The 3D is cool, but, they can also take a few frames of video and make it into a poster that moves! I can imagine a house full of paintings where the people in the pictures are all moving, like in the Harry Potter movies, I think this is the future of home decor.See this link with video from a soccer player, from the same site.<a class="user" href="http://www.xyzrgb.com/holos/soccerplayer.swf">http://www.xyzrgb.com/holos/soccerplayer.swf</a>
The fact that they are using them to create animations also indicates that these are lenticular. An animation is a linear frame sequence along a single dimension(time). A lenticular animation transposes the time dimension/axis along the horizontal viewing angle axis. (ie When you walk past it, it appears to move)A 3D effect is created by synching the animated camera move to the eventual view angle axis.The best frame count that I have seen before these is like 4 or 5. They claim six seconds of animation. So at 24 to 30 fps. These would be upwards of 144 to 180 frames.A true hologram doesn't have frames per say, though you could think of each two dimensional viewing angle coordinate as an individual from..
Even though its insanely expensive, I could see this being used in a marketing campaign and it would probably do very well depending on the product. Hmm awesome, maybe I should be pitching this idea to my clients heh
thebusdriverAug 28, 2006
I want one!
beelzAug 29, 2006
only 3300 <a class="user" href="http://www.xyzimaging.com/pricing.html">http://www.xyzimaging.com/pricing.html</a>Story- <a class="user" href="http://www.gamese****ch.com/2006/08/xyzrgb_final_fantasy_holograph.php">http://www.gamese****ch.com/2006/08/xyzrgb_final_fantasy_holograph.php</a>
steveisthedudeAug 29, 2006
The 3D is cool, but, they can also take a few frames of video and make it into a poster that moves! I can imagine a house full of paintings where the people in the pictures are all moving, like in the Harry Potter movies, I think this is the future of home decor.See this link with video from a soccer player, from the same site.<a class="user" href="http://www.xyzrgb.com/holos/soccerplayer.swf">http://www.xyzrgb.com/holos/soccerplayer.swf</a>
datasurferAug 29, 2006
The fact that they are using them to create animations also indicates that these are lenticular. An animation is a linear frame sequence along a single dimension(time). A lenticular animation transposes the time dimension/axis along the horizontal viewing angle axis. (ie When you walk past it, it appears to move)A 3D effect is created by synching the animated camera move to the eventual view angle axis.The best frame count that I have seen before these is like 4 or 5. They claim six seconds of animation. So at 24 to 30 fps. These would be upwards of 144 to 180 frames.A true hologram doesn't have frames per say, though you could think of each two dimensional viewing angle coordinate as an individual from..
d3adkl0wnAug 29, 2006
agreed..
idntunknwnAug 29, 2006
Wrong place
eviliuAug 29, 2006
The T800 poster is majorly badass.
starforgeAug 29, 2006
Even though its insanely expensive, I could see this being used in a marketing campaign and it would probably do very well depending on the product. Hmm awesome, maybe I should be pitching this idea to my clients heh
tylerdurden0Aug 29, 2006
I think I speak for everyone when I say your clients do not want to see a flying "Bigf Ol' Fist."