As the title suggests. I was under NDA before now, so I can talk all about it.
June of 2016 for me was spent working with a company called "Chronica Creative" and "Flying Fish" to create a museum exhibition for a showing at the united states space and rocket center. I was the only programmer on contract for the job, working in a close knit team to hash out the UI and UX for the hologram interactive stations (nine stations in total), a kinect scene where you become a spaceman, and a live feed from the International Space Station that shows current location data and the like, as well as a model viewer.
The hologram interactive
The hologram is on top of a large tablet, forced full res and scaled all proper to show information about the current planet selection. It's designed from the ground up to be usable with wheelchairs and children, as well as adults with around two to three concurrent users. Multi touch support is of course available. The small hologram is seen around 360 degrees of the device, so it encourages multi user discussions about facts and new information given from the device.
The hologram interactive
The hologram is on top of a large tablet, forced full res and scaled all proper to show information about the current planet selection. It's designed from the ground up to be usable with wheelchairs and children, as well as adults with around two to three concurrent users. Multi touch support is of course available. The small hologram is seen around 360 degrees of the device, so it encourages multi user discussions about facts and new information given from the device.
The projector room
The main part of the show was a massive room filled with projectors. I didn't personally have a hand in the creation of the show that was on the projectors, but I was a part of the set up phase for all the wiring and the inevitable issues that would arise when attempting to run the show in a controlled environment. It all worked out, however; and here is a video of it looking fine.
A sneak peek of the new Neighborhood Earth exhibit at @RocketCenterUSA! How cool is this? □ https://t.co/woE2MCBW5J
— VisitHuntsvilleAL (@Go2HuntsvilleAL) February 21, 2017