Green Team Video – Rough Edit

I would like to share a very rough edit of the Green Team video that I have been working on along with a few students.  So far, I’m pretty happy, but there’s more work to be done!

This video was shot mostly on cellphone using the DJI Osmo Mobile 3 that was borrowed from a faculty member here at BCC. The only video that wasn’t shot on cell phone, aside from the drone shots, is the interview with Chris Laney.  The results I think are quite good and it sounds like I will have a BCC owned Osmo Mobile 3 real soon for these types of video projects so that we won’t have to coordinate borrowing one.

The video is a rough edit for sure, nothing is finished essentially.  The titles aren’t done, someone even pointed out that “Water” is misspelled – thanks and oops!  We used royalty free music that was found by one of the students.  All the editing was done in iMovie, which has changed a bit since the last time I used it but it’s still a pretty great tool.  In the final version there will be more titles to explain what you are looking at and more data, such as numbers of solar panels and water bottles saved by the filling stations.

I’m thinking now that there will be 2 versions of this video.  We need to add some more content, ideas brought from the last Green Teem meeting which include more interviews, shots of a future Green Team meeting, mention of the new Leading By Example award won by BCC, and add some shots of an electric car, probably mine.  I’m not sure if we can get those shots and finish the editing before the Spring Semester Orientation, which is our goal for this.  That version will not have all the additional shots but a second version for mid-semester will.  So there will be a “Chris Laney only” version, and a version with more interviews and more voices.

I would love to hear feedback and suggestions!

 

Oculus Quest: Hand Tracking!

My news feed this morning had an article that the Oculus Quest will have hand tracking added as a feature later this week.  This is a big deal.  Being able to manipulate a VR environment without having to depend on controllers for tracking is huge.  This opens up all sorts of opportunities for VR and AR going forward if controllers aren’t needed for tracking.  The applications go beyond VR/AR, remember the movie Minority Report and how they interfaced with the computers using hand gestures? Even in that movie there is some sort of special glove involved, but with this technology that wouldn’t be necessary.

I can also see a possibility with mobile devices.  If your cell phone could track your hands then you could manipulate it anytime the phone is in sight.  There’s a lot of potential here.  To begin with, the Oculus Quest hand tracking will only be in the menus and the Oculus apps, like Browser and Video, however it likely won’t be long until developers begin to take advantage of this.  Could we see a guitar instruction app where you can learn with no guitar necessary?  It will be super interesting to see where this goes.

The articles say the hand tracking feature will be active this week.  Over the weekend I will test this and report back!

Walking the Virtual Plank

Yesterday I had about 25 Taconic High School students walk the plank.  To hear how much of a ruckus were making (sorry library folks, the quite floor is downstairs!) one would probably think that it was a real plank and not Virtual Reality.  We had several onlookers due to the scene we made and as a result one of the BCC Librarians even gave it a try despite her fear of heights!

Here’s a little about the process I used for yesterday’s demonstration.  I set up in a corner of the library where they often do classes on Information Literacy among other things, I moved all the tables and chairs to create a 20×20 foot VR space and put down a yoga mat generously supplied by STEM.  Then I turned off the lights, and dimmed the blinds a bit so that I could attempt to project the image from the headset on a screen.  This however, didn’t work out so well.  I was able to get the Oculus to cast in the menus, but once I started Richie’s Plank Experience, everything crashed.  It even made the headset reboot itself once.  It seems that a recent software update broke casting.  In addition, the street scene sometimes appeared as a parking garage which I had never seen before.  There was also this new countdown every time the app was paused, which is what happens when the headset is taken off.  So every new person who put it on had to endure a 10 second countdown, slowing the process down. All this I discovered 5 minutes before the first group of students arrived.

Students were brought to me in groups of 8-9 and each group also had a teacher (I assume) from their school and a BCC representative as a guide.  To start with I give a short speech introducing myself and explaining what we would be doing today — taking turns walking the virtual plank.  I explained that VR is already being used as a way to simulate very dangerous situations to provide training.  Doctors can practice surgery with no risk to patients in VR.  Firefighters can experiment with new innovative techniques without risking their lives.  You can meet with someone halfway around the world as if they were in the same room with no travel cost and minimal carbon footprint.  Therapists use VR to give patients exposure therapy in a safe way for individuals with a fear of heights for example.  Virtual Reality completely fools your brain, so now let’s walk the plank!

While I was unable to cast to the screen, I was able to get the headset to cast to a tablet.  As the students took turns walking the plank their peers watched their progress on the tablet and cheered them on.  To make sure everyone was safe, once having their permission I would guide the plank walker by placing a hand on their arm or back to let them know they were safe and I would not let them be injured. Several of the teachers and a few of the BCC guides tried to walk the plank as well.  Everyone remarked on how completely real it feels, and that’s the whole point!  About 15-20% of plank walkers never made it to the end and walked off the plank.

Overall the demonstration went very well and I am very pleased with the student’s reactions and feedback.  I’m looking forward to seeing if STEM provides any written comments as they have done in the past.  Next week I have a drone demo for STEM which I’m sure I will be writing about.