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Subject: 3D Walkthrough's. Is there a program.?


waverider303 ( ) posted Wed, 05 May 2004 at 7:31 PM · edited Mon, 23 December 2024 at 8:40 PM

Here is a question. Is there a program where you can make 3D models..for instance.. a house. is there a program where you can take that house and make it walkthrough your house. Viewing all rooms in a smooth path?? Is the program if there is one is it easy to make a walk through or is it complicated.. now i know it can be done in Bryce but the Keyframes are complicated.. Thanks to all if you post info here..


dlk30341 ( ) posted Wed, 05 May 2004 at 8:08 PM

Attached Link: http://www.broderbund.com

Try here...programs like 3d Home Architect are excellent...they have some other software there that might interest you that is similiar. You build your own house with stuffs already provided for you within the software...they also have free pre-made houses(different styles available). Hope this helps...just 1 option.


Jumpstartme2 ( ) posted Thu, 06 May 2004 at 12:43 AM

Attached Link: http://www.sketchup.com/

There is another program, altho its a demo..its a full version demo that gives you 8 hours play time..its really quite amazing..you can build whatever you can think of, and then walk inside.. Best of all, it 'helps' you draw, by telling you when you are inline with another line or plane..check it out :)

~Jani

Renderosity Community Admin
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pearce ( ) posted Thu, 06 May 2004 at 4:01 PM

Attached Link: http://fraktali.849pm.com/vrml.html

You might find something useful at this link. It's also worth having a good look around for Platinum Technology's VR Creator (free learning edition). Support for this was discontinued by Platinum, but there are odd sites out there that still have it available for download. You'll need to do a deep Google search though (and you'll find a lot of dead links). You could also check out Cosmo Player (a VRML viewer), and the (free to download) TrueSpace 3.2, which has a VRML walk/fly-through mode. Mick ;)


lgrant ( ) posted Thu, 06 May 2004 at 6:28 PM

For a VRML viewer, I recommend Cortana from Parallel Graphics (www.parallelgraphics.com). Unlike Cosmo Player, it is still supported, and even enhanced regularly.


odeathoflife ( ) posted Fri, 07 May 2004 at 10:34 AM

2nd that lgrant. I just made a VRML for a client who is renovating a resaurant :) VRML is great for that sort if thing, but to me it seems like yesterdays technology, just something that never lived up to it's potential.

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lgrant ( ) posted Sat, 08 May 2004 at 7:53 AM

I'm not sure it is so much yesterday's technology as it was in the wrong place at the wrong time. It was way overhyped, then just when it was starting to show it's potential, some of the major players, like SGI, bailed out, and without major companies to push it, it stagnated. And because it was so overhyped, with nothing much coming of it, I think most companies don't really want to embrace it too strongly. A few years ago, my partner and I were working on several VRML projects, including several VRML-based 3D chat platforms. They all went out of business, or got pulled from marketing by their vendors, presumably because they weren't making any money with them. TPresence (of Holodesk fame) was probably the most advanced as far as getting 3D chat to work well, but then they went out of business. One thing that is really nice about VRML is the way you can interact with the VRML scene, using Javascript (or ECMAScript, as they call it), or direct programmatic interfaces to the browser. Parallel Graphics seems to be concentrating on this niche, making VRML instruction manuals, where you touch a part and it brings up a bill of material or disasembly instructions in another screen, and that sort of thing. The VRML language itself is very powerful, and I still use it sometimes as an intermediate format when converting files. For example, if you have an object in a VRML file and you want to rotate it, you can just wrap a TRANSFORM node around it, specfiying the rotation. You can't do that in an OBJ file. And VRML files can have inline textures, which is handy if you want to ship an object and its textures as one file. When you're used to the kind of images you can do in Poser, or Vue, or Cinema 4D, or whatever, VRML renders are somewhat disappointing, but since it has to render in real time as you move, one can't expect it to be all that great. I'm not really sure what there is to replace the functionality of VRML these days. There's Adobe Atmosphere (which some say is really VRML under the covers). It has its nice points. The fact that the authoring tool costs $400 is not so good, but it may help ensure that Adobe stays interested in it, if they're making some money off of it. While it was in its long (a couple years) beta, Atmosphere was promoted as a 3D chat client, which was a good way to get people to play with it. Adobe now seems to be backing away from that, and positioning it as a professional 3D display system for product presentation, and that sort of thing. (Another thing that might help ensure its longevity, since corporations have more money than most 3D chat users.) Be well... lynn


waverider303 ( ) posted Sat, 08 May 2004 at 10:12 PM

Thanks guys for all the info.. I like 3d hme archietc. and i bought it.. How do you get a walkthrough or veiw the inside of your home? the 3d views??


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