
Actuality Systems to Present Invited Paper at AeroSense
2002
Actuality Systems' CTO to Discuss Design and Results of World's
First 100 Million Voxel Volumetric Display for Mission Planning
at AeroSense 2002
Company Founder Favalora Sees an Important Aerospace/Defense
Role for 3-D Systems that Enable Group Interaction and Collaboration
ORLANDO, FLA. - APRIL 1, 2002 - Actuality Systems, Inc., a developer
of advanced 3-D display technology, will present the results of
the development of its spherical 3-D display technology at the
AeroSense 2002 Conference being held this week at the Gaylord
Palms Convention Center in Orlando. The Conference is sponsored
by SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering.
The breakthrough technology, believed to provide the highest
resolution volumetric imagery ever developed, will be discussed
by company founder and chief technology officer Gregg Favalora.
The presentation is scheduled for 2 p.m. on Thursday, April 4.
The unique monitor, code-named Helios, is shaped like a 20-inch-diameter
globe and can show high-resolution color images that appear to
hover in space, allowing multiple users to move completely around
the 360-degree display and view images from any angle.
"This newest generation of 100-million voxel displays is
radically changing the way we can visualize spacial relationships,"
Favalora said. "It's proving to be particularly attractive
for collaborative mission simulation and for presenting 3-D wire
frame renderings that can be viewed by a team of people, such
as for battlefield visualization, air-traffic control, or virtual
prototyping."
Unlike some 3-D displays that require ribute_data_text_476"
ORLANDO, FLA. - APRIL 1, 2002 - Actuality Systems, Inc., a developer
of advanced 3-D display technology, will present the results of
the development of its spherical 3-D display technology at the
AeroSense 2002 Conference being held this week at the Gaylord
Palms Convention Center in Orlando. The Conference is sponsored
by SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering.
The breakthrough technology, believed to provide the highest
resolution volumetric imagery ever developed, will be discussed
by company founder and chief technology officer Gregg Favalora.
The presentation is scheduled for 2 p.m. on Thursday, April 4.
The unique monitor, code-named Helios, is shaped like a 20-inch-diameter
globe and can show high-resolution color images that appear to
hover in space, allowing multiple users to move completely around
the 360-degree display and view images from any angle.
"This newest generation of 100-million voxel displays is
radically changing the way we can visualize spacial relationships,"
Favalora said. "It's proving to be particularly attractive
for collaborative mission simulation and for presenting 3-D wire
frame renderings that can be viewed by a team of people, such
as for battlefield visualization, air-traffic control, or virtual
prototyping."
Unlike some 3-D displays that require special stereoscopic goggles
to simulate multi-dimensional imagery, or flat-screen monitors
that translate 3-D data into flat 2-D images, the Actuality Systems
technology is volumetric, meaning that instead of simulating the
effect of 3-D, it actually illuminates voxels throughout the full
range of 3-D locations inside the spherical display. In addition,
a custom embedded graphics architecture takes computational load
off the user's workstation, enabling fully animated 3-D imagery
that can be controlled and maneuvered from the keyboard.
The display has a resolution of approximately 100 million volume
pixels or "voxels." Instead of flat square pixels, voxels
also have depth. Resolution is defined in terms of a stack of
flat slices arranged around a centerline like thin wedges of an
apple around its core.
Actuality Systems uses proprietary graphics-rendering algorithms
to generate the extremely fast, high-performance scene drawing
that is crucial for smooth animation. In addition, by using a
high-speed, high-resolution internal projector, the display is
able to create bitmapped 3-D imagery that gives users access to
100% of the available volume.
The company is currently in the beta testing phase of development
for its new monitors, and is planning to have the first commercial
units ready for shipment by the end of 2002.
-----------special stereoscopic goggles to simulate multi-dimensional
imagery, or flat-screen monitors that translate 3-D data into
flat 2-D images, the Actuality Systems technology is volumetric,
meaning that instead of simulating the effect of 3-D, it actually
illuminates voxels throughout the full range of 3-D locations
inside the spherical display. In addition, a custom embedded graphics
architecture takes computational load off the user's workstation,
enabling fully animated 3-D imagery that can be controlled and
maneuvered from the keyboard.
The display has a resolution of approximately 100 million volume
pixels or "voxels." Instead of flat square pixels, voxels
also have depth. Resolution is defined in terms of a stack of
flat slices arranged around a centerline like thin wedges of an
apple around its core.
Actuality Systems uses proprietary graphics-rendering algorithms
to generate the extremely fast, high-performance scene drawing
that is crucial for smooth animation. In addition, by using a
high-speed, high-resolution internal projector, the display is
able to create bitmapped 3-D imagery that gives users access to
100% of the available volume.
The company is currently in the beta testing phase of development
for its new monitors, and is planning to have the first commercial
units ready for shipment by the end of 2002.
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