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2008 The Year of Virtual Worlds (?)

By AWOMO, Google Earth, PS3 'Home', Second Life, Virtual Earth, virtual worlds

Second Life broke into the main stream during 2007 and perhaps more than any virtual world to date illustrated how digital environments can be used for visualisation and communication in the sciences.

Second Life’s take up by NATURE and numerous Universities illustrates how established institutions are testing the water and exploring the potential of virtual environments. As readers will know we are huge supporters of virtual worlds in geographic science, outreach and education and 2008 looks like it’ll be the year when such environments reach into more and more peoples homes.

A World of My Own (AWOMO), currently in beta, is indicative of the increasing number of systems that are looking to get into the Second Life model. Interestingly the system is aimed at developing a communication space and distribution network for gamers. The movie embedded below provides a glimpse:



Sony’s ‘Home’ is similar in concept to AWMO but via the Playstation 3, a notable move to bringing virtual worlds into the home.

Due early in 2008 ‘Home’ is not looking like taking Second Life’s crown but with the ability to tap into the PS3’s graphics ability it looks like being the most visually impressive virtual world to date -note the real time shadows, something that Second Life is crying out for.

The official trailer is embedded below:

More speculative predictions are the launch of Google’s own Virtual World system, something that wouldn’t surprise us at all. Google Earth is being rapidly out manoeuvred by Microsoft’s Virtual Earth and a populated earth is without question the next big thing. We would love to tell you more about the ‘Populated Earth’ but sadly we aren’t allowed to yet 🙂

The number of virtual environments is growing at an ever increasing pace, we believe 2008 will be the year of Virtual Worlds entering into main stream science and that can only be a good thing for outreach, education and visualisation.

2008 The Year of the Neogeographer

By Neogeography

The last few months have proved interesting with a few professionals in the industry getting increasingly unsettled by the rise of the Neogeographer and with it a huge increase in information along with a general decrease in overall accuracy.

We are all for it to be honest and the forthcoming Digital Urban book provides a series of tutorials on how to use the best tools out there for the very purpose of Neogeography. The focus on accuracy has always perturbed us, surely its all about a sense of location and place, if the icon or information is a few metres off then to be honest who cares? If you need sub centimetre accuracy go down the Ordnance Survey, or other official map provider route, if you want massive amounts of geoinformation that allow a picture of a place to be developed then its all down to the people, Web 2.0 and ultimately Neogeography.

With this comes a prediction that 2008 will see a wealth of new tools allowing street level data capture and 3D modelling at low cost. Microsofts Photosynth is on the horizon and new software that takes images from Flickr to build 3D models is under development. Cameras and GPS tracking sticks are continuing to fall in price with software to geolocate images becoming increasingly easy to use.

Embedded below is a review of the forthcoming ATP Photofinder:

You can read the full review and find out more details on the Photofinder from here.

Also on the increasingly essential YouTube tobaiswac has placed a movie based on his walk from Wilshire Blvd in Downtown Los Angeles to the Pacific Ocean:

Covering 16 miles tobais took 1 photo every 10 steps providing an actually quite useful data archive of his route. If this had been linked to a gps it would of provided a simple yet effective street level tour, perhaps the next Open Street Map type project could be street level photography, after all who needs all those expensive vans and street capturing systems from the likes of Google and Microsoft (?).

2008 is the year of Neogeography and we cant wait, GIS and mapping in general has been too complicated for too long, it is at last coming to the masses and if that means some points are not quite in the right place, so be it, its not the end of the world is it.

Virtual Earth & the Wii Remote

By Virtual Earth, Wii

We picked this up via the James Fee GIS Blog, the Wii Remote has become a jack of all trades recently acting as a VR Headset Sensor, Whiteboard Input Device and now to control Microsoft’s Virtual Earth.

The movie below is well worth a look:




One of the leading developers of interfaces using the Nintendo’s Remote is Johnny Chung Lee of Carnegie Mellon University, embedded below is how to use the remote for headtracking, enabling desktop virtual reality.

Now if the headset can be merged with the Virtual Earth navigation you are really on to something.

Take a look at Johnny Chung Lee’s site for more info and the source code, if we could just find a Wii in the shops we could try this out at CASA.

Urban Design: Chongqing SketchUp

By SketchUp

Chongqing is the largest and most populous of the People’s Republic of China’s four provincial-level municipalities. With a population of over 4.1million the area is experiencing unprecedented growth.

Embedded below is a proposal conceived by Rêve architectes associés, rendered in SketchUp the compression shows in the quality but it provides a good indication of how good SketchUp can be when it is used well:

Rêve architectes associés is a chinese and french agency created in Shanghai by Zhang Liang et Vincent Pavard.

See the Rêve site for more details.

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