TELE-IMMERSION SYSTEM IS FIRST 'NETWORK COMPUTER,' WITH INPUT, PROCESSING AND OUTPUT IN DIFFERENT LOCATIONS
PHILADELPHIA -- When they make their first public demonstration of
tele-immersion at this week's Super Computing 2002 conference in
Baltimore, computer scientists will also attain another first: a
"network computer" that processes data at a location far removed from
either input or output.
While the tele-immersion system will gather and display information in
side-by-side booths at the Baltimore Convention Center, actual data
processing will occur some 250 miles away at the Pittsburgh
Supercomputing Center. Previous demonstrations of tele-immersion, a
next-generation type of ultra-realistic videoconferencing that draws
upon Internet2 and technology similar to that used in 3D movies, have
relied upon local computing power at the University of Pennsylvania and
other participating institutions.
"Shifting the computing from 10 processors at Penn to 1,240 parallel
machines based in Pittsburgh will speed data processing 75-fold, turning
tele-immersion into a true real-time technology," said Kostas
Daniilidis, an assistant professor in the Department of Computer and Information Science
at Penn Engineering. "It now takes our tele-immersion system roughly 15 seconds to
scan, process and display the entire volume of a typical room. With
help from the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center, that time will shrink to
200 milliseconds."
This week's tele-immersion demonstration in Baltimore, presented by
scientists from Penn and the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, is the first large-scale public display of the technology.
Drawing on a bank of cameras that constantly scans participants and
their surroundings, tele-immersion allows participants in different
states to feel as if they're chatting in the same room. But gathering
such comprehensive, real-time measurements of a person and his
environment takes a toll: Tele-immersion generates huge amounts of data,
requiring massive computing power and bandwidth.
The boost in computing power achieved with the move to the Pittsburgh
Supercomputing Center will permit at least one significant advance in
tele-immersion's capabilities: For the first time, the system will be
able to image an entire room in real time. Previously, limited
processing power restricted the gathering of images to a small area
where participants were seated, while the background was static, not
unlike a television anchor seated before an unchanging image of a city
skyline.
"The reassigning of tele-immersion data processing to a faraway
supercomputing center is a milestone for grid computing, which uses
remote machines to process data," Daniilidis said. "If connections are
fast enough -- as with Internet2 -- the network itself becomes a giant
computer, linking processors scattered over many hundreds of miles.
This tele-immersion experiment shows definitively that a network
computer configured this way can handle extremely data-intensive
operations much more quickly than if processing were occurring within
the confines of a single room."
All this computing is for a good cause. Daniilidis and his colleagues
say tele-immersion may well revolutionize the way people communicate,
allowing people on opposite ends of the country or world to feel
temporarily as if they're in each other's presence. Key to
tele-immersion's realistic feel are a hemispherical bank of digital
cameras that capture participants from a variety of angles and tracking
gear worn on their heads. Combined with polarized glasses much like
those worn at 3D movies, the setup creates subtly different images in
each eye, much as our eyes do in daily life.
The tele-immersion collaboration involving Penn, UNC and the Pittsburgh
Supercomputing Center is funded by the National Science Foundation.
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