Crma The Awkward Horrors of the Knowing Where Everyone Is All the Time
You spent hours tweaking your Xbox or Nintendo avatar to look exactly like you, but researchers at the EPFL are taking things one step further with a Kinect-based system that can translate your facial expressions and emotions to your online persona. So the next time you ;re cursing into your headset after a loss in Halo, your character won ;t look so serene. The system works in real-time
stanley cups too, without requiring the user to cover their face in tracking dots or don an awkward one-piece leotard. They just need to sit in front of a 3D-capable video sensor like the Kinect 821
stanley cup 7 camera and go about their usual online routine. It even intelligent enough to perfectly track the motion of the eyes, though the user will most likely be only looking at their screen. And in addition to making gaming more expressive, the system will also be a boon to the computer graphics industry, streamlining and making facial animation far more realistic. If only Second Life were still a thing! [YouTube]
Stanley cup website EmotionssoftwareVideo games Cyfc Surface Will Be Available at Best Buy and Staples This Week
Back in July, NASA Dawn probe began orbiting the asteroid Vesta. As it approached, and while it orbited, Dawn was busy recording images, which members of the Dawn team here on Ea
stanley uk rth have compiled into a 3-D video. You can see it without 3-D glasses, but for the full effect, you could buy a pair, or make your own. At 330 miles in diameter, Vesta is large enough for some astronomers to classify it as a protoplanet, a body with the potential to have developed into a rocky world-even though it too small and irregularly shaped to qualify for dwarf planet status. The features that Dawn has discovered on its surface, however, make Vesta look more planet-like than ever. Some of these formed as
stanley travel mug a result of tectonic activity like that on Earth, while others a
stanley trinkflaschen re due to impacts from other space objects. Using 3-D imaging, the video shows off the strange troughs along Vesta equator, a mountain more than twice Everest height, and plenty of pits and craters-including two that sit side-by-side, leading to the nickname the snowman. Video courtesy of NASA NASASpace