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3D Sphere Interface for XP 388
Brian Brian writes "I found this super cool 3D, inside a sphere, desktop interface. The videos really demonstrate it. I would love this built into OS X but it is just for Windows right now. And if nothing else, the paradigm is the coolest way to handle multiple screens." Here are a
collection of screenshots & videos. I'm skeptical that it wouldn't be very practical, but it sure looks fun.
What does this really do for me? (Score:4, Insightful)
It looks like someone saw Minority Report one time too many.
Re:What does this really do for me? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:[tt]:What does this really do for me? (Score:2)
So windows XP sp 2 has been working great for me on that 6 year old box.
Re:[tt]:What does this really do for me? (Score:2, Insightful)
The longest part of XP rebooting, for me, is waiting for it to shut down. This is because I have mine set to zero out the page file before shutting down, and zeroing out a few gigs of swap space takes some time. I imagine if I disabled that, it'd reboot extremely quickly.
Re:[tt]:What does this really do for me? (Score:2)
Fscking market share! Fscking refusal to kowtow to the minority!
Grr!
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re:[tt]:What does this really do for me? (Score:2)
Re:[tt]:What does this really do for me? (Score:2)
Re:What does this really do for me? (Score:2)
Right (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What does this really do for me? (Score:2)
I'd use it if it was useful and if done well it wouldn't be that heavy on the system.
i got free cpu most of the time, and when i don't want to spare it (compiling, starting up emulators) there's nothing moving on the screen anyhow...
Re:What does this really do for me? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:What does this really do for me? (Score:2)
I love the interface. I can't wait to call TAC (helldesk) and complain I can't read my windows b/c they're backwards and crooked
-nB
I've tried this (Score:4, Insightful)
The problem with it is that it's not about function, but flair.
In short, try something else, preferably something which doesn't include the ability to rotate windos around their own axels.
Re:I've tried this (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I've tried this (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I've tried this (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I've tried this (Score:3, Funny)
Antivirus integration with such a game would let it represent trojans as... hmm... mimics?
That's interaction I'd like to see. Blow up Internet Explorer once and for all with a BFG.
Re:I've tried this (Score:5, Informative)
It's been done (as a research project!) on Linux though.
http://www.cs.unm.edu/~dlchao/flake/doom/
William
Same idea, different genre (Score:3, Interesting)
Nominally, the gam
Mirror (Score:3, Informative)
if the bandwidth gets out of hand, I'll shut this mirror down
Sunny Dubey
Re:Mirror (Score:3, Funny)
Hi... Welcome to Slashdot. It already has gotten out of hand.
Re:Mirror (Score:5, Informative)
Slashdot brought a new level of mirror indirection now :-)
Mod parent up (Score:2)
Re:Mirror (Score:2)
http://li3-33.members.linode.com.nyud.net:8090/
Re:Mirror (Score:2)
IF? Hehehehe.
Not a question of "IF", my friend, but "WHEN".
Things like this make me wonder if I'll ever see an HTTP Error 911: Router on Fire from
Re:Mirror (Score:2)
lolz
rolf
err
rofl
roflz
I really hope you're not expecting any pats on the back for that conversation...
Old news (Score:5, Insightful)
-Extreme resource hog
-The designer knows nothing about UI design (so many different actions, even if you can customize the controls. Needs to be simplified)
-It's ugly.
-You can't even use the windows while they're in "3D " mode
Just a poor windows developer trying to make some competition to Looking Glass. It's too bad, because it'll never work, unless MS does it and integrates it into their OS. (It would probably be really buggy coming from them though. I hate to say it, but I'm looking to Sun for the first 3D desktop)
Re:Old news (Score:3, Informative)
Not trying to troll but... (Score:2)
That was exactly Microsoft's mentality (and mine at the time) when it came to IE. Now look at Firefox.
Re:Not trying to troll but... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Old news (Score:2, Informative)
And it's a terrible UI.
And I'm easily impressed by bells and whistles. I could get nothing done using it. It vanished from my computer roughly 5 minutes after I installed it.
And this is ME. I would've been one of the ones insisting that we should just give Microsoft Bob a little time to flesh itself out.
Re:Old news (Score:2)
~Lake
Re:Old news (Score:2)
Oh No! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh No! (Score:5, Funny)
So now XP can ... (Score:3, Funny)
... suck spheres.
*cough*
Nice.. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's nice eye candy but I really don't see how this will make a user more efficient as it seems to be distracting (just more ammo for those with ADD). I do find Windowmaker's [windowmaker.org] multiple workspaces to be a great boon though but it's not XP.
Re:Nice.. (Score:2, Informative)
It doesn't work as well as it could, but its better than just one desktop.
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/downloads/power toys/xppowertoys.mspx [microsoft.com]
Direct Link:
"Manage up to four desktops from the Windows taskbar with this PowerToy."
http://download.microsoft.com/download/whistler/In stall/2/WXP/EN-US/DeskmanPowertoySetup.exe [microsoft.com]
Not a pager, but... (Score:3, Informative)
A great tool. I've been using it for quite a while on Windows 2000 and the only quirk is after setting up how you want it to behave having to shut it down once to store its settings in the registry. I also keep a backup of the registry key for that. Other than that it works great for me, and I'm used to KDE.
Intuitive? (Score:2)
I just lost my textpad window... maybe I'm floating over it.
Very strange experience this is!
Re:Intuitive? (Score:2)
Not so 'super cool' (Score:5, Informative)
It's a fun theory tool and shows you exactly what SUN was going for in Project Looking Glass [sun.com]. However, when it comes down to it, it has no current practical application. Windows are stored in the sphere, not used in it, which means that everytime you want to recover an open window, you need to go into sphere mode, look arounnd for the window, find it, and then bring it back to flat mode. It adds a whole extra step to the process, and definitely a lot more time.
I think the best improvement may be interaction with windows inside the sphere, but as the website proclaims, this project is still in Beta.
Best,
- Brandon
Re:Yes, 'super cool' (Score:2, Interesting)
The only problem is, currently, the windows will not update while inactive. So for monitoring it would be kind of stupid to keep looking at the same second in time.
Interaction and perspective management (Score:2)
I'm not sure which would be more valuable, a multi desktop or a multi monitor paradigm, perhaps both, or all three -- multiple desktops within a polygon, some desktops spanning multiple polygon faces, and perhaps a multiple polygon paradigm as well. It gets kind of trippy if you start thinking of how you would implement this with multiple physical monitors.
Any
Re:Interaction and perspective management (Score:2, Insightful)
Perhaps have a dual-monitor setup where if you go past the edge of the entire display (lef
Re:Interaction and perspective management (Score:3, Informative)
old news (Score:2, Informative)
Anyhow, I hope they have improved it, as I had it installed just for the *neat* factor, and the damn thing would always start up whenever I booted into XP. I use windows so little, I didnt bother tracking down where the start up processes were, but it wasnt in the norm HKEY/LOCALM...BLAHBLAH. It was very buggy too. Even 3d desktop [sourceforge.net]
Dupe (Score:2, Insightful)
Hey look, it was also posted by CmdrTaco.
Re:Dupe (Score:2)
Spiffy (Score:2)
Cool Now I can (Score:2)
great eye candy... (Score:2)
osx could have something like this if aqua were to use/borrow the QTVR technology. spherical distortion of windows is easy when your view point is always from the center(?)... the genie effect and exposé already work quite well for staking and layering of windows.
this alos looks like it has similarities to sun's looking g
Possible Mirror (5 mirrors available) (Score:2, Interesting)
Highly Impractical (Score:2, Informative)
This looks a lot ... (Score:5, Insightful)
This looks a lot like 3d desktop [freshmeat.net], but ontop of the desktop instead of the black background.
Misconfigured webserver (Score:2)
It's serving me octet streams for its web pages, so it asks me to download them.
Firefox got confused on http://www.hamar.sk/sphere/ as well -- "document contains no data".
Even the default Apache settings get these basic things right. *sigh*
So, editors.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So, editors.. (Score:2)
Some day it might be a real window manager, and when that happens, I'll consider using it.
Re:So, editors.. (Score:3)
Mirror (Score:5, Informative)
http://slashdot.fluky.org/www.hamar.sk/sphere/scr
Also their main page:
http://slashdot.fluky.org/www.hamar.sk/sphere/ind
Spatial awareness, not just space (Score:2, Interesting)
Having a spherical desktop does not make it any easier to find your files since there is no point of reference.
I saw the looking glass demo a long time ago, and even this does not go as far as it should.
If you imagine a 3d terrain, preferably photographic, with recognisable features as your desktop picture, you could place files
Google images (Score:2, Informative)
Smells like.... (Score:5, Funny)
Sounds like someone beat MS to longhorn
A change of language is needed (Score:2)
I think that we are in a situation with a lot to do with the early renaissance: before Piero della Francesca and he's works on perpective, drawings and paintings did not used perspective. At all.
Some years later, perspective became part of the pictorial language, and it was used to express things in a new way.
I believe that we need a paradigm shif
Re:A change of language is needed (Score:2)
Re:A change of language is needed (Score:2)
It's like saying that animations aren't better than stills only because they weren't used until invented!
download (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.majorgeeks.com/download4222.html [majorgeeks.com]
Interesting Idea, but . . . (Score:3, Informative)
I'm all for modifying the desktop, but I don't think this model is going to really solve any problems. Cool stuff is all fun and good, but in the end for something like this you have to address and solve a problem. Fulfill a need.
I've used it a bit (Score:4, Informative)
I didn't use SphereXP for very long, as it wasn't very mature when I used it, but I found Spaces [spatialresearch.com], which was pretty good - It's not exactly the same, but they both make use of our spacial memory - With spaces I could have 30+ windows open and have no problems at all navigating them
The only problem is that they are "images" of the window, and hence does not update once they are out of focus.
Plus, none of them support multiple screens, as far as I can remember - I use a dual screen setup right now, but I would still *love* to have it
I got interested in it after viewing demonstrations of Sun's Looking Glass (I think it's called) - now they updated in real time, but that was "built in"... Plus it was linux
SphereXP (Score:2)
3D Desktop NOT the wave of the future (Score:5, Interesting)
The ability to put a window into the dock is pretty nice, though that section should be larger so the contents of the window are still recognizable, while shortcut icons are still small (16x16-ish).
To get more 'desktop space' we've tried bigger displays with higher resolution; multiple virtual desktops; multiple displays; parts of the desktop sliding in and out of view
What we really want is the ability to see everything that's going on at the same time without having to turn our head or move anything on the screen.
I think if there were a system like Expose with a central area for displaying the current window, we'd be there. That way you could have all your windows displayed miniturized and your primary window large in the center of the screen. You could still get information from the rest of your windows without having to switch to them or stop whatever it is you're working on.
Re:3D Desktop NOT the wave of the future (Score:3, Informative)
CTRL-Click on the taskbar the windows you want to use. Then right-click on one of them, and select "Tile" either horizontally or vertically. I do this when I'm trying to watch different IM conversations.
Re:3D Desktop NOT the wave of the future (Score:2)
Re:3D Desktop NOT the wave of the future (Score:2)
Most of my users still want to run at 800x600 on 17" or 19" screens and maximize their browser window, even when the text in that window is only an inch across. Why? The overlapping windows distract them.
You think a 3D desktop would be less distracting?
Re:3D Desktop NOT the wave of the future (Score:2)
speak for yourself, 3-neuron wonder!
i would rather see one window [nongnu.org]!
yours truly, a 2-neuron programmer...
PARC... again (Score:2)
I was at UIST '94 (ACM SIGCHI Conference on User I/F and Software Technology), and some guys from PARC presented a paper on what you call a ZUI.
Not at all (Score:2)
The point of a video game is that you are playing through a virtual space, that you are slowly discovering this space as you would in real life. ELements are concealed from you until crucial moments. Do you turn on god/noclip mode when you first start a game?
But the goal of a desktop is exactly the opposite. Rather that concealing most of the world for later discovery, a desktop is meant to reveal as much as possible to you as quickly as possible. The design
Re:3D Desktop NOT the wave of the future (Score:3, Insightful)
Some 3D games are really 3D, like flight simulators, but most are no more 3D than the original Wizardry was.
what a waste (Score:2)
/.ed already (Score:3, Funny)
O
Not true 3d.... (Score:2)
This is a true 3D desktop currently being worked on by SUN. I can not wait to play with it (NOTE: runs onlu on linux)...
Project home w/ pics and vids [sun.com]
Developer site w/ some doenloads [java.net]
circular logic (Score:2)
GGI Cube (Score:2)
The research shows... (Score:5, Funny)
So the only answer to continue to drive innovation is new input and output devices. This is where Microsoft has got it right. They see the need for this and are constantly developing newer and more unique interfaces. They have their biometric login device that allows you to log in just by touching something. And now they have this new 3D sphere interface. What they need is a corresponding physical input device to take the most advantage of this new UI. Since they are so keen on the tactile approach, they should probably make an input device that is more convenient to what most of the users of their products are accustomed to interacting with.
I would suggest that they build a unit that can be placed on the lap for convenient reach. It should have a firm cylindrical projection that is easy to grab (probably about 6.5 inches in length and about 2 inches thick to fit the majority of the users hands) and two spheres placed on either side of the control rod. The placement of the two spheres on either side should accomodate left or right handed users who with to interact with the 3D Sphere UI. Just to make the make the spheres more tactile, they should use a surface that is somewhat riled. Possibly the entir e device could even be heated to approximately 98.6F so that touching it would be a little more intuitive.
Following up on their force feedback technology from the mid 90s, they could add the same kind of technology to this input device. A little jerking to and fro to represent more 3D features in this new UI might be helpful for most users. There could also be an automatic sensor in the control rod that can detect when a user's skin is getting a little dry and a plume of self contained moisturizing cream could be oozed out of the tip of the control rod and directed down the sides to the users hand(s) for instant skin relief.
Just a simple premise to prove that innovation in UIs is purely driven by the input and output hardware.
[tt] Fuck the mouse .. (Score:2)
So why not wire up a REAL mouse - you know, a furry white beast with red eyes and a red nose? Teach him what you want done when he sees different stuff on the screen. For example, he sees porn, he cli
3D interface for OS X (Score:3, Informative)
I would love this built into OS X but it is just for Windows right now.
I can recall seeing some kind of 3D finder for OS X before, so I did a google and found it. It's called 3DOSX [uiuc.edu]. However, I also found another one called 3D-Space VFS [marcmoini.com] as well. They aren't the same thing as the UI the Slashdot post is talking about, but still are some kind of 3D interface.
Ok, but what is it good for? (Score:2)
Prior art (Score:2)
Katamari Damacy [namco.com]
Unusable hack (Score:2)
Waiting for the Apple Version (Score:2)
It is an interesting idea (as it was when this story was FIRST posted a year ago or more). It seems they have a new version since then but it's not a new slashdot story.
RP
Still prefer the NeXTstep virtual desktop man. (Score:3, Interesting)
mirror dot link (Score:5, Informative)
Re:0 comments... (Score:2)
Meanwhile, in "News for Nerds. Stuff that matters," GCC has a wiki! woo hoo! [gnu.org]
Re:Google Cache (Score:2)
Re:A Few Things (Score:3, Informative)
Care to back that up with any technical information?
(tip: before you do, please watch the 2004 WWDC Graphics State of the Union address here. [apple.com])
Apple really took a step backwards when they made OS X because they tried to abandon the original interfaces and paradigms that so many of us loved from the original MacOS days.
Again, specific examples please. The only one that really springs to mind is that t
Re:A Few Things (Score:2)
Re:Both links dead! (Score:2)
Re:Both links dead! (Score:2)
Re:3D in a 2D world (Score:3, Funny)
"It's a UNIX system!" (followed by what was apparently some sort of VRML-based power management tool)