JKCalhoun 19 hours ago

In case you miss it, a video of the thing in operation is linked: https://youtu.be/pcAEqbYwixU

Reminds me that there are limitations to volumetric displays—namely that, since you have no idea where the viewer is located, there is no backface culling you can perform. So it seems to work best for "cutaway" views.

I'd like to see one in person. Might be "magical" — the video only kind of hints at this.

  • unwind 3 hours ago

    I think it's worth pointing out that "in operation" here means it's running Doom. Which I was not expected, and somewhat blown away (heh) by. Very very cool.

  • two_handfuls 7 hours ago

    I think this limitation could be overcome with the right hardware.

    For example imagine a spinning display like those of the article but somehow tuned so that they are only visible when exactly head on. In that case, you know where the observer is: right in line with the screen. So you can have backface culling; as the display spins you render all 360 (or however many) viewpoints.

    Now granted, this doesn't deal with how high or low the observer is. We'd need to find another solution for that.

    • PetitPrince 2 hours ago

      > imagine a spinning display like those of the article but somehow tuned so that they are only visible when exactly head on

      I don't understand: doesn't defeat the purpose of a volumetric display (seeing what is displayed from multiple point of view) ?

  • seanmcdirmid 9 hours ago

    If only Halolens took off. Now we have to make do with Chinese drone performances at night.

  • lawlessone 16 hours ago

    I can see it making a great "radar" peripheral for 3d space games, think Elite Dangerous or No Mans Sky that both have one in their cockpits.

thesz 19 hours ago

These displays use rotating mechanisms.

This ones does not: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrfBjRp61iY

Volumetric display in the video above uses static projector whose pixels light up etchings inside solid glass.

  • wowczarek 13 hours ago

    Whatever the outcome, when someone sets up an optical table, I'm sold.

  • ge96 17 hours ago

    feel like I saw this in a hackaday, at least remember hearing the podcast about projecting all the rays at all intersections, it was green though maybe I'm thinking of something else

    oh wow yeah I've seen a lot of this channel's work before the lego display, the CV fiber optic bundle display

bananananna3654 16 hours ago

This one uses a projector on oscillating rubber bands so that you can reach in and touch it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wwKOXxX9Ck

  • mjorgers an hour ago

    That’s actually really neat. It’ll be interesting to see how durable these kinds of displays end up being. Rubber bands tend to loosen up with use, or when exposed to uv rays.

Terr_ 12 hours ago

I'm sure I'm not the only one who thought "why not vacuum", so I went and found the creator's reasoning [0] for why it's not a priority:

> [I]nside the dome the air quickly ends up rotating at the same rate as the rest of the mechanism. It's reaching its design speed with the motor at less than half duty cycle. Even if it were practical to make the whole thing airtight, it doesn't solve a problem that I currently have. The sound it makes doesn't come from inside the dome but from the motor in the base.

[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pcAEqbYwixU&lc=UgygtRUb6XZyu...

  • Terr_ 12 hours ago

    [Self-reply with side-topic] Assuming a rectangular display rotating in standard air... what glass enclosure would be best?

    My intuition says "change the sphere to a cylinder", because then we can minimize how much air could be passing around the sides and top of the display-rectangle, potentially curling around and causing turbulence and noise.

    However, that introduces a new issue of visibility: Big flat surfaces have different glare/reflection problems than a spheroid does. It may become harder for the user to see clearly, whether from external glare or from internal reflections in a dark room. What if the top face of the glass cylinder was very slightly curved outwards, to avoid the worst-case scenario where you just can't look down into the device from certain angles? Depending on the refractive index of the glass, it could just be a thicker top, so that it doesn't create dead-space on the inside.

tra3 18 hours ago

Whoa, the intersection of different skills necessary is incredible.

- software

- math

- 3d printing

- electronics

Very impressive.

limbicsystem 16 hours ago

This guy's entire output is incredible (from alien tellitubbies onwards). Go moose! https://mastodon.social/@ancientjames

msuniverse2026 16 hours ago

I wonder if you could have a vibrating chladni plate with sand on it and you match when the sand should jump with the light that's meant to be at that spot. You get the interruption of light looking like a mid-air pixel and then when it isn't needed it drops back down allowing light to pass through. Kind of like one of those mist-screens except there isn't mist where you don't need it.

btbuildem 16 hours ago

Before I watched the video, my brain ran ahead and I imagined it would be one of those led "fans", except also rotating around it's base. It might be harder to sync the two rotations, but you'd have much less mass in motion that way.

The solid state ones are cool! The real mystery there is how the pixel volume was manufactured -- it doesn't seem like something easily DIY'd

  • raphman 15 hours ago

    There are companies that laser-'etch' 3D images into glass. I guess it's not that hard to find one that accepts a list of xyz coordinates.

dllu 19 hours ago

I once considered making a spinning persistence of vision similar to this one specifically for visualizing lidar data from a spinning automotive lidar. The lidar has 128 beams and you could make a spinning array of 128 1D LED displays at exactly the same beam angles to recreate the point cloud from the lidar.

Anyway, I was too lazy to make it, but it's super neat to see that someone actually made something similar.

lifty 16 hours ago

Would be great having one of these hooked up to an LLM agent so it can be somehow “embodied”. Like a Siri + volumetric display + speaker. Waiting for a company to build this.

  • kridsdale3 14 hours ago

    Like the Morpheus character near the end of Deus Ex.

    • lifty 4 hours ago

      Exactly, but more friendly

qoez 17 hours ago

Never knew this was possible. I hope some huge company with lots of resources jumps on this and drives up the resolution and price.

  • andblac 14 hours ago

    Check out Voxon [1]. From the specs and youtube videos it seems like it's working on the same principle (rotating LED screen). Fun fact, it was co-founded by none other than Ken Silverman (the creator of Build engine) [2]. They've been pushing commercialization of this technology for years now.

    [1] https://www.voxon.co/ [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Silverman

    • nl 7 hours ago

      My son works on this. It's pretty cool tech.

  • tclancy 16 hours ago

    >drives up the resolution and price.

    Uh, I get the former but why the latter?

  • Night_Thastus 17 hours ago

    Why would they?

    I mean, I think it's SUPER cool and would not mind one sitting on my desk.

    But from a product standpoint...? It doesn't scale well in size, resolution or refresh rate.

    VR is pretty much better if you want a the kind of immersion I think you'd be looking for, and even selling that is hard.

    • _flux 5 hours ago

      Looking Glass displays (not the "hololuminescent" ones) solve many of the same things (multiple viewers, no glasses) while looking good, and in principle you could build a cube out of them, although the display can't be seen from the full 180 degrees.

simultsop 16 hours ago

Amazing, finally a refreshing, motivation source!

wowczarek 13 hours ago

Doom or Quake renderer coming when?