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Graphics Software

NASA's Hyperwall 7'x7' LCD display 18

Doppler00 writes "I thought this was a unique use of off-the-shelf technologies. NASA is using NVidia Geforce 4 video cards, AthlonMP processors, and Red Hat Linux 7.3 to create a super computing system to display 'up to six dimensions'." Press-releasy, but worth reading if you want to imagine the rec room of the future ;)
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NASA's Hyperwall 7'x7' LCD display

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  • by Neck_of_the_Woods ( 305788 ) * on Wednesday May 14, 2003 @03:44PM (#5957977) Journal

    We have contracted out the services of Libert to supply us with a 20 unit array of Air Condition Units to keep this "HyberWall" HyperCool. After completion we found the cooling of this monstrosity was more than the wall itself.

    To quote the last words of the Project Head "Hey where do we plug this in at?".

  • to create a super computing system to display 'up to six dimensions'

    So lets see, that's length, breadth, depth, time, hyperspace and, oh hell, what's that last one again? At any rate, should be cool. Now all they'll need is someone with a brain that can simultaneously comprehend them.
    • (universe dimension upgrade 2.5 required)
    • According to NASA Ames research scientists, the Hyperwall is extremely adept at displaying a 2D array of 3D images; thereby providing a five dimensional view.
      Somehow, I don't think dimensions quite add up that way. Especially because the 2d array reuses 2 of the dimensions used in the 3d view.

      What they are doing is drawing slices - the same way you can represent a car in 3D by displaying lots of 2D slices. Since the pictures are disjoint, it's a lot harder to interpret (that's why people are working on fl
  • Looks like a great system to implement the Chromium [sf.net] project on!
  • Hey, they put one of those in my house I'd be willing to watch NASA TV!
  • This is not a troll. I would like to build a Linux cluster of these for my back yard pool parties in the summer.
    Could someone give me some advice on how to wire these together?
  • An example of a high dimensional graph would be a 3D grid of vectors, such as a weather simulation. The little arrows would appear distributed in 3D, but they could also have attributes of direction, length, and color. Obviously, they're not true dimensions, but each datum conveys a lot of info (X,Y,Z,dX,dY,dZ,T).
  • Judging by a rough calculation of the mentioned hardware alone, the entire system would cost around $64,500. This includes 100 AMD Athlon Mp 2000+ processors, 50 Tyan Tiger S2466N motherboards, 50 nVidia GeForce4 Ti4600 128 MB AGP video cards, 49 18.1" CTX LCD Flat Panel displays, and 50 network cards. I didn't even include RAM and other stuff. Including those would probably bring the cost to around $80,000.

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