Build a Rotisserie Scanner With Legos 173
WalkingBear writes "All you 3d geeks out there should take a look at this. This guy has built a 3d scanner (scans 3d objects resulting in a 2d cylindrical image map) out of a flat bed scanner and Lego. Also has a turntable style for use with digital cameras."
This is a DMCA violation. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This is a DMCA violation. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This is a DMCA violation. (Score:2)
No, your thinking of SCO.
Re:This is a DMCA violation. (Score:2)
some lego sculptures (Score:4, Informative)
The mathematical sculptures are good... (Score:2)
Re:This is a DMCA violation. (Score:1, Funny)
Liscence This... (Score:2)
};^P
Re:This is a DMCA violation. (Score:2)
Plurals??? (Score:1)
Re:Plurals??? (Score:1)
Re:Plurals??? (Score:1)
One lego brick.
Two lego bricks.
Many lego bricks.
Check the lego website where they state this very clearly.
Similarly:
One beef burger.
Two beef burgers.
Not two beefs burger.
One red car.
Two red cars.
Not two reds car.
One SCO lawsuit.
Two SCO lawsuits.
Not two SCOs lawsuit.
Understand yet?
2d cylindrical image map? (Score:2)
Re:2d cylindrical image map? (Score:2, Interesting)
Hey now, I did read the summary! (Score:2)
Read the whole article (Score:4, Informative)
He never explicitly says what his purpose in all this was (although he claims inspiration from the Matrix), but I guess he's wanting to use this to make it easier to get textures for 3D objects based on actual objects.
The scanner in no way reads depths though... the 3D model he uses in the end is NOT determined by the scanner. That would take a hell of a lot more work, and probably lots of those 2x1 blocks that always seem to run out.
Re:2d cylindrical image map? (Score:1)
Okay Okay (Score:5, Insightful)
This touches two vital "geek nerves" - Hack value and use of Lego.
Re:Okay Okay (Score:2)
Movie (Score:2)
Re:Movie (Score:3, Funny)
This person made a device that they found useful, and you have the AUDACITY to tell them to get back to work until it suits YOU!?
Who the FUCK do you think you are?
Oh my god, look (Score:1, Funny)
Start your bashing engines, gentlemen!
He could have used Linux, The Gimp, and SANE and his project would have been so much more cooler.
Re:Oh my god, look (Score:1, Informative)
You'd probably want to make yourself a script for Script-Fu to do it for you.
Temporary mirror (Score:5, Informative)
Rotissery Scanner Mirror [bigbold.com]
Not a 3D scanner (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not a 3D scanner (Score:3, Informative)
Don't remember what it was called, but I used it a few years ago. Someone else get some karma and Google up a link.
Are you talking about PhotoModeler? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Not a 3D scanner (Score:3, Informative)
Photomodeller [www.photomodeller.com] - where you specify verticies and edges on a series of photos taken from different perspectives. It will generate the 3d mesh and map the images onto the faces -- good for regularly shaped objects in particular.
The other is D Scupltor from D Vision Works [www.d-vw.com] where you take photos from regular angles of an object (using a rotating turntable such as he has built) and reference markers in the image. The software will then generate
Re:Not a 3D scanner (Score:3, Informative)
The technology of deriving 3d geometry information from 2d images is typically known as image-based rendering. Gabe Newell (head of Valve Software) said that this is one of the technologies they didn't have enough time to get into Half-Life 2. It was first demonstrated in The Campanile Movie [debevec.org] and has since been used for special effects purposes in movies (including the Matrix). It is very impressive, not only for its ability to generate the geometry from the images, but also
Re:Not a 3D scanner (Score:1)
Re:Not a 3D scanner (Score:2)
You're right - there is no distance measure (Score:2, Interesting)
This is actually not completely impossible to do (but a royal pain), I have heard of guys who did it in lab classes in college. The most troublesome part is suppose to be converting all the distance readings into a useful data format.
Tor
Re:You're right - there is no distance measure (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.braintech.com/sc3d_overview.html [braintech.com]
Re:You're right - there is no distance measure (Score:2)
Sorry for responding to me own post.
Re:Not a 3D scanner (Score:2, Insightful)
Inventor has neglected to write...well, I'll be sure to go put my boot on their neck and tell 'em to get their lazy ass back to work.
Wanker.
Re:Not a 3D scanner (Score:2)
A better cylindrical map would have taken, say, 360 slit scans of one row of vertical pixels taken 1 degree apart, then lined them all up. This would have smoothed out the errors. He only did 8 scans and that ain't enough.
Re:Not a 3D scanner (Score:1)
Really steams me when somebody looks at a project some clever soul has obviously done on a lark, and says "Well, that's hardly good enough for MY purposes."
Loser.
Re:Not a 3D scanner (Score:2)
And yes, I've done better, with less equipment too. That's what I WAS DESCRIBING.
Well, at least your
What I would do. [Algorithm] (Score:3, Interesting)
(1) Encase the thing in a black box [or work at night], and put a light on the y-axis of the scanner, and a red light on the axis of the rotisserie, near it, but not inside it [of course]
For your lights, use a good small fluorescent bulb.
(2) Run a normal scan.
(3) Light the thing from the North with blue light, and from the west with red light. Keep each light as *close* to the rotisserie as possible, and on the scanner side [of course].
(4) Run another
Impressive. Next project? (Score:5, Funny)
I'm impressed. He built a very cool system. I'd be more impressed if he could devise a means in which his web page displayed in the fullness of my browser, instead of being limited to a tiny window in the center. I'm telling you, once someone conquers the "fit to window" problem this World Wide Web thing is really going to take off. Mark my words, someone will make money off it.
Re:Impressive. Next project? (Score:1)
Re:Impressive. Next project? (Score:2)
Re:You obviously are a Linux user. (Score:1)
Re:You obviously are a Linux user. (Score:1)
The catch... (Score:5, Informative)
The spoof. (Score:2)
Another way to get a realy fine scan like this would be to mount your digicam on one of these [ebay.com], or a lathe.
That's enough activity for me. Good night.
Re:The catch... (Score:1)
his delima. (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, he admits all that. His problem was that the scanner does a calibration every time, which requires motion of the scanning element relative to the bed. It's got some patern in there. It turned out to be easier to make this amusing rig that rides along and spins the object than it was to try to mount the cal patern on a rot
Got Mesh? (Score:3, Insightful)
But what I really would like is some info on how to make meshes. I've heard about people using lamp projectors with grids on them, shine that one the persons face and then the software can follow the gridpoints making a mesh.
Then use a similar technique to follow body movements (flashlights at all the joints/tips on a body in a dark room)
Exciting times..
With a mesh and skinning proccess simplified and cheap enough for anone interested.
no dark room needed for motion. (Score:2)
Bonus - export the frames back as an mpeg or other format. Stop animation, it's not exactly film gimp. Come to think of it, this woud make capturing turntable
Re:Got Mesh? (Score:5, Funny)
"This is great for skinning..."
I'll take your word for it. My cat absolutely refuses to get in it.
Re:Got Mesh? (Score:1)
Darken the room, black curtains, and use blacklight to light the figure. The dots will POP way above the level of the black or any face/hands shown.
Would be a very cool app to do this from moderatly-low-quality webcams... =^)
Re:Got Mesh? (Score:1)
Rotomapper and a home-made 3d scanner (Score:3, Informative)
A home-made 3d scanner does not seem unfeasible. It would require having a computer-controllable laser range finder mounted on a vertical post, which is connected to a horizontal post. The laser could slide vertically on its post while the vertica
Re:Rotomapper and a home-made 3d scanner (Score:2)
Re:Rotomapper and a home-made 3d scanner (Score:2)
Legos (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re:Legos (Score:1)
Specifically (from that document the parent post linked to):
Proper Use of the LEGO Trademark on a Web Site
If the LEGO trademark is used at all, it should always be used as an adjective, not as a noun. For example, say "MODELS BUILT OF LEGO BRICKS". Never say "MODELS BUILT OF LEGOs".Also, the trademark should appear in the same typeface as the surrounding text and should not be isolated or set apart from the surrounding text. In other words, the trademarks should not be emphasized or h
Re:Legos (Score:1)
LEGO.
What will they think of next (Score:3, Funny)
From the article (Score:2, Funny)
Apparently the answer is: "Correct my diction."
Cool hack, though.
-Peter
Re:From the article (Score:1)
Legos...is there nothing the can't do? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Legos...is there nothing the can't do? (Score:1, Funny)
Im starting too think that leggos have a deleterious affect on speling and grammer. maybee its contajus. oh shitt...
Imagine The Possibilities. (Score:2, Insightful)
With that being said... Imagine what this could do for game skinners. Now using an old scanner and some legos you can easily skin in your own face to UT2k3 and other games.
Re:Imagine The Possibilities. (Score:5, Funny)
Wouldn't the step where you have to sever your head and rubber-band it to the Lego rotisserie going to discourage all but the most hard-core game skinners? ;-)
Re:Imagine The Possibilities. (Score:1)
I suppose you could make some sort of cage that goes around your head and mount the scanner on that.
Re:Imagine The Possibilities. (Score:2)
Re:What? You actually READ THE ARTICLE?!? (Score:1)
Infomercials (Score:4, Funny)
"Just scan it, and forget it!"
Is this flatland? (Score:2, Funny)
A specialized viewer (Score:4, Informative)
This technique could be incredibly useful for creating photorealistic views of 3D objects from any angle about one axis.
Wish I'd thought of it. Now how long until IPIX patents it?
I don't think that would work (Score:3, Informative)
Think of it like rendering a sky in games like doom/quake/half-life/etc. The sky is really just a very large box with a sky texture applied to the inside. You as a player are inside the box so you don't realize it's a box. Once you go outside the box, it becomes painfully obvious that there is no sky, just a bo
Re:I don't think that would work (Score:2)
Re:I don't think that would work (Score:2)
How about a real rotisserie? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:How about a real rotisserie? (Score:2)
Legos - Words to Live By (Score:2)
Anyone out there know Latin? I'm thinking of having that translated and placed on my Coat of Arms. Come to think of it, it probably wouldn't look that bad as my epitath, either.
Re:Legos - Words to Live By (Score:2)
Surprising how many people don't know that.
Re:Legos - Words to Live By (Score:2)
That should be relatively close. To be any more accurate would require stuff [ohio-state.edu] that I didn't really even understand when I actually knew Latin.
Re:Legos - Words to Live By (Score:1)
Yeah, how about:
Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum viditur.
Seriously, if you're hoping to put it on your gravestone, you might want to learn Latin yourself. Don't ask people like me, leastwise!
Structured Light (Score:2)
Re:Structured Light (Score:1)
Giger.... (Score:1)
Re:Giger.... (Score:1)
Mehh (Score:1, Interesting)
Until it stiches the images automatically and looks good I won't be impressed.
He says he is having problems with lighting, that's because the lighting and the person have to remain stationary while the camera goes around the object. That way the shadows will stay the same. Spot the funky shadows in my images.
Re:Mehh (Score:1)
As kewwwl as this is... (Score:4, Funny)
Wait - this wasn't another BattleBots thread?
Okay, to be (relatively) serious - it's a fun adaptation, and goes far beyond the usual motorized crane / walking dinosaur constructions. It needs to be tweaked (i.e. fixing the light leak, and a few other things) before it is really usable in a practical** sense, but it gets all kinds of kudos in the "nifty idea; let's see if it works" department.
Now, if he can find a way to build a genuine 3D cylindrical scanner out of Lego(s), that would elevate him to uber-geek status in a heartbeat!
**not that practical usage ever had anything to do with building wonderful toys...
Rotisserie BBQ made of lego! (Score:3, Funny)
To make it a real trick give it a linux box to control the heat and cooking time
Better yet, put the linux box inside and cook that!
i don't get it (Score:1)
yeah, that was pretty cool... so when does it go into production? (yes that first closed tag was a trick to get you to read this other lame joke, i admit it... i'm sorry)
So, do you.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:So, do you.. (Score:2)
that's what i get for not reading ALL the other posts
hand-scanner? (Score:2)
It seems that the developer used a scanning bar from a flatbed scanner to make this work though. It also mentions that calibration is a problem do to the issue with the scanner's initial alignment routine.
I have in my possession an old LogiTech hand-scanner, you just scan it over the paper onto the screen (slowly). I am wonder if this would
Wow...My first slashdotting... (Score:2)
Well, as far as I can tell, the server didn't melt. Hope everyone enjoyed my kooky little experiment.
Thanks for stopping by!
In the voice of Homer Simpson (Score:2, Funny)
The scanner
The lego
The skull
aaaaa common
Re:BYU Wannabe (Score:1)
You may have BYU beat playing with Lego, but your grammer and spelling use seems evenly matched.
All your Lego are belong to us
Re:BYU Wannabe (Score:2)
Mod parent down as Troll!
I am of course taking a shot at BYU, which is manditory for a UofU grad. But it is true, we had a class in, well basically engineering process. By way of an exercise, the prof thought is would be too easy to have us engineer software, so we got to choose between making a scanner, a self-navigating robot, and creating a robot programming language.
OB Joke: Why do Mormons stop having children at 35? -- Because 36 i
Re:BYU Wannabe (Score:2)
Go Suns (hey, they've got lots of sun in Arizona!)
Re:Like Orthopantomography X-Rays in dentistry (Score:2)