From the daily archives: Thursday, October 30, 2008

Fred Rogers tries to vote.

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MuWRj1db-wE[/youtube]

 

They sound as if they’re used to this happening:

“When our keepers arrived in our neighbour’s garden, Akea was happily playing with a bicycle, which must have reminded him of one of his toys. He wouldn’t pose any danger, and his reaction to strangers would be the same as a pet dog, either a friendly greeting or a guarded retreat.”

Boy finds cheetah in his garden – Telegraph.

Damn good thing the kid’s leg didn’t “remind him of one of his toys,” eh?

 

NEW YORK — It’s election night, and CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer is in New York talking to an Obama campaign strategist in Chicago.

But instead of the split screen or window TV viewers might typically see during live remote interviews, the Obama spokesperson will be projected as a three-dimensional hologram, making it appear as if he or she is in the Manhattan studio with Blitzer. The network plans to conduct similar holographic interviews with representatives from the McCain campaign in Phoenix.

“Everyone is doing something virtual this election year,” says CNN Senior Vice President David Bohrman, the guy who pushed the technology. But Bohrman believes CNN is going where no network has gone before by employing Hollywood-style effects. “Virtual elements in a real set look so much better than a real person in a virtual set,” he says.

“It’s so complicated,” Bohrman says. “The crew is basically shooting someone that isn’t there.”

CNN will have 44 cameras and 20 computers in each remote location to capture 360-degree imaging data of the person being interviewed. Images are processed and projected by computers and cameras in New York. There’ll also be plasma TVs in Chicago and Phoenix that will let the people being interviewed see Blitzer and other CNN correspondents. Bohrman says the network can project two different views from each city so Blitzer can appear to be in the studio with two holograms.

Election-night news to co-star latest technology – USATODAY.com.