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Sneak Peek at Microsoft's WorldWide Telescope
Posted by
ScuttleMonkey
on Sun Mar 02, 2008 06:31 AM
from the eye-on-the-sky dept.
from the eye-on-the-sky dept.
Ted.com has a great sneak peek at Microsoft's new WorldWide Telescope project. In this video, presented by Roy Gould and Curtis Wong, you are able to see a combined view of satellites and telescopes from all over the planet and nearby space. The compiled image is rendered using Microsoft's new high-performance "Visual Experience Engine" that allows users to pan and zoom across the night sky seamlessly.
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who's watching who? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:who's watching who? (Score:5, Insightful)
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C'mon..... (Score:2)
This article has got to be a hose. I mean, Microsoft doing something both useful and cool?
Well, as they say: even a blind squirrel finds an acorn now and then...
The Video (Score:4, Insightful)
I for one, am looking forward to this. I'm sure someone will ask if it can run on Linux. I've no idea, but I can't see it being that hard for Wine to get it working.
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I'm the "Microsoft Visual Experience Engine" has some core dependency like DirectX 10, or whatever, that is a big pain in the ass to port. (Not to mention, corporate strategies behind Vista and all that).
Looking up now copyright infringement (Score:2, Funny)
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Also, I want to report a bug with the sky software. Sometimes this giant ball of fire becomes visible, and looking at it hurts my eyes.
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Take my love. Take my land.
Take me where I cannot stand.
I don't care, I'm still free.
You can't take the sky from me.
Take me out to the black.
Tell 'em I ain't comin' back.
Burn the land And boil the sea.
You can't take the sky from me.
Have no place I can be since I found Serenity.
But you can't take the sky from me.
For 16 years we have provided spin... (Score:2, Interesting)
Q. When did Microsoft first starting looking at the sky?
A. For 16 years, Microsoft has invested, and will continue to invest, in long-term, broad-based research through Microsoft Research. WorldWide Telescope is built on work that started with Jim Gray's SkyServer and his contributions to Sloan Digital Sky Survey.
Sky Server (a portal to the Sloan Digital Sky Survey) was first released in 2001. Aside from the poor grammar in the question, reading that answer just made my skin crawl...
A little about the WWT (Score:5, Informative)
Jonathan Fay (of MaximDL fame) showed it off at Table Mountain Star Party last year and they'd moved from that sky to a synthetic pre-rendered sky that would transition to real images from Hubble or other sources as you zoomed in.
Saw it again at the American Astronomical Society Meeting this January in Austin and really got to play with it since they were right alongside the Harvard IIC booth. It was the first time they were using real imagery for the entire sky and it looked amazing and Jonathan was touting the tour facility.
Its biggest trick in my mind though you didn't see in the video - one little slider that takes you from the Optical to the Infrared and Microwave and X-Ray sky. Simply blew me away.
It already supports VOTable and FITS images and dozens of other formats that astronomers use and are becoming standards for enthusiastic hobbyists. You can take your own images and put them up on the same sky as data from Chandra or Swift or the best ground based data from MMT or Magellan or Keck. Now it starts to get really useful. The CfA at Harvard has been digitizing its old plates of sky images, Pan-STARRS will start operating sooner rather than later, SDSS has a ton of data already and LSST will be up in a few years imaging the entire sky every few nights. This is a monstrous amount of data and the system really gives you a way to search through it all very intuitively. I'd love the ability to click on a star in the sky and have all known spectra of it pop up along with references. Not quite there yet but it will be.
This also makes it the best educational tool. There are projects like Las Cumbres and several schools and colleges have access to telescopes so this gives you a great tool with which to look at data and take your own data and do it in a way that doesn't require you learning how to use NED and SIMBAD and looking for papers on ADS. But I think the biggest thing it does is just blow you away with a sense of how large everything is, or perhaps how small you are in relation and I think that is a very powerful idea. I remember the first time I saw the Eames Power of Ten video - this takes that to a different level and is genuinely thought provoking.
Quite simply the best thing I've ever seen out of Microsoft.
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What about time ? Is there a means of moving forward and backwards in time ? (A lot of the interest in the Harvard Sky Patrol plate, for example, is that they sample the sky in the past.)
http://www.stellarium.org/ (Score:2)
Lame demo or not a big deal (Score:2, Interesting)
It's basically one of the application I already had installed in my Linux box for years, but only with a bigger database. That can surely not be accounted as an invention, and certainly not as big an invention as the telescope 400 years ago.
How is different from Google Sky? (Score:2, Interesting)
Jim Gray gone missing (Score:5, Informative)
LS
Earlier Autistic Story going around (Score:2)
BSOD (Score:2)
Re:Question: (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
Re:Question: (Score:4, Informative)
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Answer (Score:2, Funny)
Google sky is from Google and the worldwide telescope is from Microsoft.
hth
Rich-media-immersive-experience! (Score:3, Funny)
Q. What is WorldWide Telescope?
A. The WorldWide Telescope (WWT) is a rich visualization environment that functions as a virtual telescope, bringing together imagery from the best ground- and space telescopes to enable seamless, guided explorations of the universe. WorldWide Telescope, created with Microsoft®'s high-performance Visual Experience Engine(TM), enables seamless panning and zooming across the night sky blending terabytes of images, data, and stories from multiple sources over the Internet into a media-rich, immersive experience.
Couldn't find the same about Google Earth (Sky):
Explore the sky with Google Earth
Whether you're an astronomer or stargazer, Sky in Google Earth brings millions of stars and galaxies to your fingertips.
Re:Question: (Score:5, Informative)
Make no mistake about it Photosynth is a world changing technology.
Parent
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Yes, it is, but it isn't new. It's nice that Microsoft has a cleaner and better implementation of it now and that better hardware makes it look smooth, but it's been around for nearly as long as images and networks.
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These patents will likely be challenged if Microsoft tries to enforce them; I'm sorry, but you'll have to do your own prior art searches.
Saying that computers *could* do something for a long time is nothing like having a product that actually does those things through a seamless user experience.
That's quite right. And their implementation is
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Finally! (Score:2)
Finally! The cure for cancer? No? What, solves world hunger? Peace for mankind? Not even a better aspirin? What you say, a neat imaging trick? Your world must be very small.
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Well, maybe the database is bigger. Or not. Oh, and you can switch the view to infrared and radar.
Re:oK... (Score:4, Funny)
D00d, I luv the way you say "Linuzz" instead on "Linux", and "Abble" instead of "Apple" (even if I don't really get "Abble") but you missed the obvious and oh-so-original "Open Sores" line that cracks me up everytime.
Back on topic, Google [google.com] have already done this, Celestia [shatters.net] have already done this (and Celestia is free software - sorry, "open sores"), so what's *not* to bash about Microsoft (damn, that should be M$) arriving late to the party? What does Microsoft bring to the party that we don't already have - in spades - already? Fanbois?
I know, I shouldn't feed the troll, but it was so cute, sitting there under the bridge...
Parent
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I think maybe it's more like Google Sky [google.com].
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Re:This is an invention? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think the thing that really ticks off the tech community about Microsoft, is that they don't really invent anything, they're just extrordinarily good and spotting excellent software early on, acquiring it and then marketing it better than any other company out there.
Parent
even worse (Score:4, Interesting)
These people are real sleazeballs.
http://www.google.com/patents?q=Blaise+Aguera+y+Arcas&btnG=Search+Patents [google.com]
Parent
Yeah but... (Score:2)
Personally, I'm not that worried about patents. Being sued usually presupposes a certain level of affluence and comes with the territory. As a citizen of the USA, I'm am worried. The patent for 'Scanning a check and exchanging information about the scanned check' is going to cost everyone money and make a few people rich. It about makes me
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Yeah, "defense" as in "if you don't do what we want, we'll sue so long and hard, your investors will run screaming and your startup will crumble". Here, "do" can be anything from "give us a cross-license agreement on your patents" to "sell your company to us".
And because of cross-licensing agreements, Microsoft doesn't have to worry about any big competitor getting into a big fight with them.
With competent lawyers and business people involv
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LS
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Um, Microsoft employed SCO to employ SCO-like tactics, hello? Remember, several million dollars for "Unix licenses", several million dollars PIPE investments by way of Baystar and RBC, etc.
Not to mention the "nice little operating system you have there, it'd be a shame if we had to enforce any of our 238 patents on it" tactics to spread FUD.
Re:This is an invention? (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Not true... (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
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Yes, but why is this being presented as as advantage over 3D modeling?
To answer my own question: A program like Celestia allows you to see hundreds of thousands of stars (or however many are in the database you are using). It allows you to "fly" to those stars, turn around and look back at our star from them, or see star configurations that are familiar to us on earth from other perspectives. Wha
Re:Eh... (Score:4, Funny)
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Re:so much for: "But you can't take the sky from m (Score:2)
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LoB