Development by Davis

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sábado, 3 de marzo de 2012

Development by Davis: “3D Web for everyone?” plus 1 more

Development by Davis: “3D Web for everyone?” plus 1 more


3D Web for everyone?

Posted: 03 Mar 2012 04:35 AM PST

Compared to computer games, movies and professional graphics tools the amount of 3D rendered, interactive web content is still rather minimal these days. When we shop online (e.g. deciding if we want to buy a new camera) we often get to see some photographs from pre-set perspectives. In better cases there is a 360 degree view available that has been built out of photographs, but lacks any sort of interactivity with the object and might not provide the required details.

With HTML5 and WebGL there is an opportunity to enrich the web with 3D content. However, for a regular web designer it is rather hard to get interactive 3D models integrated into their webpage and have them viewable across the compute continuum (from high-end workstation machines to mobile phones) due to the coding complexity and inability of the same code to work across different compute devices. This is where XML3D will likely play an important role in the future. It is an extension of HTML5 developed by the Intel Visual Computing Institute*, DFKI and the Saarland University under the lead of Kristian Sons.

XML3D enables a web developer to easily integrate 3D content into the web browser and to be able to use existing programming languages like JavaScript to interact with them. If for example a web designer would want to display a triangle, he would just add code like this:

(header)

<xml3d:int name="index">0 1 2</xml3d:int>

<xml3d:float3 name="position">0.0 0.0 0.0   1.0 0.0 0.0    0.0 1.0 0.0</xml3d:float3>

(footer)  

Of course the full language offers much more like translating, rotating, scaling, materials, grouping, camera changes, dynamic manipulations etc.

One interesting aspect of XML3D is that is never forces a certain rendering algorithm. Therefore on a high-end workstation a higher quality, ray traced image could be calculated. Other devices could use WebGL or a completely different renderer for displaying the content.

The way to enable XML3D to the masses is not by a browser plug-in, but by defining it as a standard in the World Wide Web Consortiums (W3C) and to have it natively supported in the browser. A modified Firefox and Google Chromium version can be downloaded from XML3D website and experimented with. Let us know what you think. What are your thoughts on 3D in the browser? Where would you desire it the most? What new possibilities might arise with this? Tell us your opinion in our comment section.

Also we would be happy to welcome you at our booth at CeBIT 2012 in Hall 26, booth F34 and show you a live demo of XML3D.

 

 * "Intel Visual Computing Institute" is a collaborative research institute at Saarland University co-funded by Intel


Could Watson be your doctor's new AI ally?

Posted: 02 Mar 2012 11:31 AM PST

Watson by IBM

Watson, IBM's formidable supercomputer Jeopardy contestant, made a video appearance at the annual meeting of the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS). Watson appeared in a talk given by Dr. Martin Kohn, chief medical scientist for IBM's Care Delivery Systems.

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viernes, 2 de marzo de 2012

Development by Davis: “Obliteration = Collaboration” plus 2 more

Development by Davis: “Obliteration = Collaboration” plus 2 more


Obliteration = Collaboration

Posted: 02 Mar 2012 04:00 AM PST

Obliteration = Collaboration

A recent exhibition at the Children's Art Centre in Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art fuses two seemingly disparate concepts (destruction with creation) through a simple, kid-based approach with a design spin.

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ASP.NET MVC 3: Develop Hybrid Native and Mobile Web Apps

Posted: 29 Feb 2012 04:00 PM PST

March 2012

Shane Church shows you how to build a mobile Web application with ASP.NET MVC 3 and take advantage of native mobile features such as the camera and accelerometer.


Community spotlight: 5 questions with system administrator Marek Mahut

Posted: 01 Mar 2012 08:00 AM PST

Community spotlight: 5 questions with system administrator Marek Mahut

Meet Marek Mahut. He's a system administrator in Brno, Czech republic, works for Red Hat, and has an interest in the public sector—particularly in how it can be more open and transparent. Marek has contributed several articles on public policy and transparency in government, including Open source is illegal? This very popular post generated thousands of page views and some interesting conversation. Marek also contributes reports on several open source events that he attends.

On opensource.com, community is very important. We want to continue to recognize our community members who contribute in ways other than writing articles--things like rating and commenting, voting in polls, and sharing our collective work on social media. We hope you enjoy getting to know Marek.

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jueves, 1 de marzo de 2012

Development by Davis: “Everyone innovates every day: Collaborative idea management at Ericsson” plus 3 more

Development by Davis: “Everyone innovates every day: Collaborative idea management at Ericsson” plus 3 more


Everyone innovates every day: Collaborative idea management at Ericsson

Posted: 01 Mar 2012 05:00 AM PST

Everyone innovates every day: Collaborative idea management at Ericsson

At Ericsson, a collaborative idea management tool is enabling all employees to innovate everyday across the organization. After 3 years of use, the pull based and self-organizing system has over 15000 ideas. More than 300 innovation managers globally have opened idea boxes to attract ideas for their specific innovation efforts.

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AMD to Acquire SeaMicro: Accelerates Disruptive Server Strategy

Posted: 29 Feb 2012 12:00 AM PST

AMD (NYSE: AMD) today announced it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire SeaMicro, a pioneer in energy-efficient, high-bandwidth microservers, for approximately $334 million, of which approximately $281 million will be paid in cash. Through the acquisition of SeaMicro, AMD will be accelerating its strategy to deliver disruptive server tec...


Android Design V2: Now with stencils

Posted: 29 Feb 2012 02:47 PM PST

[This post is by Android designer Alex Faaborg, on behalf of the entire User Experience team. —Tim Bray]

When we initially released Android Design, by far the number one request we received was for us to release stencils as well. The fine folks on the Android User Experience team are pleased today to release some official Android Design stencils for your mockup-creating pleasure.

With these stencils you can now drag and drop your way to beautifully designed Ice Cream Sandwich (Android 4.0) applications, with grace and ease. The stencils feature the rich typography, colors, interactive controls, and icons found throughout Ice Cream Sandwich, along with some phone and tablet outlines to frame your meticulously crafted creations.

Currently we have stencils available for those venerable interactive design powerhouses Adobe® Fireworks®, and Omni® OmniGraffle® and we may expand to other applications® in the future. The source files for the various icons and controls are also available, created in Adobe® Photoshop®, and Adobe® Illustrator®. Here are the downloads.

We'll be updating these stencils over time so, as always, please send in your feedback!

Happy mockup making,
— Your friendly Android Design Droids


Regina Holliday advocates patient engagement at HIMSS12

Posted: 29 Feb 2012 12:54 PM PST

It's Hosted, The Patient View

Patient care has always been vital to healthcare. At the same time,  patient engagement has always been frighteningly low. Patients have been passive players in their own care, depending on and assuming that 'doctor knows best.'

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