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Written by Andreas Schiffler
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Monday, 18 September 2006 |
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For the ZKM installation "Digital Body Automata" a realtime "blue-screen" driver software was used to build an interactive videowall made out of 16 TVs with interactive content on 12 of the screens.
System components were: - 2x 8 TV screens arranged in a row on each side of the mural - 5 Pentium200 PCs with 3 Matrox VGA video cards each and a Matrox Meteor framegrabber card - 4 cameras imaging a red cloth screen below the TVs - multiple VGA-to-TV converters, video splitters, cables, etc. - RedHat Linux and custom X-Server that supports 3 video cards (needed at the time) The TVs shows a cover image (stone texture). When the observer enters the space, a virtual shadow is cast onto the TVs revealing a detailed image underneath. The "shadow" is calculated from the obscured red sloth in the image path of the tiny wide-angle cameras hidden below the TVs. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 18 September 2006 )
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