Acrobat 3D or Free?

There’s an interesting review of Adobe’s new Acrobat 3D application over on CGArchitect. I don’t know anyone that’s using it yet, but I assume that it will work its way into some product development toolsets; although at US $995 I don’t see it finding space in mine any time soon. Anyway, here’s the part of the review that caught my attention (Link):

There is also a third, more direct way for AEC users to get 3D content into Acrobat 3D from those CAD and BIM applications that support the OpenGL rendering mode. This is through the built-in 3D Capture utility, based on an OpenGL model capture technology developed by a French company, OKYZ, that Adobe acquired in December 2004. It allows users to quickly capture a 3D file displayed on screen in OpenGL mode and convert it to Adobe PDF.

Does that sound like anything I’ve been playing with? (*cough* … OGLE … *cough*).

Perhaps I should email the author, Lachmi Khemlani, and tell her to try it instead. Between OGLE and a free model viewer (like plyview, perhaps), that $995 is looking pretty outlandish … especially since grabbing the videostream data like that has been around for years.

One Hurdle Down

For those hoping for, working toward, and dreaming beyond the eventual legitimization of online 3D for things other than games, this news from Next Generation (Link) will doubtlessly signal that day is near:

EA along with rock mainstays Depeche Mode have teamed up to translate the band’s song “Suffer Well” to the language of The Sims, otherwise known as “Simlish”. The song will be available through The Sims 2 expansion pack, Open for Business.

What am I going to write now that could remotely compete with that?

Karma To Burn

Finally. Someone has finally started an online Reputation service that isn’t tied into its own offerings (like eBay’s). From the story on C|Net (Link):

Jupiter, Fla.-based iKarma’s new service allows any Web site owner to add user, reader or customer-created ratings to their site. That, said iKarma CEO Paul Williams, can significantly increase business.

This is exactly what we need going forward into an age where the concept of protecting intellectual property fades into oblivion. I don’t have to like that something I create can be ripped off, but I’m not going to waste time lamenting the turn of events either. And having a good reputation can go a long way to regaining some of what’s lost.

So while there’s still some time left before I have my own iKarma account, I just have one thing to say to everyone…

Ummm, wait a sec. What’s this? Additional details posted by the CEO concerning something called “Karmic Reboot”??? That wasn’t in the flash animation intro. What the hell. So much for this. I can pretty much guarantee someone is going to game this thing now. Guess we’ll have to wait and see how this service actually works after beta.

In the meantime, I guess I can continue calling out trademark violations on the Second Life forums because as soon as this or some other service gets put into play, there’s going to be a whole lot of crowd intimidation.

(p.s. Does anyone else think that Moe should have had the good rep and squeeky-clean Joe should have turned out to be a wanted felon?)

{p.s. – For those of you landing on this entry looking for news of the band, I honestly wish I had some; I’m a fan. Right now all I have is a couple CD’s and a Derek Hess print with K2B on the bill.}

There Is No “My” In Disney

From an article over on Ad Age (Link – free registration required):

Walt Disney Co. is expanding the availability of its hit shows via ABC.com as part of its plans to create the “network of the future.” CEO Bob Iger detailed the soon-to-launch product called My ABC, which will provide consumers with the opportunity to download shows free of charge.

“There is so much greater consumption of media, the opportunity for advertisers are greater; look at what Google has managed to do,” Mr. Iger said. “Our job is to create the new networks and new direct commerce opportunities.”

“Network of the future”? I guess that would include coming up with creative ways to brand your product to distinguish it from all the other companies out there creating their version of the “future”. But it sure sounds like Disney has their finger on the pulse of innovation, doesn’t it? First up: preface everything they do with “My”.

Good thinking, guys.

The Big “No Surprise”

PAXimpel

Now here’s a curious story over on C|Net (Link): a company is being credited with figuring out that spiral forms are efficient and useful in solving problems that involve fluids; specifically mechanical design problems (fans, impellers, aso). Well, at the risk of sounding like a know-it-all … no duh.

As far as I’m concerned, most of us shouldn’t be at all surprised at this “breakthrough”; at least anyone who has watched water drain from a sink, or stared at the mini-whirlpool that forms in a drinking glass while stirring. And if you’ve rented the movie Pi you most certainly shouldn’t be surprised (the movie is about some guy obsessed with … what else? … spirals).

But then again, there are those who dismiss anything that doesn’t match the rigidity of current theory:

They approached scientists at Stanford and MIT to get feedback on the theories, but they experienced a lot of initial push-back. “People would say, ‘You’re building a model in the shape of a shell? That’s certifiable,'” Harman recalled.

Once again, no surprise to me that a bunch of academics will casually dismiss someone who doesn’t have a piece of dried animal skin with foreign words and a wax seal decorating it hung on their wall to prove they can think. One can only wonder how many truly good ideas were brow-beaten into obscurity by an incredulous horde of uppities.

Anyway, so far no surprises for most of us.

But wait, here’s another opportunity for surprise. The company, PAX Scientific, is calling itself an “industrial design firm”, even though the founder isn’t credited in the story as having an industrial design degree (closest he appears to have come was dabbling in comparative religion) . The company’s work sure doesn’t sound like something design*sponge would care about. And even on the other end of the ID spectrum, how many IDers are engineering impellers? None that I know of or ever expect to hear about. This sure looks like just another case of “diluted occupation syndrome” to me. Sadly, there’s no surprise here either.

Well, there you have it: the Big “No Surprise”. The only possible surprise afaic is that someone with more than a little common sense broke through the barriers erected by everyone that doesn’t want someone else to succeed. But that’s not really “surprise”. That’s more like … astounding.

{Image Copyright © 2005 PAX Scientific, Inc. }