Atlas Virtual Reality Turns Any Room Into A Holodeck You Can Run Around In

Atlas Virtual Reality

Archenemies for decades, video games and exercise are about to unite. Atlas is a cheap, new “walk-around” virtual reality system that uses markers you put on the ground to track your movements as you play with an Oculus Rift headset. Protagonist is Kickstarting Atlas to get real-space VR into the hands of developers, so they can build games that ditch joysticks and actually let you run-and-gun.

Here’s how startup Protagonist’s Atlas system works. First you find an open space. If you’ve got a huge living room it could work, but you’re better off in a garage, on a basketball court or in a warehouse. Then you lay out the location markers. You can print them at home, but Protagonist plans to give out vinyl ones that stick to the floor so they don’t get displaced. Then you strap on your Oculus Rift VR goggles, an optional Razer Hydra-equipped gun or sword, and the Atlas chest mount for your iPhone.

Fire up the Oculus and Atlas iPhone app, and step into the future. The patent-pending Atlas positioning system maps the markers and uses your phone’s accelerometer and gyroscopes to know where your are. Play with Atlas and when you walk forward your in-game avatar walks forward, too. Chasing aliens or exploring dungeons could become an alternative to going to the gym.

“I’ve wanted a Holodeck since I was a kid,” says Atlas inventor and Protagonist founder Aaron Rasmussen. He’s no stranger to making sci-fi dreams come true. Back in college, Rasmussen was the first person to make an optical-tracking sentry gun. He stitched together an automatic BB gun and a video camera with some home-made machine-vision software to make a weapon worthy of defending your fort. “The military came to my dorm room. I thought that only happened in movies,” he tells me. Since then he’s built and sold a robotic machine tool company called USMechatronics, created the Blood Energy potion drink sold in IV bags, and most recently sold a ghost detector that connects to your iPhone. (It’s detected zero ghosts to date.)

Real-space VR systems have been around for well over a decade but have been reserved for big research institutions. That’s because there weren’t wide-field-of-view head displays with low-latency, head-orientation tracking for under $50,000, and the positioning systems were clumsy and cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. Lucky for Rasmussen, the Oculus Rift took care of the first problem, freeing him up to reimagine real-space positioning. Unlike the Virtuix Omni VR treadmill, Atlas not only lets you walk, but also run, jump, crouch and move around like you do in real life.

Right now Rasmussen is the only one working on Atlas full-time out of the four-person team, but that will change if it meets its $125,000 Kickstarter goal to manufacture the chest mounts and refine the software. The plan is to get the system and Unity integration assets to developers so they can start building first-person shooters, fantasy epics, and educational exploration games. “Someone should do Jurassic Park,” Rasmussen says.

I’m pretty excited about meatspace/virtual reality hybrid games and their potential to help us avert a Wall-E future where we just get fatter and fatter watching our screens. The technology will take some time to trickle down, but Atlas could eventually become a distinct industry parallel to console gaming.

“We’re really living in Year Zero of virtual reality,” Rasmussen giddily tells me. “We’re going to to see more wearable technology become consumer products. As developers work on games, we’ll work on a consumer version that kids can get under their Christmas tree. My vision for the system is something you and some friends bring to a racquetball court, play a high-intensity game for an hour, and get a workout.”

Kickstart Atlas if you want your games to make you sweat



ŠKODA vRS Mega Man-pram is a Baby Stroller for Real Men

To celebrate the launch of their fastest ŠKODA car ever, the Octavia vRS, the company has something for dads who want their toddlers to travel in style. This baby stroller is called the vRS Mega Man-Pram and it has the same styling as a ŠKODA car.
Skoda stroller
Your toddler is going to pushed around in luxury. It is much taller than any conventional baby carriage, at two meters high and has wing mirrors, hydraulic suspension, oversized brake calipers, anti-stress grips, headlamp beam and 20 inch alloy wheels. It also has adjustable lumbar support and nice upholstery.

Skoda stroller1
This baby carriage came into being after a survey conducted with 1000 dads when asked what they wanted to push their kids around in.

Skoda stroller2

Check it out in action, along with some other manly new things in the awesome ad below:

[via Damn Geeky]

Zagat for Android and iOS: All the Zagat Reviews (Finally) for Free

Zagat for Android and iOS: All the Zagat Reviews (Finally) for Free

The Google+ Local iPhone app mysteriously disappeared from the App Store this past Friday—and now we know why. The Google-owned Zagat has just released a new app for both iPhone and Android today, all coming in Google’s new card-based UI.

Read more…

    

Apple’s Bob Mansfield latest “special projects” mystery shake-up

Apple has quietly reshuffled its executive team once again, with senior vice president of technologies Bob Mansfield discretely being removed from the executive profiles page, with Apple cryptically saying only that he would be instead working on “special projects”. Speculation began once the missing profile was first spotted that Mansfield had been sidelined after struggling to cut Apple’s dependence on Samsung, but instead it appears that the exec is being repositioned to work on another mysterious project as the firm looks to follow up the best-selling iPhone and iPad.

apple_bob_mansfield

“Bob is no longer going to be on Apple’s executive team, but will remain at Apple working on special projects reporting to [CEO] Tim [Cook]” Apple spokesperson Steve Dowling confirmed to AllThingsD. The sudden shift had led to comparisons with Scott Forstall’s exit from Apple, announced last October, where the software chief was supposedly cut out over arguments around which direction to take iOS.

Not so in the case of Mansfield, however, at least according to those familiar with Apple’s internal politics. Sources speaking to Daring Fireball‘s John Gruber insist that “working on special projects” is exactly what Mansfield will be doing, and that there’s “nothing punitive” about the shift in role.

“Mansfield is well-liked at all levels within the company” Gruber writes, “and truly is working on special projects (read: new products). No euphemism there.”

Exactly what those special projects might be is unknown, which is of course just how Apple likes it. The former hardware chief isn’t the first to be so employed in recent weeks, however; earlier in March, Apple installed former Yves St Laurent Group CEO Paul Deneve as vice president of “special projects”.

At the time, it was widely suggested that Deneve’s role would be – at least in part – in making the much-rumored iWatch sufficiently appealing to timepiece enthusiasts rather than just geeks, something so far smartwatches like Pebble have struggled to achieve.

That Apple is wheeling in the big guns to take on backroom development of new products should come as little surprise. The company currently has a relatively comprehensive range – desktop, notebook, tablet, phone, media player – with few obvious gaps to it, and yet faces a voracious audience of investors, enthusiasts, and commentators demanding The Next Big Thing. Figuring out exactly what that might be will take some work, without falling into the trap of making it too niche for the sort of broad market appeal Apple prefers.


Apple’s Bob Mansfield latest “special projects” mystery shake-up is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Scientists’ luxury car hack warning faces injunction via Volkswagen

A paper has been published by Flavio Garcia of the University of Birmingham which includes access codes for a number of luxury car brands, this resulting in the Professor being served an injunction from a UK court. The paper is being called dangerous as it would, according to the brands on the other side of this court case, allow criminals to drive away with the cars in question. The paper itself, on the other hand, warns against what Professor Garcia calls “weaknesses in security” which he suggests, in so many words, that criminals are already aware of.

asdfds

The paper in question was set to be published by Usenix Security Symposium in Washington DC in August, but due to this court order, it’ll be held until a court session on the matter can be held. The injunction itself is being filed against Garcia as well as two colleagues of his, Baris Ege and Roel Verdul of Stichting Katholieke Universiteit, both of them cryptology experts that contributed to the paper.

Porsches, Audis, Bentleys and Lamborghinis are included in the paper, each of them with security codes set to be published if the paper ever does see the light of day. It’s Volkswagen’s parent that’s launched this case against the scientists, that one entity owning the four luxury lines affected by the paper.

Those filing for the injunction made a specific request for the paper to be published without the codes themselves, but the paper’s authors have declined. The paper itself, Dismantling Megamos Crypto: Wirelessly Lockpicking a Vehicle Immobiliser, shines light on the system that protects the whole lot of these luxury vehicles: Megamos Crypto.

The software behind the code has been available on the internet since 2009, the team reminded The Guardian this week through their court case filings. The paper suggests that the code had been leaked to the web after the system had (likely) been broken using what the team describes as “chip slicing.”

This chip slicing technique takes a computer chip from the security system and analyzes it under a microscope. The process, which the paper asserts likely cost the perpetrator around 50 thousand British pounds, analyzed the arrangement of the physical bits of the chip, inferring their abilities.

Now we’ve only to see what the difference is between this paper being published and the same information being available on the internet – other than the courts’ control over one and not the other, of course.


Scientists’ luxury car hack warning faces injunction via Volkswagen is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2013, SlashGear. All right reserved.

Holy Crap Look How Fast This Nikon Pro Can Teardown a $6000 D4

Holy Crap Look How Fast This Nikon Pro Can Teardown a $6000 D4

Well just call this guy Mr. Magic Hands because he makes dissembling and repairing one of the best cameras in the world look so easy that it must be sleight of hand. I know this is real, but I still can’t believe it.

Read more…

    

Should You Friend Someone on Facebook Before Your First Date?

Should You Friend Someone on Facebook Before Your First Date?

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Air Travel Today is a Damn Bargain

Air Travel Today is a Damn Bargain

It might not feel like it, but air travel’s a steal compared to what it was a half century ago. Since the American airline industry was deregulated in 1978, ticket prices have fallen by about 40%. Of course, air travel isn’t quite as luxurious as some postwar dreamers imagined, but you can’t beat that price. So just how much more did it cost to fly in the 1950s? Quite a bit, once you adjust for inflation.

Read more…

    

HP Plans US$99 Tablet, Has Intel Inside

While not much about it is known,
Hewlett-Packard’s use of an Intel processor in its upcoming
ultra-cheap tablet computer might make the device very interesting to
hackers.

4,000-plus duke it out in epic Eve Online space showdown

Myriad lasers light up an otherwise sullen star system.

(Credit: shenanigans144/Imgur)

On Sunday, possibly one of the largest online space battles to occur in the history of video games took place in Eve Online, the massively multiplayer online role-playing game, resulting in the virtual demise of thousands of players aboard their high-tech spaceships.

The epic battle, called 6VDT-H (as it played out in that star system), was the conclusion to months of escalating tension between rival factions CFC and the Test Alliance.

CFC declared war on resource-rich regions held by Test after parent company CCP Games changed resource distribution in Eve. The final confrontation came about at Test’s home region of 6VDT-H.

Ships line up in preparation for battle.

(Credit: shenanigans144/Imgur)

An expanded view of the chaos.

(Credit: shenanigans144/Imgur)

The numbers associated with the battle wo… [Read more]

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