MUSEUM-L Archives

Museum discussion list

MUSEUM-L@HOME.EASE.LSOFT.COM

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show Text Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
DIRK VOM LEHN <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Museum discussion list <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 3 Sep 1997 09:59:53 GMT0BST
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (89 lines)
In a recent issue of wired news (www.wired.com), you can find the
following:

http://www.wired.com/news/news/culture/story/6550.html


                     Considering the Virtual Museum

                     by Austin Bunn
                     6:02pm  2.Sep.97.PDT Le Louvre has spent centuries
                     adapting to the crowds that flock to Winged Nike,
                     The Dying Slave, and, of course, da Vinci's
                     Plexiglas-protected Mona Lisa. But at this week's
                     International Conference on Hypermedia and
                     Interactivity, curators, academics, and museum
                     directors have come together at the French
                     museum in part to strategize how to reverse the
                     human tide by taking their collections directly to
                     the public - in effect, to turn the centralized
                     museum inside out.

                     "I imagine consumer services which will be
                     subscription based - you'll get the grand opening
                     of the week, 52 weeks a year, delivered to [the
                     computer] and you'll be making cocktail
                     conversation over that," says conference organizer
                     David Bearman.

                     This concept of the "distributed" museum had its
                     first trial run this summer with the VR exhibition
                     "Captain James Cook's Voyage on the Endeavor"
                     at the Natural History Museum in London. The
                     exhibit, which lets users wander aboard a
                     photorealistic version of the 18th century brig that
                     first mapped Australia, is part of a new European
                     Union initiative to explore new telecommunications
                     technology. Simply to prove it is possible, all the
                     data for the real-time VR navigation - including
                     sound, video, and images - is cached on servers in
                     Belgium and transmitted on the fly over a
                     dedicated ATM line.

                     Essentially, the server technology itself, developed
                     by Germany supercomputing company Parsytec,
                     is a key part of the exhibition, explains the
                     museum's new media designer, James Johnson.
                     "We're talking about servers which have to deliver
                     hundreds if not thousands of full-screen videos
                     simultaneously," says Johnson. "But the end user
                     wouldn't know if it was coming locally or not."

                     Johnson says this networked exhibition is just the
                     first stage of a drive into people's homes. The
                     following phase, to begin this fall, will begin
                     looking to developing a video-on-demand network
                     of exhibitions in Belgium. It may be too early to
                     expect much, he cautions. "Their set-top boxes
                     won't have the capacity for full-scale VR, but when
                     cable modems become common, then people in
                     their homes will have the capacity to see [the
                     exhibition]," says Johnson.

                     The effort engaged in whole-hearted European
                     boosterism, Johnson adds - "a model of
                     international partnership." Including the processor,
                     the rendering of the Endeavor was completed by a
                     Swiss architecture firm, and Paterborn University
                     in Germany created the VR application to run
                     everything.

                     But with the "distributed exhibit" format, museums
                     need to be careful about "diluting" the power a
                     museum has to convey information in situ, says
                     curator Carl Goodman at the American Museum
                     for the Moving Image. "VR gives you the sense of
                     a place without a sense of interpretation,"
                     Goodman says.

                     Goodman says European institutions have largely
                     taken the lead in exploring the technology
                     because of the money available to explore ways to
                     preserve their cultural heritage. "This is one area
                     where [the US] is envious," Goodman says.
                     "There is, of course, a trade-off - we're not
                     socialist."

                     From the Wired News New York Bureau at FEED
                     magazine.

ATOM RSS1 RSS2