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Capturing holographic memories for AR and VR

2017-11-07
what if you could preserve the people you love or the stories they have to tell in a way that makes it feel like they're right next to you AR and VR have the potential to dramatically change everything from gaming to entertainment to training for a new job but they also have the potential to impact our memories not just the moments we remember but actual living testimonies and how we interact with people after they're gone I can let go back into myself right whoa she's so little Ashley Scott is a Los Angeles based actress an interior designer she is also a mom which is worth noting because she's one of the few people in the world who has turned her kids into Holograms I you know just was still kind of keeping up with the casting calls and stuff that were rolling through my email and I saw something for a mom and a baby and I thought oh that's me like I can do that for me it just didn't even compute like what that would entail or how real it was the virtual reality of it this mom and baby casting call led her to a tie a Los Angeles based company that makes so-called Holograms volumetric video that can be viewed in a VR headset or as part of an AR app a lot of the video content 8i makes is focused on celebrities or animals but not in this case this was really early out in the company and we were looking for ways to test the emotional connectivity that can happen between a real person and a digital person and so a mom and a baby seemed like a really good idea when Ashley came back and she was able to enter her hologram and hold her baby again she was got very emotional we all got very emotional watching her and we understood hey we're onto something after seeing Ash's experience other 8'i employees started to bring their kids in to get their own holograms made this is one-year-old Little Mix - almost two year old loan and he was super bummed then but he still carries the same blankie we're gonna film you using all these cameras right now see all the cameras circling around you but you have to stay in this little circle in order for the cameras to see you last month we followed Ashley as she made her fourth trip to a tie this time with her now youngest child Wilder being recorded isn't any different than normal video which I happen to know because I've had a hologram of myself made before what is different though is what it's like to experience it afterwards whoa this is so cool and it's so nice to see the little her again looking at a flat image it's just way different she's changed so much and it's just crazy how fast it's going it just takes you right back to that moment and when you're dealing with a newborn it feels like that stage is just gonna last forever because your days are long and your nights are longer but it really goes by so fast and so to be able to jump right back into that again it was like I was overwhelming any time you kind of had that feeling of like I miss you know I miss my newborn I missed that stage it's kind of cool that you can literally just put on a headset or with the new technology with the phones and everything you could be right back in that place a R is definitely more accessible to view now that it's on smartphones but the big question is when will people be able to tape Holograms the way that Ashley has at least one major company invested in AR and VR has taken steps towards that Microsoft just opened its first mix reality capture studios in San Francisco and London 8i says that's coming but they're just not there yet do you have friends asking you if they can come in tie a tie and do this sorry to interrupt you but everybody asks me that everybody wants Holograms of their kids yeah can you imagine a world in which this becomes commercially available through a tie yes I think it will be hopefully in the not too distant future we don't have a date for that because there's a lot of engineering that has to out them but what I can tell you that we are doing is starting to experiment with how the quality get affected if you use less cameras and that's with an eye towards a lot of use cases capture your kids what about dating right how are people going to make dating apps of the future social vr but it's not all baby holograms and dating apps and our quest to find others who have been experimenting with AR and vr to capture memories we ended up taking a deep dive into one of the darkest moments in history I think is how are you today I'm fine thank you tell me about your experience during the Holocaust this is Pincus guter he's a still living Holocaust survivor who has had his life story preserved by the USC Shoah foundation over the past 23 years the foundation has been capturing personal testimonies of people who survived genocide and as part of a newer project called new dimensions in testimony the foundation has been experimenting with AR and VR how does it feel to be a hologram myself it's so important for the future to actually see and hear and be able to interact with a Holocaust survivor despite the fact that he's just a hologram is so important because I think it will impact the audience in a much more forceful way than just watching a film in one or two dimensional way even though I know it's not a real person and it's a video it feels very real part of the reason why talking to Pincus felt so natural is that the foundation created its own natural language processing system that enables the video to respond to you actually have a conversation not preformed robot responses I think that the immediacy of this format brings you really close to the subject and I think it's going to become a standard way in which we document our history because what we've seen so far with new dimensions and testimony is that people do feel emotionally connected they want to know more and feel when they come away from it that they have had some kind of visceral and emotional experience there are obviously still technical hurdles around creating and experiencing personal memories in these formats in a lot of cases like when it requires a headset these things just aren't easy to pick up and view the way you can look at a flat photo or a video clip on your TV but the bigger question might be what happens once this kind of immersive video is married with artificial intelligence which is where some experts say it's going what if a holographic AI isn't just recognizing what you're asking but is formulating its own responses so these are all discussions that we had to have and they are important because actually there are going to be versions of this in future for sure where you're going to be able to take the human form of a subject and put words into his or her mouth and be able to create answers from an artificial intelligence drawn off a database that's continually growing and changing that's without question that that's going to happen but that's going to be an Android and what we've got is human beings telling their story and we make a very clear distinction between the two a future filled with hyper realistic holograms seems bizarre but also quite possible when you consider the advancements being made in AR and VR and it makes sense that this technology would impact the way we experience memories the stuff closest to our hearts and minds basically it's an emotional experience right now that mostly just means capturing people as we see them now but this kind of volumetric capture might also be the next level of how we interact with people when they've dramatically changed or when they no longer actually exist you
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