You can do a very similar thing in virtual reality with TiltBrush. You don't get a physical object at the end but you do have a lot more flexibility in the structure and appearance, and, of course, the magical power of the undo button. And maybe you could get a physical object out with the help of a 3D printer...
I believe 3D sketching and CAD will be the first popular non-game application of virtual reality. 3D CAD with 2D I/O (mouse and flat monitor) has always been a little too difficult for the masses. Virtual reality with natively 3D input and output makes 3D CAD an order of magnitude easier and more fun. It could give a real boost to the 3D printing market too, as once the masses start doing CAD they're definitely going to want to print their creations.
> I believe 3D sketching and CAD will be the first popular non-game application of virtual reality.
I don't think so. Watching movies and shows, taking tours and shopping will be probably be the most popular non-game uses. After that will be something like Skype in VR. Then educational uses.
Using CAD or any other creative endeavour will always be in the minority. Sadly, most people are raised to be consumers, not creators.
I would prefer creating virtual objects for this kind of prototyping because they do not produce plastic waste. I wonder if the protopiper device can be used with biodegradable tape.
I could use it to lay out my living room for the movers. Then they could see the layout I want for each piece and then replace the layout with furniture as it's unloaded. As I'm setting this up, I can get a sense of how each furniture piece might fit in my space. On a smaller scale I could use it to place objects where I was thinking of putting a new piece of furniture and then spend a week living with the space carved out before I buy the piece.
If there were a smartphone app that took dimensions and then supplied assembly instructions it would be golden.
ProtoPiper is an attempt to bring the human back to material interaction, like in traditional craft practices. It is more than just a prototyping device. It helps you think about materials, gravity and structures.
I look at this and it reminds of drawings from the late 1800s of people doing things with mechanical devices that we now use electronics for. It just seems very contrived and impractical.
[+] [-] modeless|10 years ago|reply
http://tiltbrush.com
I believe 3D sketching and CAD will be the first popular non-game application of virtual reality. 3D CAD with 2D I/O (mouse and flat monitor) has always been a little too difficult for the masses. Virtual reality with natively 3D input and output makes 3D CAD an order of magnitude easier and more fun. It could give a real boost to the 3D printing market too, as once the masses start doing CAD they're definitely going to want to print their creations.
[+] [-] avn2109|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pmoriarty|10 years ago|reply
I don't think so. Watching movies and shows, taking tours and shopping will be probably be the most popular non-game uses. After that will be something like Skype in VR. Then educational uses.
Using CAD or any other creative endeavour will always be in the minority. Sadly, most people are raised to be consumers, not creators.
[+] [-] mjn|10 years ago|reply
Michael Deering (at the time chief engineer of Sun) had a similar feeling in the mid-'90s, and built an interesting demo called HoloSketch: http://michaelfrankdeering.com/blog/projects/graphics_softwa...
Paper: http://cumincad.architexturez.net/system/files/pdf/a91e.cont...
[+] [-] felixmar|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|10 years ago|reply
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[+] [-] huuu|10 years ago|reply
This reminds me of a talk by Brett Victor [1] "The Humane Representation of Thought".
Brett thinks we are limiting ourselfs by expressing our thoughts in a mostly 2D scaled down domain.
This protopiper is a great example of what we will see in the future.
[1] https://vimeo.com/115154289
[+] [-] nkurz|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pidge|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] WhitneyLand|10 years ago|reply
What's are the foreseeable applications of this?
[+] [-] jschwartzi|10 years ago|reply
If there were a smartphone app that took dimensions and then supplied assembly instructions it would be golden.
[+] [-] perceptron|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] ernestoharti|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] theophrastus|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] gopowerranger|10 years ago|reply
[+] [-] pidge|10 years ago|reply
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