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Gadgets may help merge virtual reality with real life

Started by Jen, July 10, 2007, 11:16:53 AM

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Jen

Does anyone else find this idea slightly creepy? I envision the TNG episode where everyone becomes addicted to the virtual reality game....MMO's are awesome if you don't allow them to replace your real life. This gadget sounds like a tool for the addicted.

The only thing that sounds interesting is the Tricorder they mentioned, but I'm not sure they know what the heck a tricorder is since the description they gave doesn't seem to illustrate the function of the Tricorder we know.  ???  Penny for your thoughts.
  :2cents
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Gadgets may help merge virtual reality with real life

By Mark Baard, Globe Correspondent  |  July 9, 2007

That hipster you always see talking into his Bluetooth headset might soon be able to use a similar device to leap into Second Life without even stepping out of line at Trader Joe's.


The company behind Second Life, Linden Lab, hopes to introduce hand-held and wearable systems that act as gateways between the real and virtual worlds. Linden Lab and other virtual worlds also are developing versions that run on existing mobile phones.

Researchers at a recent virtual worlds conference at MIT said that special eyewear, display "badges," and speakers worn about the neck will allow us to live more fully through our avatars -- those idealized versions of ourselves that typically boast better proportions than the saggy originals.

Second Lifers wearing the gadgets will be able to attend "in-world" parties and gallery openings, whether they are sucking down beers at Cornwall's or stuck in Fenway traffic. Motion detectors and other sensors in the devices will also show your virtual mates what you are up to in the real world.

It might sound like public safety officers will need to shift focus away from the risks associated with driving while chatting on cellphones to the inherent dangers of operating in two realities at the same time. But conference participants said such concerns are premature.

"It's like you're not going to be allowed to be in a virtual world while driving in the real world," said Robert Sutor, vice president of open source and standards at IBM.

Linden Lab vice president Joe Miller described one of the early products that will bridge the two worlds as a wearable box that creates a "3D sound field" that allows the wearer to hear voices from his virtual world without completely shutting out the real people around him.

The prototype speaker device presented to Linden recently by a developer "is not ready for prime time yet but it's working pretty well," said Miller, speaking at "Virtual Worlds: Where Business, Society, Technology & Policy Converge," sponsored by MIT and IBM.

Linden is encouraging open source developers to create client software for mobile devices. And Blizzard Entertainment, creator of the online multiplayer game World of Warcraft, is hiring developers with experience in Symbian and Adobe Flash Lite for its mobile interface initiative.

Conference participants said cellphones are likely to be the first mobile devices to create two-way connections between real and virtual reality.

"The idea of cell phone as sensor has started to catch on in the sensor network community," Joseph Paradiso, leader of the Responsive Environments Group at the MIT Media Lab, wrote in an e-mail last week. "They're much heavier platforms than usually seen in sensor networks, but they are certainly ubiquitous!"

ResEnv has produced a prototype "tricorder" -- inspired by the information- synthesizing gadget from "Star Trek" -- that gathers data from real-world surroundings and translates that information into virtual desks and chairs.

In a video at the ResEnv website, media.mit.edu/resenv, grad students demonstrate how the tricorder's sensors can detect someone swiveling in a desk chair and typing on a computer keyboard. The device can also show the user what is happening in the virtual space he or she is helping to create.

It will take some retooling before virtual worlds can accommodate all of the data streaming from ubiquitous sensors.

"We're talking with Linden Lab [about creating] more efficient pipes of sensor data into their environment," said Paradiso. "I can certainly stream video, but I can't efficiently input diverse sensor data."
Founding co-host of the Anomaly Podcast
AnomalyPodcast.com
@AnoamlyPodcast

Duffster

Science fiction writers have written about these type of things for a long time, and it looks like technology is slowly creeping that way. In my opinion it won't be long before there will be neural jacks... which will lead to wireheads, as predicted by lots of different sci-fi writers. Right now these games are just mental addictions, but I know plenty of people that I would consider "addicted" to them. Some are worse then others. But how long until there is tech that will actually lead to physical addictions to these escapists realities.

Don't get me wrong, I enjoy a good MMO World, but like anything else...moderation is needed, and the more things that enable people to spend there life in these worlds, the more "addicted" people we are going to see.

Duffster
Duffster is, The HugoNaut
www.thehugonaut.com

Jen

Yes, how true.

I agree, MMO's are very cool and as soon as Star Trek Online is released I'm going to jump on the band wagon...But moderation is the key. Many people who play MMO's are able to shut down their computers and go back to the real world...and then there are those who have died at their computers because they haven't moved from that spot for a week or more.

I have a slightly addictive personality  so I only plan to play the upcoming Star Trek MMO once a week with a friend who has the same schedule. I'm practicing this now with my 360...so far this works for me. I sometimes go weeks without playing.

I think they design some games (like MMO's) to be addictive, its how they keep the cash flowing. People get obsessed with leveling up or achieving the next goal. For me its what's going to happen next? What's around the next bend? What would happen if I did this instead?

Now it seems they're working on making it easier for addictive personality types to stay "in the game " all the time.

This paragraph really stuck to me:

"Researchers at a recent virtual worlds conference at MIT said that special eyewear, display "badges," and speakers worn about the neck will allow us to live more fully through our avatars -- those idealized versions of ourselves that typically boast better proportions than the saggy originals."

And that's it in a nut shell...if your real world life bites, why would you want to live anywhere else but online?

Founding co-host of the Anomaly Podcast
AnomalyPodcast.com
@AnoamlyPodcast

iceman

I can see this very easily develop into an addiction, with withdrawl symptom, I could see this developing into a type of internet crack. Very scary