4 resultados para cave bear
em Digital Peer Publishing
Resumo:
Der Cyberspace - im Sinne sowohl von weltweiter Vernetzung als auch von räumlich simulierten Scheinwelten - bietet nicht nur Künstlern ein neues Betätigungsfeld, sondern eröffnet auch neue Perspektiven für die wissenschaftliche Forschung und Lehre. Schon in der Antike war die Kunst der Memoria eng mit der räumlichen Vorstellungskraft verbunden. Während die antiken, mentalen Erinnerungsräume jedoch nur individuelle Wissenskonstruktionen erlaubten, ermöglicht die digitale Technologie die Schaffung von virtuellen Kommunikationsräumen. Diese können nicht nur eine flexible Strukturierung von Wissen erleichtern, sondern auch zu einer neuen Form des wissenschaftlichen Austauschs führen. Gerade die Kunstgeschichte, die es primär mit visuell wahrnehmbaren Gegenständen zu tun hat, muss sich fragen, inwieweit die Darstellung und Diskussion ihres Forschungsgegenstandes im virtuellen Raum dem Fach neue Perspektiven eröffnet.
Resumo:
Wind and warmth sensations proved to be able to enhance users' state of presence in Virtual Reality applications. Still, only few projects deal with their detailed effect on the user and general ways of implementing such stimuli. This work tries to fill this gap: After analyzing requirements for hardware and software concerning wind and warmth simulations, a hardware and also a software setup for the application in a CAVE environment is proposed. The setup is evaluated with regard to technical details and requirements, but also - in the form of a pilot study - in view of user experience and presence. Our setup proved to comply with the requirements and leads to satisfactory results. To our knowledge, the low cost simulation system (approx. 2200 Euro) presented here is one of the most extensive, most flexible and best evaluated systems for creating wind and warmth stimuli in CAVE-based VR applications.
Resumo:
On October 10, 2013, the Chamber of the European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) handed down a judgment (Delfi v. Estonia) condoning Estonia for a law which, as interpreted, held a news portal liable for the defamatory comments of its users. Amongst the considerations that led the Court to find no violation of freedom of expression in this particular case were, above all, the inadequacy of the automatic screening system adopted by the website and the users’ option to post their comments anonymously (i.e. without need for prior registration via email), which in the Court’s view rendered the protection conferred to the injured party via direct legal action against the authors of the comments ineffective. Drawing on the implications of this (not yet final) ruling, this paper discusses a few questions that the tension between the risk of wrongful use of information and the right to anonymity generates for the development of Internet communication, and examines the role that intermediary liability legislation can play to manage this tension.