Scientists Claim Breakthrough On Holographic Display 123
SpuriousLogic writes to tell us that University of Arizona researchers claim to have broken a barrier in holographic technology by creating an updatable, three-dimensional display with memory. While the existing model is only able to update once every couple of minutes, and isn't particularly suited for 3d images, it is certainly a step in the right direction. "Peyghambarian is also optimistic that the technology could reach the market within five to ten years. He said progress towards a final product should be made much more quickly now that a rewriting method had been found. However, it is fair to say not everyone is as positive about this prospect as Peyghambarian. Lecturer in Electronic Engineering at Bangor University in Wales, Dr Justin Lawrence, told CNN small steps were always being made on technology like 3D holograms, but, he couldn't see it being ready for the market in the next ten years."
Another revolutionary technology... (Score:5, Insightful)
... for our new holographic masters! (Score:4, Funny)
I saw it on Star Trek, it must be true!
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I use the electricity-friendly version called the photograph. ;)
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Isn't goatse porn?
What about porn games? (Score:3, Insightful)
Porn is usually the deciding factor between two competing technologies
Counterexample: video game consoles vs. PCs running Windows. The consoles have no pornographic games, yet PC gaming hasn't slaughtered console gaming. Why is this?
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The consoles have no pornographic games?
Hehe, don't be so innocent...
Here are two examples (not porn):
Osouji Sentai Clean Keeper [play-asia.com] for the wii
and
Doki_Doki_Majo_Shinpan! [dokimajo.com] for the DS.
Also, don't forget about the unofficial illegal porn games for consoles...
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Here are two examples (not porn):
Japanese erotic games [wikipedia.org] are a special case. Let me rephrase:
Counterexample: North American video game consoles vs. PCs running U.S. English Windows. The consoles have no pornographic games, yet PC gaming hasn't slaughtered console gaming in North America. Why is this?
Also, don't forget about the unofficial illegal porn games for consoles...
Are you talking about a handful of titles from decades ago (like Custer's Revenge on Atari 2600 and Panesian's NES games) or a whole thriving industry?
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Well, you need to understand that the pc gaming industry is pretty much dead in japan. I'm confident that the pc is still popular here because of its capacity to let players create their own games (like porn games)
The platform that lets the consumers create their own games and mods easily wins.
Also, don't forget that consoles are still selling because the products are not distributed on all platforms. If all games were released at the same time for all platforms with the same quality and price, the pc would
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Re:Another revolutionary technology... (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't understand people claiming that porn created the computing universe in 6 kilobytes.
Computers proliferated when they became cheap enough for the average person to afford (IBM PC) and useful enough for the average person to want (taxes, word processing, games, etc). Sure, some people probably bought Internet service primarily to access porn, but I don't think that had much effect on the overall computer boom. Computers boomed like cars boomed: someone made it cheap and people saw everyday uses for them.
Now, one might make an argument about porn boosting search engines (look at graphs of popular terms over time), but certainly not the whole shebang.
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Now, one might make an argument about porn boosting search engines (look at graphs of popular terms over time), but certainly not the whole shebang.
I thought porn was all about the whole she-bang.
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you spin me right round baby right round.
or something like that anyways.
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That's the funniest thing I've read all week. :-P
Cool now for the real use (Score:1, Funny)
When will I be able to have a FREE holographic lap dance?
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But if you use the machine about 5,000 times would the cost of 5,000 lap dances be a lot less then the holographic machine?
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Or will the next release of NFS require you to spend several hours arguing with police, getting repair estimates, and submitting an insurance claim every time you have an accident?
Nah. SecuROM handles that part.
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You know.... a real lap dance would probably cost less than that holographic machine.
I'm pretty sure the parent is inferring a clothes off experience.
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Isn't particularly suited for 3d images (Score:4, Funny)
Other than that small issue, sounds like a winner.
Re:Isn't particularly suited for 3d images (Score:5, Funny)
See my sig...
Boo! (Score:5, Funny)
Too soon!
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It's about ignoring something very big and important, and instead focusing your attention elsewhere.
Falling off a building isn't so bad, except for that sudden stop at the end.
This new hologram technology is great, except that it isn't great for 3D images.
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Well, in the 3 minutes it takes to change images, just imagine you've walked around to a different side, then the picture can show that. Voila!
ahhh, those magic words... (Score:1, Interesting)
five to ten years.
-> hot air
Every couple of minutes? (Score:4, Funny)
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Updating every couple of minutes is still plenty of time for 3d porn.
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Ah, I could finish before the update
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It can only update every couple of minutes? Not to worry, Lucas will stretch out Episode XXIV accordingly.
And don't forget about the Episode I remake. It may actually be more watchable that round, giving us time to mentally recover between the frames of Jar-Jar.
PC monitors next (Score:1)
Dude (Score:5, Funny)
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I hear he was in a galaxy far far away too.
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Yeah, where's the helpmeobiwan tag?
Who? (Score:3, Insightful)
Who is this Dr. Justin Lawrence and why is he being cited as the authoritative naysayer for this technology? He doesn't seem to have any reasons to be unimpressed other than this cliche:
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http://www.eng.bangor.ac.uk/Staff/justin_lawrence.php
http://arrow.dit.ie/scienmas/30/
Anyone who has successfully published a peer-reviewed doctoral dissertation on "optical amplification and lasing in conjugated polymers and novel semiconducting dendrimers and fabrication of wavelength scale microstructure by soft lithography" has my complete respect.
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Okay, maybe 15 more minutes...
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In short, he's an expert on holographic materials. So, yeah, he knows what he's talking about. Disclaimer: His old PhD supervisor is my current one, but I don't know him.
Holographic display technology is a long way away from going into TVs. There's a lot of active research on it, as well as on holographic data storage (there's an obvious overlap), which is actually commercially available (c.f. Inphase [inphase-technologies.com]), though it hasn't much market share yet.
Refresh Rates (Score:5, Funny)
If it can only refresh every few minutes, it'd be perfect for airing CSPAN, right? I mean, it's not like Congress moves very fast - you really don't need a refresh rate measured in Hz.
And if they got it in 3D... It'd be just like you're there!
Re:Refresh Rates (Score:4, Funny)
> And if they got it in 3D... It'd be just like you're there!
But why would you want to be?
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And i'ts attitudes like that that'll keep this technology from taking off!
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you can't understand the government until you become a member of the government. And the first rule of government is to not talk about how the government works.
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A.K.A. The Golf Channel.
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If it can only refresh every few minutes, it'd be perfect for airing CSPAN, right?
Congress will ban it as the 2-D left-right paradigm suits their purposes quite well.
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That would be a 1D paradigm then.
You, sir, are correct.
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> Congress will ban it as the 2-D left-right paradigm suits their purposes quite well.
Libertarian?
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MIT Media Lab has been doing holoTV for 15 years (Score:5, Informative)
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So.. just use spheres for the heads.
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HoloTV? (Score:5, Informative)
"HoloTV" conjures up images of...
- a display much like holograms, but instead with fully moving images (and I don't mean the ones that have moving images when you change the viewing angle)
- a holodeck, but confined to the 'space' of a TV.
Benton et al (mostly et al) did great work, but... ...it is neither of the above.
http://people.csail.mit.edu/wojciech/3DTV/index.html [mit.edu]
A lenticular display is cool, but still depends a lot on the viewing angle, very precise registration, etc.
True '3D TV' is quite a long ways out as of yet.. there are plenty of existing and research methods, but all of them have their caveats that make them nowhere near '3D TV' a la "everything actually looks 3D, from any angle, without special glasses required, and without the surfaces appearing translucent, and with no more extreme requirements than a very high-end regular TV now".
red/blue | red/green methods - no color accuracy, need glasses, not actually 3D (fixed viewpoint)
chromadepth - no color accuracy, need glasses, not actually 3D (fixed viewpoint)
shutter glasses - need glasses (dur), not actually 3D (fixed viewpoint)
polarization - need glasses, not actually 3D (fixed viewpoint)
VR glasses - need the big VR goggles.
Lenticular displays - limited viewing angles, not actually 3D (multiple fixed viewpoints - typically on the horizontal plane, MIT's work has the vertical plane covered a bit as well)
Tracking displays - limited viewing angles and, moreover, limited number of viewers (just one.. the person being tracked. Also not really 3D (fixed viewpoints, but with greater 'fluidity' between viewing angles; no actual depth cues (could be combined with a 'glasses' method to overcome this limitation, however). In theory extensible to spherical displays to provide a - albeit awkward - free-viewpoint display).
Collated displays / array of displays - expensive, limited viewing angles (not as limited as lenticular, but if you look at the side of the array of displays, you're not going to see a whole lot), surfaces appear translucent, color inaccurate the deeper 'in' you look.
Spinning surface displays (in various forms) - noisy (even with the spinning surface encased and usually vacuum-sealed; for resistance purposes as well), flickery, surfaces tend to appear translucent although some level of opacity can be attained.
Making the air explode in gorgeous bursts of luminosity - loud. very, very loud.. zero color, not even greyscale; presuming technique perfected to at least allow greyscale (minor vs major bursts, or frequency bursts), surfaces will still appear translucent.
Of all of the above, Lenticular displays are the most commercially successful *right now*, and they're still not mainstream; that might change as more and more 3D movies come out and they start getting stuck on Blu-Ray/whatever, though.
I get the feeling I missed one, but it's likely to have some of the other usual drawbacks.
Overall, VR goggles give the best experience as long as the content is actually 3D.. but people don't like wearing even the little polarized glasses, nevermind a VR headset.
--
On top of that, though... shooting a movie in a stereoscopic format (glasses) is difficult enough; a lot of movie shots only really 'work' from a single angle - think one actor punching another... move a little right/left and it becomes a lot easier to tell that the guy never actually hit him; gets worse when you add in the original viewing angle and you get full 3D depth cues. That's not to mention any effects that have to get replicated in stereo (double the work; easy if it's a 3D feature film, not so easy if it's live-action and some poor artist has to rotoscope an actor's hair not once, but twice, and with stereoscopic cohesion.
And that's just stereo.. that's not even the common concept of 3D (cameras all around), nevermind full 3D (being able to look all the way around, instead of just orbiting the scene of interest).
No.. it'll be a long, long while more before 'HoloTV' is something we can all talk about the way we did about flatscreen TVs several years back.
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3D w/ out glasses
http://www.megagames.com/news/html/hardware/3dtvwithoutglassesareality.shtml [megagames.com]
http://www.hemagazine.com/node/CEATEC_Show_Coverage [hemagazine.com]
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cool, however...
"works by deflecting light from the screen according to its color. Red, green and blue light is deflected in different directions to create left and right eye views in eight adjacent viewing plains."
That sounds like ChromaDepth ( mentioned in my previous post - here's the tech owner's site: http://www.chromatek.com/ [chromatek.com] ), but without the glasses. Unfortunately, you only get 8 viewpoints (like a lenticular display might) and the color is going to be highly inaccurate; like a rainbow of colors.
I
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DNF? (Score:5, Funny)
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I thought the problem was that DNF is on track to be nearly ready in 5-10 years. When this goes commercial, they'll have to go back and switch engines *again*!
AGAIN!? (Score:5, Insightful)
seriously, how often have we read about holo-TV breakthroughs within the last - say - 15 years?
I stopped believing, although I'd love such technology...
sweet (Score:5, Funny)
thats about 0.0056 frames per second
still better than crysis on my rig
Could reach the market in 5-10 years = ... (Score:2)
Maybe it is just me, but sketpress releases like this are hardly news. Think of every breakthrough you've read about on Slashdot that was supposedly going to be a product in 5 or 10 years. ...
Use 4 monitors...cheaper! (Score:1)
Old news (Score:4, Informative)
This news is from February.
More detail here...
http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/feb08/5995 [ieee.org]
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I don't think this exactly the same technology and idea. This article seems to appear to focus more on reusable holographic devices and not aimed at fast refreshing TV/movies. However this technology, if advance can used for TV/movies but as it is is replacement for existing film based holographic.
Misunderstandings and Disbeliefs (Score:5, Informative)
That guy is a prick and a true disbeliever.
I think it has been widely misunderstood what exactly this breakthrough is. It is not yet another display with a fast-rotating spiral in the center, or a box filled with smoke and crossing beams form a 3D picture.
No. What this is, is basically a "normal" hologram, the kind you have as small stickers on CCs or (ugh) EULAs, or the kind you hang on your wall if you're so inclined, just erasable. It's basically the CD-RW of holograms. With that technology, if they can 'erase' and 'write' images fast enough (fast enough for let's say 25fps), we finally can have a holographic display.
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You mean those crappy monochrome pictures you see in art galleries that you need to be looking at 100% square on to get anything other than horrible distortions?
Look, I think holograms are cool and all, just like I did back in the '80s when they were the next big thing. And they don't seem to have improved much since.
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They have improved, though - they haven't been limited to a monochromatic display for many years now, they can include animation, etc.
e.g. http://www.rabbitholes.com/ [rabbitholes.com]
They're not 3D TV or Holographic TV, however :)
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I'll side with skeptical for now too.
Currently it is 4" square, monochrome, several minutes to draw and erase is a separate step.
To even get 3 colors, he is looking for a material that will produce the other 2 colors. I wonder if the resolution drops by a factor 3 then...anyone remember CGA graphics
Can you make a polymer with 256 different reactive materials to produce anything resembling a picture? Much less 16.7 million different types of material in a uniform polymer coating....
Even if it works on a big
I can't wait.... (Score:4, Funny)
And once I get home, I'll fire up my commercially viable Linux desktop and look at watch Netflix streaming Netflix movies, eating some Taco Bell (It will be the only "restaurant" left after the earthquake)
Interesting, but what about filming? (Score:5, Insightful)
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But why do all the actors have their eyes closed
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You also have to have a holographic "camera", and those are not easy, especially since they require LASER light.
A computer-generated hologram can be built from any 3D mathematical model. The 3D model could be built from from interpolating parallax from stereoscopic image capture.
Practical computer-generated hologram displays will probably be much "simpler" than analog film holograms (fewer virtual views per degree, no horizontal parallax, etc.)
It must be snowing in hell... (Score:1)
offtopic (Score:1)
The root of his (Peyghambarian) last name is "Prophet" in honor of the Prophet Muhammad, sal Allahu 'alaihi wa sallam.
Stupid (Score:2)
Useful for some things, but not TV.
The magic "5 to 10 year" milestone (Score:1)
I distinctly remember sitting in my 4th grade classroom, in 1970, and listening to the teacher read an article to the class, telling us about "the future".
One of the breaking news items was that scientists were working on making televisions that could "hang on a wall like a picture frame", and we would see it homes within 5 to 10 years.
I won't hold my breath on this holographic TV thing. I don't even think I'll bite on the "within our lifetime" bait at the start of the article.
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So he was off by a few decades. Happens to the best of us. Visions of the future don't always show a calendar, you know.
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True, if they were indeed, just visions. But I assumed when the person predicting invoked a range of "5 to 10 years", that he was, indeed, putting an outside limit on the project.
Interestingly enough, I saw the same thing on the news about 10 years later and remembered that day in class, so many years before. At the time, television was a big part of my life, and I was looking forward to that milestone. Ironically, now I couldn't care much less.
My point is, sometimes people just spout off a big number of
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New theorem:
Any technological advance will not arrive until at least an amount of time greater than or equal to the square of the precision of the rough estimate has passed.
You don't just change channels on it . . . (Score:1)
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3 D bullcrap. (Score:1)
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And a large scale implementation like this could spur tabletop gaming from a backroom pastime in comics/hobby shops to something more on par with laser tag. Or both if its Shadowrun.
You realize if this works out, we're on the verge of being overrun by LARPers. [wikipedia.org]
RUN! FLEE!
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What's this 'console' you speak of? (Score:2)
But by including animated 3d projection would get people away from a console and play the games on the living room floor.
We used to do that without any electronic gear - just a set of dice, some rulebooks, and maybe some notepads. Oh, and pizza.
Was that just the poor-kids' D&D? I can't imagine any of these electronics improve the fun.
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so who really cares if the same lame effect can be animated?
Bumper stickers and billboards.