Virtual Celestia?
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Topic authorElChristou
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Please define what you mean by "virtual reality device".
Celestia has been ported for use in Cave 3D environments.
See http://www.lsi.usp.br/~paiva/glass/glass.htm
Celestia has been ported for use in Cave 3D environments.
See http://www.lsi.usp.br/~paiva/glass/glass.htm
Selden
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Topic authorElChristou
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ElChristou wrote:Hey this is pretty neat!
I was thinking much in those head mounted displays of stuff like that for a complete immersion...
Actually, I have got pretty good lcd shutter glasses here. Two minutes of use and I just -- beeuuurrk -- feel completely sick.
At my company, we have a very big professional setup, I mean really big, with latest 3d headset tech stuff to render hi-res virtual visits of computer-generated power plants on a huge screen. Customers can visit their plant before any metal has been cut.
That's much better than my home equipment, for sure. But ... our most resilient guests survive for 5-8 minutes. At best.
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Topic authorElChristou
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Boux wrote:ElChristou wrote:Hey this is pretty neat!
I was thinking much in those head mounted displays of stuff like that for a complete immersion...
Actually, I have got pretty good lcd shutter glasses here. Two minutes of use and I just -- beeuuurrk -- feel completely sick.
At my company, we have a very big professional setup, I mean really big, with latest 3d headset tech stuff to render hi-res virtual visits of computer-generated power plants on a huge screen. Customers can visit their plant before any metal has been cut.
That's much better than my home equipment, for sure. But ... our most resilient guests survive for 5-8 minutes. At best.
Really? what's the problem?
Boux wrote:ElChristou wrote:Hey this is pretty neat!
I was thinking much in those head mounted displays of stuff like that for a complete immersion...
Actually, I have got pretty good lcd shutter glasses here. Two minutes of use and I just -- beeuuurrk -- feel completely sick.
That brings back memories - I once participated in a psychology department VR experiment where I had to wear a headset and try to find my way around a virtual environment. I got sick after about 5 minutes (motion sickness?). Needless to say, the "data" they collected from me was useless.
This was 6 years ago! Don't they have better equipment now, or are all VR helmets doomed to make the user sick?
dirkpitt wrote:That brings back memories - I once participated in a psychology department VR experiment where I had to wear a headset and try to find my way around a virtual environment. I got sick after about 5 minutes (motion sickness?). Needless to say, the "data" they collected from me was useless.
This was 6 years ago! Don't they have better equipment now, or are all VR helmets doomed to make the user sick?
Apparently, this is almost universal. People are getting sick with this VR stuff, because the brain is confused between the VR signals and the body signals. They don't match, and the "human OS" crashes !
"Well! I've often seen a cat without a grin", thought Alice; "but a grin without a cat! It's the most curious thing I ever saw in all my life!"
The company I work for makes an octangenal (sp) room with 8 or 16 projectors in it. You get a 360 degree 2D or 3D view. Each screen is about 6 - 7 ft wide. I have asked about getting Celestia running in it. There is interest but other projects are demanding our time. I remember a thread were someone was talking about generating several POV's in the program. This would need to be so different images of space could be sent to each projector. All of the POVs would be parented together so you could rotate in any axiz to see another part of the sky.
I will post when something gets going in that direction in the future.
Don
I will post when something gets going in that direction in the future.
Don
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Cham wrote:People are getting sick with this VR stuff, because the brain is confused between the VR signals and the body signals. They don't match, and the "human OS" crashes !
The inner ear fluid does not spin with visual movement. Therefore, our minds get confused. This is the basis of motion sickness, but in reverse. The OS doesn't necessarily crash, it is just not equipped for motion without visual movement or visual movement without motion. Airsickness, zero-g sickness, carsickness, etc... In many cases you can learn to overcome it though...
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buggs_moran wrote:Cham wrote:People are getting sick with this VR stuff, because the brain is confused between the VR signals and the body signals. They don't match, and the "human OS" crashes !
The inner ear fluid does not spin with visual movement. Therefore, our minds get confused. This is the basis of motion sickness, but in reverse. The OS doesn't necessarily crash, it is just not equipped for motion without visual movement or visual movement without motion. Airsickness, zero-g sickness, carsickness, etc... In many cases you can learn to overcome it though...
Yes, the movements of the scenery are not produced by one's body movements.
There is not a good match between what the scenery is sending to the brain and what the brain expects to "see" while it relies on body sensors input (ground pressure under the feet, internal ear fluid...).
The brain then feeds back wrong signals to the muscles. You start feeling like drunk and loose control over your equilibrium. Then headhache creeps in and your stomach shouts for mercy.
At the widescreengaming forum there some immersive setups described.
Multiscreen setups can provide good experience, specially for flight sims.
You better have very deep pocket though
Edit: and to add to the confusion there may be very weird depth sorting problems which are not so apparent/harmful on a 2d projection but are real killers in a VR setup.
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