

Australian Museum Exhibit Sports 3D Bees 12
BoogieChile writes "According to The Age, the Victorian Museum in Melbourne, Australia has opened a new display called The Virtual Room. In this display, visitors don polarizing 3D glasses to view a series of eight two-metre-wide screens arranged to form a seven-metre-wide octagon, enclosed in a 15-metre-wide darkened theatre. Not only are all the screen images in 3-D, but by walking from screen to screen you can see the same scene - dinosaurs at the edge of a lake, for example - from a different angle. I saw this on the news last night, and it looked really cool - there was a display of Phar Lap, 'Australia's wonder horse', displayed galloping around the track in 3-D, modelled from precise measurements taken from his stuffed body which also lives at the Victoria Museum. Programs on Tasmanian tigers, the ancient Devonian sea and the Cambodian city of Angkor Wat are set to follow, as are interactive programs. Run from screen to screen, for example, and a swarm of 3-D bees will follow you."
Pharlap? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Pharlap? (Score:1)
3D bees? (Score:1)
People really seem to care! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:People really seem to care! (Score:1)
Re:People really seem to care! (Score:1)
I guess pics wouldn't do it justice but dammit, I'm curious.
3D Bees (Score:2)
Re:3D Bees (Score:2)
Re:3D Bees (Score:1)
>
>Twice the power of ordinary bees!
Oracle, MySQL, Access?
No, that's still only two and a half DBs.
Been there, done that (Score:2)
I was at the museum on the 31st. The "virtual room" amused me for about 30 seconds. Mind you, I was watching the brain show, not the bees. The bees might have been more fun.
I thought the Graeme Base exhibition was far more fun, but that's probably just me.