The lab of Microsoft in Cambridge is working on a technique that allows the moving three-dimensional images can project that ‘touch’ can be controlled. There is no glasses required for the 3d effect to be seen.
The lab in Cambridge is working on a technique that Vermeer baptized. This allows a hologram to be projected that is visible from all sides. There is no glass needed for the hologram to project and viewers do not need to wear glasses for the 3d effect. Viewers can the hologram move and with that ‘touch’ is the projection control.
The creators show in the video is a current figure, which by means of touch can be stopped. Through the hologram again to get the figure to walk again. The researchers call the system, therefore, an ‘interactive display’.
In Vermeer uses a mirascoop, an arrangement of two parabolic mirrors that are placed opposite each other. In a classic mirascoop is an object on the bottom of one of the mirrors placed. The researchers project, however, in one of the mirrors of a three-dimensional illuminated through a hole in the bottom of the second mirror above the mirascoop is projected. For the interaction with the moving image uses Kinect technology.
Microsoft Research Cambridge is working on Vermeer