NVISION 08: The 'Expansive Ecosystem' of Visual Computing
The week after SIGGRAPH may not have been the most ideal time for NVIDIA to host NVISION 08 in San Jose, but its first-ever visual computing conference served as a nice companion event and attracted around 9,200 attendees. The convergence of this "expansive ecosystem," as NVIDIA CEO Jen-Hsun Huang termed visual computing during his Monday keynote, was very much on display last week, whether it pertained to entertainment, industrial design, biomedical, aerospace or any of the other cutting edge industries. "We're on the cusp of a display revolution -- [and] it's about more dimension," Huang began. He touted parallel computing while pointing to his company's own Cuda GPU, before sharing the stage at The Center for the Performing Arts last Monday with several industry leaders, including Peter Stevenson of Realtime Technologies; Taehoon Kim, co-founder of Nurien Software; Joshua Edwards of Microsoft Live Labs; Jeff Han of Perceptive Pixel; and actress Tricia Helfer, who plays Cylon #6 on Battlestar Galactica. Stevenson demonstrated realtime raytracing to reveal how a CG car resembles a real car. He showed a digital prototype of a new Lamborghini model and discussed the importance of rapid protyping to the design process. Kim, who entertainmed the crowd with a 3D avatar of Huang, showed off Nurien's new MMO game with stunning graphics, comprised of noteworthy cloth and hair simulations. This next-gen game will start to blend MMO gaming with social networking functions.
Edwards showed off Microsoft Labs' new Photosynth app, which uses multiple photos of a site or object to create a 3D model and then display a 360-degree perspective of the object. Edwards revealed how a series of photographs were combined to create an interactive view of Stonehenge and the main display area of the National Archive building in Washington, DC. Photosynth can give the illusion of depth, but true dimensionalization of Huang showed the latest 3-D stereoscopic gaming technology from NVIDIA (which was also on display in the GeForce LAN area of the Convention Center's exhibition hall): the new Medusa demo as well as an existing game, Age of Empires, converted to 3-D with a GeForce GPU. Han showed off his multitouch user interface technology. Using a 100-inch multitouch display, he gave the audience a taste of what the UI of the future might look like. The current bottleneck is the input device. The mouse and cursor are too limiting, he said, but with multi-touch technology some amazing interactions are possible. And Helfer showed how challenging it is blocking and shooting on a greenscreen stage with CG characters in the hit series, Battlestar Galactica. Tuesday's keynote, hosted by Scott Budman of NBC 11television, went further in discussing the everyday applications of visual computing. Eileen Collins, the first female to pilot and command the space shuttle, touted the importance of simulation, and previewed NASA's upcoming Constellation program, which will replace the shuttle and return humans back to the Moon and eventually to Mars. Bernard Charles, CEO of Dassault Systemes, offered a glimpse into the future of 3D design and how visual computing is becoming much more collaborative. He discussed how design, whether it is the Boeing 787 or other "virtual rollouts," will one day include consumers in the design process. For instance, they will evaluate the quality of the styling of a car and driving experience.

























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