There are a few visualisation packages out there that either have VR support 
now or are very close to having it in place. I've personally had a chance to 
briefly try out the Oculus Rift (aka seasickness simulator) in VMD. The 
challenge with these things is doing the head-tracking, re-calculating the 
display, and showing it fast enough that the delay doesn't cause 
disorientation/dizziness - or, alternatively, predicting head movements well 
enough so that the eyes see what they expect. It's getting very close, but 
still imperfect.

If you want to get really excited, though, check out the Microsoft Hololens and 
start imagining the possibilities.

Cheers,

Tristan

-----Original Message-----
From: CCP4 bulletin board [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Robert 
Sweet
Sent: Thursday, 26 November 2015 11:28 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [ccp4bb] VR – I can’t believe no-one is talking about this!

Iʼm a synchrotron geek and Iʼve not actually solved a structure for years, and 
I certainly never ran COOT. The NY Times recently send all of us subscribers a 
stereo viewer: http://www.google.com/get/cardboard/  It came with our Sunday 
paper.  It helped introduce a new NYT feature, which is virtual-reality news 
stories.  Here is the website presenting this feature as it is today: 
http://www.nytimes.com/newsgraphics/2015/nytvr/   The initial feature was the 
one entitled The Displaced.

I donʼt happen to own a Smart Phone, but my son Charley (a photographer) does 
and probably most of you do. He hadnʼt really learned about this, but he 
happens to be home for Thanksgiving and tried it out. I watched the full 
episode entitled Backwater on the nytvr web site. It's pretty thrilling!

To me the idea of touring the inside of a protein molecule pops up instantly.  
Back in the early days of stereo images for computerized model building, folks 
would talk about "virtual reality."  To me this wasn't virtual, it was REALITY; 
I WAS inside the molecule looking around.  Is any of you looking at this 
smartphone/stereo viewer combo?  Why is there no chatter on ccp4bb?  What a 
great way to recruit grad students!

Bob

=========================================================================
            Robert M. Sweet                   E-Dress: [email protected]
            Principal Investigator, LSBR: The Life Science     ^ (that's L
              and Structural Biology Resource at NSLS-II           not 1)
            Photon Sciences and Biosciences Dept
            Office and mail, Bldg 745, a.k.a. LOB-5
            Brookhaven Nat'l Lab.             Phones:
            Upton, NY  11973                  631 344 3401  (Office)
            U.S.A.                            631 344 2741  (Facsimile)

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