at very low acceleration. Now, when I say higher speeds, I mean compared to chemical rockets. According to NASA, chemical rockets can achieve speeds of around 8.05 km/s, where the ion-powered rockets could get up to 90 km/s, or over 10 times faster. This sounds pretty fantastic, until you actually get a sense of scale. The distance from the Earth to the Sun, known as an Astronomical Unit, or AU, is approximately 150,000,000 km. This means that our ion rocket would take 20 days to travel 1 AU, and that's if it's at top speed the entire time. In reality, the amount of time it takes to speed up and slow down an ion-powered rocket would make that trip on the order of months.
There are more esoteric concepts being explored, such as nuclear pulse propulsion, which, in a nutshell, involves detonating smallish nuclear devices behind the ship and using a shielded plate to catch the shockwave and ride it off towards the stars, or matter-antimatter reactions, which is limited by the difficulty of generating antimatter. These methods could produce conservatively estimated speeds of up to 50,000 km/s, or nearly 1/4 the speed of light. Compared to the 90 km/s from an ion engine or the 8 km/s of a chemical rocket, that's a pretty big increase.
But it's not enough.
To get a bit more perspective, the solar system is around 40 AU in diameter, if we assume that the outermost orbit of Uranus is the end of the solar system. If we go to the edge of the heliosphere, which is the more commonly accepted definition of "edge of the solar system", we're talking about 180 AU, or, if you're too lazy to do the math, about 89 AU from earth to the edge of the solar system. The problem is that getting to the edge of the solar system isn't really our goal. Let's say we wanted to go to the nearest possibly inhabitable planet, Tau Ceti E. Tau Ceti E is almost 12 LIGHT YEARS from Earth, or almost 760,000 AU. Assuming that our little ion rocket is going its absolute fastest, it'll still take around 400 CENTURIES to travel that distance. Yes, that's right. 40,000 years, or 1000 times longer than Moses and the Israelites wandered the desert. A nuclear pulse ship would take about 180 years to make the trip, and an antimatter rocket ship would still need around 50 years, and that's not including the time it'll take to speed up and slow down.
IF, and that's a big if, we could outfit a ship with a crew that could actually survive a journey of 40,000 years or 180, or even 50 years, it's extremely probable that before the mission reached the half-way point we'd have new technology that would allow us to go pick them up and take them the rest of the way in much less time. This principle is featured in the wait calculation, which basically states that there is a threshold for sending manned missions to interstellar targets based on the idea that people who leave later would have the technology to get there sooner.
So what do we do? Even at speeds approaching 1/4 to 1/2 the speed of light, we're looking at really long times to get anywhere interesting. We've proved time and again that there is the big cosmic speed limit, just like Einstein said. If we could get a ship up to around 99% of the speed of light the crew wouldn't experience a very long trip, due to time dilation effects, but getting up to that sort of velocity is incredibly difficult. As the velocity of a vehicle increases, so does its mass, meaning that it takes more and more force to achieve higher and higher speeds. More force=more fuel=more mass, generally, so that's kind of a circular problem.
But what if we could get around that speed limit? What if there was a way for us to travel faster than the speed of light without breaking the laws of the universe? Faster-than-light common trope of science fiction, mostly because no one wants to watch a show where it takes 50 years to get anywhere and by the time they do the characters you care about are old or dead, but what if it were possible?
Enter Miguel Alcubierre, a theoretical physicist who came up with what's now known as the Alcubierre Drive. The Alcubierre drive is a method of stretching and squeezing space-time to move an object. We already know that space-time is expanding, and in some places that expansion is happening faster than the speed of light. Alcubierre postulated that by expanding and contracting space-time in a region localized around a ship, the ship could be moved at speeds faster than light without violating any laws of physics.
Basically the ship would be enclosed in a bubble of space-time and the bubble would move faster than we can achieve with current technology.
Of course, there are a series of catches. First and foremost, the math requires the existence of matter with negative density, normally called exotic matter, which is something that is postulated in several separate theories, but hasn't been confirmed to exist.
Second, there's the actual amount of exotic matter required. In some calculations it was shown that in order to move a ship across the galaxy you would need around 10^64 kg of exotic matter, which is several orders of magnitude greater than the estimated mass of the entire universe. Not exactly practical. However, several scientists have reworked the calculations by considering a thinner bubble shell and a different shape. Notably among these scientists is Harold White, a NASA scientist who is actively working on the warp drive problem. His calculations showed that an average-sized spaceship would only require around 700 kg of exotic matter for the Alcubierre Drive to function. That's obviously a significant difference, which brings us from the realm of "neat but impossible" to "this might actually work."
Harold White is important because, as mentioned, he's actually working on this idea. His department at NASA has an experiment they're performing to test whether or not space can actually be warped as postulated. It's been shown that gravity bends beams of light, but whether or not space itself can be warped by man-generated effects is still unproven. The initial results of the experiment were inconclusive, but the scale on which the experiment is being run is so small that vibrations from the Earth and the surrounding environment can affect the results.
Regardless, the fact that we even think that something like a Star Trek Warp Drive is possible and that there are people out there actively working towards making this sort of thing a reality is incredible.
And this brings me to the "why is this important" part of the post. I'm not going to spout nonsense about overpopulation and us needing to find a new home or building colonies or anything. I'm all for expanding humanity to other planets. I think that's an awesome idea. But I can't sell overpopulation and dwindling resources as a reason why we HAVE to do it. I think we all know that if we managed our resources (including space on earth) a little better, we'd be just fine.
No, I believe that space exploration is important because, deep down, the vast majority of humanity has a curiosity that needs to be sated. We need to know what's out there. We need to find new things, see new sights, experience new places. Obviously any individual person can spend their whole life on earth and never run out of new things to see or do, but humanity as a whole has nearly exhausted all the "new" our little planet has to offer. There's an entire universe out there, and I'd like to see it.
Monday, December 9, 2013
On Sandbox exploration games
If you're not aware of what Terraria is, follow that link up there. If you're too lazy for that, lemme 'splain. No, is too much. Lemme sum up.
Terraria is sort of like Minecraft in 2D. If that doesn't mean anything to you, then imagine, if you will, a game where all materials are mineable. Your entire purpose in the game is to explore, mine important materials like gold and diamonds and iron so you can build weapons, armor, and other tools. The game is presented in 2D, which I feel is a good choice for something of this nature. Minecraft always felt out of scale to me, and I didn't care for the blocky aesthetic that everything in the game has. Terraria has a much smoother look to it, even though it's still pixelated.
The thing about Terraria that I love is the fact that you get to play how you want to play. Yes, there is a sort of progression that you can follow, but you really don't have to. Yes, there are deeper, more dangerous regions of the game to explore, but again, you don't have to. Obviously that sounds like a lot of video games. Don't want to leave the Kokiri forest in Ocarina of Time? You don't have to! But, the difference is that you will definitely run out of things to do in Kokiri forest, where in Terraria you can spend your time building a nice house, chopping down and planting trees, building furniture and fending off zombies at night. Now, that's not how I play, of course. I'm all for delving too deep into the earth, searching out gold and diamonds and chests filled with treasure. I love getting that next tier of armor and weapons so I can deal out (and take) more damage. And that's the beauty of Terraria. Whether you're a cautious player who wants to take things nice and slow or you're reckless and filled with the spirit of adventure, Terraria can provide a satisfying experience.
Now, one of the few things I wish Terraria had was a bit more scope. Even the largest world you can generate in Terraria still isn't that big, and, when it comes down to it, it's the only one there is.
Enter Starbound. Starbound really looks and feels (at least in the gameplay videos) like Terraria's older, more mature brother. The graphics, while still 2D and pixely, are more complex, with sprites having several more animation frames for different actions. The movement and combat seem more complex as well, but the crowning jewel of what Starbound offers is the scope: Starbound procedurally generates planets, equipment, even enemies, with a complex algorithm that promises endless unique experiences. In Starbound you can travel from planet to planet, mining, exploring, and crafting, just like in Terraria. Apparently there are NPC-given quests that are procedurally generated as well, which means that you'll never run out of things to do. Each planet is supposed to have different materials, enemies, and treasures, making it important to actually explore as many different places as you can. The addition of different player-races, persistent NPCs that can be recruited to help your cause, and a fancy, upgradeable spaceship that serves as your base of operations all serve to give Starbound that added scale that I feel Terraria is missing. Now, as has been mentioned, Starbound is still a 2D side-scrolling type game, but that's ok. In fact, in my opinion, that's actually better, for now. Maybe in an immersive VR environment a 3D sandbox mining game would be fun and feel ok, but until then, if you feel the need to explore large worlds, find materials to craft new and ever-better equipment, and discover secret treasures, Terraria and Starbound definitely have what you need.
EDIT:
I realized that I didn't really get to express what I wanted to about this topic. Yes, Terraria and Starbound are cool, but the important bit is what they indicate for the future of gaming.
For a long time, video games were pretty much linear. A lot of games still are. Even games like the Civilization series and games in other genres are still fairly linear, in a way. Yes, you may have a lot of options on how to play the game, but you're still basically progressing towards a single end point.
With Starbound's procedurally generated content, we're starting to see the beginning of true open-world games.
Other games that are "open-world" like Skyrim, Borderlands, etc, still have a linear storyline that you can choose to follow at your own pace, but not really in your own order, most of the time. Additionally, something that bothers me in a lot of games is the questing system. "Please hurry, bandits are raiding this village!" and yet, in most games, whether you hurry or not, you always get there at precisely the right time, as if by magic. In reality, you just trigger the beginning of the event when you arrive, regardless of when you arrive. In games where the quest is important to the story AND the timing is important, they generally make you repeat the mission or revert to a save point if you don't arrive in time.
Why not make a game where the events of the world are based on the same sort of procedurally generated algorithms? Make a game where stuff happens whether or not you're there. Make a game where the story isn't told in cutscenes and voice acting, but is told by the actions of the player.
Obviously Terraria still has a sort of progression. However, there are some things that definitely deviate from the norm. For example, the first boss you generally encounter, the Eye of Cthulu, can be summoned once your character is ready for it, but if you find enough heart crystals to bring your max life above a threshold, there is a chance that the Eye could spawn whether you are ready or not. This means you may have the health, but not the equipment when the Eye spawns, and, in that situation, you will probably die. The same goes for several of the bosses and events. You can trigger many of them at your leisure, but they'll happen on their own if certain conditions are met.
Now, if that sort of concept were implemented into a game where the presence of a boss monster like that could have a permanent and lasting effect on different parts of the game, say, by killing NPCs or destroying resources, and the longer they roamed unchecked, the worse the effect becomes. Then it's up to you to decide if you want to risk facing the enemy head-on with less-than-ideal equipment in order to save people or resources, or if that risk is too much.
I think this is the direction gaming needs to go, or at least a portion of the industry. I think the idea of a dynamic environment that is affected by more than just the actions of the player could create an extremely immersive universe. And, when it comes down to it, isn't that the point?
Saturday, December 7, 2013
The AR revolution
Here's the thing. There is a spectrum between Reality and Virtual Reality. Reality is, of course, completely real, meaning not affected by digital technology at all. This is specifically in terms of the way we experience the world through the 5 senses. Reality means there's no tech in between our senses and the real world. Obviously you could argue that glasses and contacts and the like "augment" our senses, but that's not really what I mean. I mean computer-like tech. So, in terms of gaming, LARPing is basically as "reality" gaming as you can get. On the opposite end of the spectrum is Virtual Reality. That's where 100% of the world with which you interact is virtual. All video games are basically virtual reality, but generally what you think of when you think virtual reality are things like the Oculus Rift, which is actually really cool. VR tech is exploding right now in the wake of the Rift, and is starting to expand past the base of just visual virtual reality to include wearable motion sensors and things like the Virtuix Omni, which is billed as an "omni-directional treadmill", which basically means you can walk on it in any direction and it translates your movements into the game.
These things are incredible, and I'm super excited about them. Anyone who knows me knows that I tend to be a bit of an escapist, and the more immersive my chosen escapist destination, the better, in my opinion. Combining the Rift, the Omni, and whatever flavor-of-the-week motion sensor to completely immerse oneself in a video game is a nerdy wet dream.
However, and this is a big however, for now, we kinda have to return to the real world periodically. No matter how immersive this tech may be, it's not going to provide nutrients or relieve your bowels for you. Maybe if you're lucky you can find a way to make money by staying in a virtual world all day, but that's not going to work for the rest of us.
Sometimes, the more immersive a game is, the harder it is to come back to the real world. That's how I feel about some books, movies, and TV shows sometimes. When they're well-made, you feel as though you've actually entered the universe they're depicting, and leaving that can be hard, especially when the world you come back to is so mundane. No interstellar travel, no magic, no clear-cut battles between good and evil, light and dark. Just boring jobs, small apartments, junker cars, and homework, or, in other terms: THE LIST OF THINGS THAT MAKE YOU WANT TO ESCAPE. So, wrapping back around to Augmented Reality. Augmented Reality falls around the middle of the Real-Virtual spectrum. The concept of Augmented reality is to put a layer in between the real world and the senses of the user. This has been around for a while in some form or another, of course. Ever since smart phones have had cameras, there have been apps that use the live camera feed and add different elements to the image. I had a game for a while where you were a gunner shooting down TIE fighters. As you moved the phone around, you could see various TIE fighters flying around in your very own sky and you were supposed to shoot them down. Simple, of course, but neat. Most games take you into a different world, but Augmented Reality brings a different world to you.
The problem with the cell phone-based AR is that it isn't very immersive. (Immersion really is going to be a buzzword for this topic, since that's been the goal of video games for the last decade or two). So, what do you do? How do you make augmented reality better? Vuzix has had different video eyewear, including "see-through" video eyewear for a couple of years now. The issue is that it's basically still the same concept as the smartphone: a screen depicts the camera view and a program adds elements to the image. Vuzix's stuff is neat, but most people don't really want to walk around with what looks like a slimmed-down pair of nightvision goggles on their face, looking at the world through a camera. Enter Google's project Glass. Glass is trying to be the augmented reality that doesn't block your reality, and they're appealing to a wide market. Their product is really similar to a bluetooth headset: basically it's trying to be an unobtrusive way of providing hands-free access to functions currently offered by your cell phone. Where bluetooth headsets only really offered you a hands-free calling, Glass is trying to provide hands-free picture-taking, video-recording, information-gathering, and video-chatting, among other hyphenated actions. The issue is that Glass is little more than a corner-of-your eye HUD. Basically it sits really close to reality on the real-virtual spectrum. The position of the screen doesn't allow glass to do much to augment your entire reality; rather it tries to provide useful information and features more conveniently than pulling out your smartphone. In a nutshell: NOT IMMERSIVE. Neat idea, to be sure, but NOT IMMERSIVE.
I want immersive AR. I want to have every aspect of my real world augmented by a virtual one. I don't want a HUD in the corner of my eye. I want to see the virtual world intermingling with my real world. So, I did some searching. The first thing I found that looked incredible was a product produced by a company called Meta. Their AR glasses sounded like the exact thing I wanted. It uses tech based on the kinect sensor (their prototype legitimately had a kinect sensor mounted on top of it) and projects images to the screen of the glasses. Since it has a separate projector for each eye, it's capable of showing 3D images out in the space of the real world. The kinect-like sensors allow you to interact with this virtual world using hand and motion tracking. Supposedly, you can create and place virtual objects "in" the real world and the glasses would be able to track your motion relative to the fixed real-world point where the virtual object was placed. If that's a little confusing, imagine this: You design a virtual vase and place it on a real table. Then, as you walk around the table, changing your view angle, the vase stays put. You could decorate your whole house like this, but that's small potatoes. I'm imagining how you could use this for some sort of IRL combat situation. Imagine you and your friends out in a field somewhere with some sort of motion-sensing laser tag-esque weapons. The glasses are projecting virtual enemy combatants running along the surface of the real world, hiding behind real trees and walls and rocks, pathing around real objects. You throw a virtual grenade that bounces off of real world objects and explodes, sending out virtual shrapnel that interacts with both virtual and real components of the game.
That sounds pretty incredible, right? One issue: the Spaceglasses, as the website is called, have to be tethered to a computer, and probably one with some relatively serious processing power. Not exactly the kind of thing you want to strap on your back when you're running around. Obviously, at the rate tech is progressing, computers will get smaller and more portable, and maybe, if we're real lucky and all eat our wheaties and obey our parents and look both ways before crossing the street, batteries will get better too!
So, really disappointed with Project Glass and slightly disappointed with Meta's spaceglasses, I kept my eyes open for new stuff. And then I found something: Lumus. Unlike Meta, Lumus is a company that's been around for over a decade, and they started the company with the invention of their optical tech: see-through lenses that reflect the image from a projector to the side of the glasses. Now, the Lumus products are actually somewhere between Glass and Spaceglasses, in the fact that they do a full-lens projection like Spaceglasses, but they have less sensors and are designed to work more like Glass. The reason they excite me, however, is because they have OEM projectors and lenses that could be incorporated into a more comprehensive product. You add a couple of cameras to those bad boys and you have everything you need for a fully-immersive augmented reality world.
Imagine walking through the real world, except with Pokemon everywhere! Imagine strolling through the park when a velociraptor runs by and a pteredon swoops overhead. Imagine having a virtual companion that can accompany you wherever you go and can take whatever form you desire. Want a pet dragon? Or a Wookiee sidekick? Want to see flying cars and 30 moons in the sky? Those are just the nifty possibilities, the games and the world-mods that are possible. But imagine the way it'd change other things. Imagine having directions to your next destination projected in the space ahead of you. Imagine getting separated from your family at a theme park and being able to look around for a big floating "they are here" arrow. Imagine travelling to a foreign country and having written and spoken words translated for you. What about being able to type on a virtual keyboard, or eschewing the keyboard altogether and having a giant, interactive computer projected into the world around you? What if you could have notifications at the edge of your vision, or teleconference with a 3D projected image of your friend or business partner? What about looking around while you drive and seeing signs for various businesses and points of interest? Would you like to have the game running in the corner of your vision, alerting you to every fantastic moment, even though you're away from your PC or TV?
Every time we've found a new way to interface with computers it has revolutionized the way we use computers. Punch cards meant computers were only good for math-like calculations. You couldn't really play games or design things in 3D. As we progressed to monitor and keyboard interfaces we began developing text-based interactions and simple graphical interactions. Then the mouse was invented and graphical operating systems. Laptops and smartphones changed the way we use computers even more. Now the next real leap is going to be wearable computers, augmenting our reality with virtual elements. Even for the non-gamer, this is going to be big. I'm an engineer, and I know that having a part that I can "see" in the real world would rapidly change how I do my job. Having a part that I can manipulate in 3D space and get a proper feel for its size and proportions without having to have it prototyped would be incredible. Being able to build assemblies and manipulate them by hand the way they'll be manipulated once realized physically would save me a lot of time. Plus, it'd be super cool.
These are exciting times in which we live. I suppose technophiles like me would feel that way regardless of the era, but for some reason I think I'd be more excited about Augmented Reality than about the three-field system. But I guess we'll never know.
Generic money rant
Thursday, November 14, 2013
Parking job
Ugh. I hate people. I think I've made that obvious, but I really hate people. This guy just pulled into the parking lot in his weird H3 knockoff, started looking like he was going to park in the same spot as my car, theb started backing into another spot behind him. I thought this was a little weird at first, but then I realized he was making a 3 point turn to go back the way he came. The real issue here is the fact that there was a COMPLETELY OPEN SECTION OF THE PARKING LOT NOT 20 FEET FURTHER DOWN THE WAY! Why would you ever pull your car close to other cars when the obvious owners are mere meters away when you could have driven a bit further and made a single point u-turn? What a maroon!
Tuesday, November 12, 2013
Musings
Turns out it is a LOT easier to write on my phone when I use the blogger app instead of the mobile website. Who knew? I think some of the reason I feel so much anger is because I'm tired and forced to spend time in locations where I don't have access to things I want to do. For example, right now I'm working on a design for a ship. I can see a lot of it in my head, but I can't really draw it, especially at isometric angles. I really want to fire up Creo and start making the model, but I can't because I'm in class and not at my computer. This, of course, makes me feel more antsy and less tolerant of my continued presence in this class than normal. I really need to get my tablet fixed so I can at least browse the internet a bit better. Even that is less than satisfying when it comes to these sorts of feelings, but at least it'd be something, right?