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    How to have a person move an object that is generated/projected by Isadora

    How To... ?
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    • Marci
      Marci last edited by

      PS: Izzy Interacting with Max... OSC. Think these days pretty much everything talks OSC.

      @timeg - what's your website address? Curious to see...!

      rMBP 11,3 (mOS 10.13) / rMBP 11,4 (mOS 10.14) / 3x Kinect + Leap / TH2Go
      Warning: autistic - may come across rather blunt and lacking in humour!

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      • Skulpture
        Skulpture Izzy Guru last edited by

        @Marci I was talking about the depth image from a kinect. SO the multiple edges are the "outline" of a person.

        Graham Thorne | www.grahamthorne.co.uk
        RIG 1: Custom-built PC: Windows 11. Ryzen 7 7700X, RTX3080, 32G DDR5 RAM. 2 x m.2.
        RIG 2: Laptop Dell G15: Windows 11, Intel i9 12th Gen. RTX3070ti, 16G RAM (DDR5), 2 x NVME M.2 SSD.
        RIG 3: Apple Laptop: rMBP i7, 8gig RAM 256 SSD, HD, OS X 10.12.12

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        • DusX
          DusX Tech Staff last edited by

          Wow, I got to this thread late in the game.

          3D collision detection should be pretty easy in Isadora as long as you have good data.
          I would be tempted to use 2 IR cameras. One in front and one above.
          XY from the front, and Z from above. In anycase adding the Z to the Quad detection should be easy.
          I have only played with rects and circles for detection, 
          but if you want to determine more complex relations I would suggest looking into 'Point in Polygon' detection. see: https://github.com/substack/point-in-polygon
          Since the number of points in a polygon may vary, it becomes important to pass data sets together (unless you are defining a specific form). It will help keep your patch clean. see: http://dusxproductions.com/blog/pro-tip-single-patchcords-multiple-values/
          I would think that you could define a dynamic polygon based on the skeleton data that would be close to the actual figure.
          Then using this 'Point in Polygon' method you should be able to make the collision detections required.
          Again I would 'fake' the 3D to some extent by make X number of Z regions (just lowering the resolution in this dimension really)
          Its great to see that my blog has been a help :)

          Troikatronix Technical Support

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          • Skulpture
            Skulpture Izzy Guru last edited by

            Some context to my idea/dream 

            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jKB0d9vsfgA 

            Graham Thorne | www.grahamthorne.co.uk
            RIG 1: Custom-built PC: Windows 11. Ryzen 7 7700X, RTX3080, 32G DDR5 RAM. 2 x m.2.
            RIG 2: Laptop Dell G15: Windows 11, Intel i9 12th Gen. RTX3070ti, 16G RAM (DDR5), 2 x NVME M.2 SSD.
            RIG 3: Apple Laptop: rMBP i7, 8gig RAM 256 SSD, HD, OS X 10.12.12

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            • Fred
              Fred last edited by

              And here again a unified coordinate system either normalised or pixel based would make comparative calculation and position in Isadora one million times easier.

              http://www.fredrodrigues.net/
              https://github.com/fred-dev
              OSX 13.6.4 (22G513) MBP 2019 16" 2.3 GHz 8-Core i9, Radeon Pro 5500M 8 GB, 32g RAM
              Windows 10 7700K, GTX 1080ti, 32g RAM, 2tb raided SSD

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              • Skulpture
                Skulpture Izzy Guru last edited by

                I've found an old patch that @gavspav made for me when talking about this a while ago.

                I can't get it to work but it may be handy for some. 

                d0d4c5-bounce-off.izz

                Graham Thorne | www.grahamthorne.co.uk
                RIG 1: Custom-built PC: Windows 11. Ryzen 7 7700X, RTX3080, 32G DDR5 RAM. 2 x m.2.
                RIG 2: Laptop Dell G15: Windows 11, Intel i9 12th Gen. RTX3070ti, 16G RAM (DDR5), 2 x NVME M.2 SSD.
                RIG 3: Apple Laptop: rMBP i7, 8gig RAM 256 SSD, HD, OS X 10.12.12

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                • DusX
                  DusX Tech Staff last edited by

                  @Fred It's in the feature requests. When you say normalized, what do you mean? I think the precentage measure isadora uses can do the job. It's just knowing which elements are based on stage width vs height that makes calculations difficult. Personally I like the scalability of this method. Using a little care you can make projects that adapt to different displays very easily.

                  Troikatronix Technical Support

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                  • J
                    JetJaguar last edited by

                    DusX and Skulpture,

                    How to track an infrared LED in Isadora?.  I can see an infrared light using Processing and simple open NI tracking IR; it is being picked up by the Kinect.  Cannot figure out how to either see and use the IR LED to be tracked in Isadora and then used as a trigger.  What would that actor configuration look like?  Currently I'm simulating moving particles on the X, Y planes with a Mouse Watcher but would like to replace it with the IR LED as both DusX and Vanakuru suggested.

                    Portland, Oregon
                    Mac Pro Retina 2013: 2.6 GHz Intel Core i7, 16 GB DDR3 Ram
                    iMac 5K: 4 GHz quad-core Intel Core i7, 32 GB DDR3 SDRAM

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                    • dbini
                      dbini last edited by

                      infrared camera -> video in watcher -> sprite (to calibrate size and positioning) -> eyes -> gives you an x and y for the infrared dot.

                      John Collingswood
                      taikabox.com
                      2019 MBPT 2.6GHZ i7 OSX15.3.2 16GB
                      plus an old iMac and assorted Mac Minis for installations

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                      • rainbow
                        rainbow last edited by

                        Wii remote and OSC, I used years ago, sure it still dose the job.

                        best ...
                        rainbow
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                        • gapworks
                          gapworks last edited by

                          @rainbow

                          i don´t quite get your concept. :( the dancer needs to carry the Wii ?

                          Running MBP2017 / Ventura Osx 13.6.7 / 16 GB 2133 MHz LPDDR3 / Intel HD Graphics 630 1536 MB / Latest Isadora Version / www.gapworks.at / located in Vienna Austria

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                          • rainbow
                            rainbow last edited by

                            ofcourse you need a IR led as well for the actor/dancer ;))

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                            • J
                              JetJaguar last edited by

                              gapworks-  IR led on the dancer.  Kinect watches the IR led.

                              Thanks dbini!  I will check out.

                              Portland, Oregon
                              Mac Pro Retina 2013: 2.6 GHz Intel Core i7, 16 GB DDR3 Ram
                              iMac 5K: 4 GHz quad-core Intel Core i7, 32 GB DDR3 SDRAM

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                              • Michel
                                Michel Izzy Guru last edited by

                                @joedrums

                                In the link you see a video where an IR-Pen and a Wii-mote are working together, the Wiimote was about 8 meters (26ft) away the maximum distance I could get to work fine. I usede OSCulator to connect to the Wiimote and sent OSC messages to Isadora.

                                http://www.filmprojekt.ch/theater-installationen/strange-lines/

                                Best Michel

                                Michel Weber | www.filmprojekt.ch | rMBP (2019) i9, 16gig, AMD 5500M 8 GB, OS X 10.15 | located in Winterthur Switzerland.

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                                • gapworks
                                  gapworks last edited by

                                  @ Michel would a pen this size work ?

                                   http://www.amazon.de/SALE-Fordex-Gruppe-WIRELESS-PRESENTER/dp/B00KFEPM6I/ref=sr_1_13?ie=UTF8&qid=1444551077&sr=8-13&keywords=IR+Pen
                                  and how do you connect the Wii with the pen. OSCulator and Osc messages is clear as i used it before. 
                                  best

                                  Running MBP2017 / Ventura Osx 13.6.7 / 16 GB 2133 MHz LPDDR3 / Intel HD Graphics 630 1536 MB / Latest Isadora Version / www.gapworks.at / located in Vienna Austria

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                                  • N
                                    nick last edited by

                                    Even later than previous late to party people -

                                    I would approach this by trying to set up sensor/sensors that cover a plane in front of the projection (parallel to the wall where the projection is happening) to detect x y coordinates for anything that breaks the plane.
                                    Depending on how many blocks you want, stage size, budget and rigging time you may be able to do it with a series of break beam or distance sensors.
                                    If you have serious budget then a laser scanner would be the thing to go for (but test it with expected lighting conditions to see) - cheap 360 laser scanner is http://www.slamtec.com/en-US/rplidar/index
                                    You would not need full 360 if the laser is on one side or above, but this was cheaper than anything else last time I looked.

                                    MacBook Pro 11.5.2

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                                    • rainbow
                                      rainbow last edited by

                                      Well done, glade you solved it. ;)

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                                      • Michel
                                        Michel Izzy Guru last edited by

                                        @gapworks

                                        No that pen would not work it uses the IR signal to communicate with the usb ir receiver and that is just for sending commands and it has a laser pointer. You need an IR-Pen that has a bright IR-Light. You don't have to connect the IR-Pen with the Wiimote, the Wiimote has a built in IR-Camera and the camera sees the IR-Light.

                                        I have used this IR-Pen the wrong way around, the IR Light was not facing the surface but the Wiimote, I am sure there are cheaper ones around, or you can build your own, there are lots of tutorials online, the trick is to find a very bright IR-LED.

                                        Best Michel

                                        Michel Weber | www.filmprojekt.ch | rMBP (2019) i9, 16gig, AMD 5500M 8 GB, OS X 10.15 | located in Winterthur Switzerland.

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                                        • J
                                          JetJaguar last edited by

                                          Portland, Oregon
                                          Mac Pro Retina 2013: 2.6 GHz Intel Core i7, 16 GB DDR3 Ram
                                          iMac 5K: 4 GHz quad-core Intel Core i7, 32 GB DDR3 SDRAM

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                                          • Michel
                                            Michel Izzy Guru last edited by

                                            @joejdrums

                                            You need to use the eyes or eyes++ actor and a blob decoder actor attached to it and something infront of the cameras lens that blocks the visible light so the camera only sees the IR light otherwise it will be difficult to track only the IR-Light.

                                            A not exposed but devoleped 35mm color photofilm is a good and cheap filter to atach to the cameras lens to block most of the visible light.

                                            Best Michel

                                            Michel Weber | www.filmprojekt.ch | rMBP (2019) i9, 16gig, AMD 5500M 8 GB, OS X 10.15 | located in Winterthur Switzerland.

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