Thursday, May 31, 2007

RealEstateSpace.tv Unveiled as 'MySpace for Real Estate


To follow up on my post from the 27th of this month describing the use of social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook by real estate professionals, today's Rismedia had a press release on the launch of RealEstateSpace.tv unveiled as 'MySpace for Real Estate’. We will be doing some more research on this site but it seems like a great tool for the real estate industry and will surely evolve as the real and virtual world technologies converge.

RISMEDIA, May 30, 2007-Eighty percent of consumers use the Internet as their primary resource while searching for real estate and professionals. While many real estate professionals may have their own Web page or utilize one of the industry Web sites for real estate agents, there has not been one solely designated real estate networking site completely dedicated to all parties involved in the real estate industry– including agents, consumers, investors, builders, lenders, developers, appraisers, brokers, and more. Until now.

According to the company, RealEstateSpace.tv was recently unveiled to fill this glaring void in the industry. And, by capitalizing on the networking models that have made sites like MySpace.com, YouTube.com, and E-Bay.com so successful, RealEstateSpace.tv is positioned to become the premier virtual real estate resource. The new site utilizes the latest technologies of the Web 2.0 revolution to keep all parties instantly and completely connected. Users are able to harness the power of SMS text messaging, podcasts, video casting, personal Web pages and more to enhance their real estate experience– whether business related or personal.

Katrina Adams, spokesperson for RealEstateSpace.tv, explains, "RealEstateSpace.tv's networking abilities, that incorporate new technologies like text messaging, podcasting, and video services, transform the site into a complete virtual community. And, by including all aspects of the real estate industry, RealEstateSpace.tv is a one-stop-shop for consumers where they can meet all of their needs, from lenders to appraisers to agents and more. We are certainly positioned to become the best real estate Web site on the market for these precise reasons."

Professionals may also join the community and earn money through the referral network. This is yet another feature that makes RealEstateSpace.tv stand out from the common crowd of Web sites for real estate agents.

Adams notes, "We are essentially bringing unity back to the real estate community. We want to dynamically connect agents and consumers without the annoyance of unwanted solicitations and additional fees. We do so by being an all-inclusive full service technology driven real estate marketplace."

Agents and real estate professionals are also able to create their own Web page to feature on RealEstateSpace.tv. Then, they can use cutting-edge technology to mass market their services. SMS text messaging for appointments, videos to accompany listings, and personal podcasting. These are just a few of the benefits of joining the growing community at RealEstateSpace.tv.

Wednesday, May 30, 2007

Google Maps takes 3D photos down to street level

Here is an article from ninemsn, which boasts the largest online audience in Australia describing a new release from Google which further enhances the detail experienced using Google Maps.
If you read down towards the bottom of the article the author suggests what we have been saying all along regarding the next logical progression of this technology. Being able to enter and walkthrough a property.


Google Maps takes 3D photos down to street level
30th May 2007 Angus Kidman Internet ninemsn.com

Now that it's offering 3D views of the landscape via Street View, it can surely only be a matter of time before Google has tracking cameras attached to every object in the world. Street View is deeply impressive, but there are a few things that need fixing.

Officially announced today, Street View is an add-in for Google Maps which provides street-level 360 views of five major US cities (San Francisco, New York, Las Vegas, Denver and Miami). According to Google, it will "soon expand to other metropolitan areas", though we're not holding our breath for a street-level view of Sydney any time real soon, given that the service was briefly blocked from access by Australian IP addresses.

In areas where Street View is enabled, Google highlights streets in blue, allowing you to drag a person-shaped marker onto an area to get a close-up, street-level photo. Once the initial image is in place, you can drag across the picture to get a 360 degree view, or click on in-image navigational arrows to move around and explore your neighbourhood. Neatly, Google also moves the underlying map while you're doing this.

Now, this could be a highly useful navigational aid, but it needs to be taken with a grain of salt. Since the photos (obviously) aren't real time, there's no guarantee that where you're going actually looks like this anymore. This is a particular risk in Las Vegas, one of the launch cities, where building activity proceeds so rapidly that even regular visitors are liable to get confused. Some of the photos also have a fair degree of sun blur, making it hard to find anything useful.

It's inevitable that someone's going to complain about privacy infringements, to which we imagine Google will respond with its customary mixture of disdain and pointing out that photographing the streetscape isn't actually illegal. On the other hand, there could be a neat sideline in businesses paying to allow you to actually enter their buildings, providing a Second Life experience that's actually modelled on the real world. C'mon, Larry and Serge, you know you can afford it.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Microsoft launches 3D maps


Today Microsoft announced the launch of its 3D Map service. The new maps offer bird’s eye views of New York, Cincinnati and Austin, Texas with Cape Coral and Tampa Bay, Florida; Cincinnati, Ohio; Northampton, England; Ottawa, Canada and Indianapolis (including the motor speedway) coming soon.

To see the 3D view of New York, you must zoom right down on the New York position on the map until the 3D icon lights up and offers you the 3D view.

We tried using the service and found it to be a little slow but very cool. Clearly Microsoft is trying to compete with Google Earth and it is off to a good start. The next logical step would be to be able to see the exterior of the building in 3D and then have the ability to do a 3D Walkthrough of the interior. Once the service is improved it seems like it will be a very valuable mapping tool.

Monday, May 28, 2007

The Air Mouse


A lot of press has been given to a recent invention of a group of undergraduate students at WPI that has the potential to revolutionize navigation in a 3D Environment. The Air Mouse is designed to allow users to control and manipulate items on a computer screen just by pointing at the monitor.

We
view this as a significant development because the easier it is to navigate and interact in 3D environments the quicker it will become mainstream. Imagine being able to navigate and interact with a 3D Walkthrough by simply pointing your finger to where you want to go. Think Minority Report.

Here is an article about this new invention from Gizmag online magazine.

Sunday, May 27, 2007

My Space and Facebook for Real Estate Professionals?

The use of social networking sites such as MySpace and Facebook have clearly expanded beyond the shy teenager looking to make friends. An article today from RisMedia discusses how real estate professionals are also starting to embrace these sites as effective marketing and networking tools.

It will be interesting to see how long it takes before the immersive technology of virtual worlds such as Second Life and virtual communities such as My Space and Facebook collide.

3Dwalkthroughs.com predicts that in the next few years you will see the best of both of these technologies join forces and the synergy that is created will be as explosive as the internet in the late 90's.

Read the article Here

Saturday, May 26, 2007

Amazing Architecture


A fascination with contemporary architecture was one of the driving forces behind the launch of 3Dwalkthroughs.com.

An article in today's New York Times details a new building which blew me away. The new building is the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision, the home of the national broadcasting archives. It was conceived as a perfect cube, half of it buried underground. Read the complete article to learn more about this amazing buildings and all the unique features it has to offer.

Friday, May 25, 2007

Plans for Memorial Day Weekend?



First and foremost 3Dwalkthroughs.com would like to wish all our friends, family, clients a Safe and FUN Memorial Day Weekend. If you live in the New York area and are looking for something fun and educational to do you should consider visiting our friends at the American Airpower Museum.

From May 23rd through the 28th walk the flight line at the American Airpower Museum at Republic Airport and be part of history. Inspect two flying legends together for the first time in New York: The mighty British RAF Lancaster and the legendary B-17 Flying Fortress. Flight experiences are available in both aircraft. (Inquire planeside during your tour of the museum.)

Then inspect the rest of the flight line with A-10's, Vietnam helios, aerobatic planes, a squadron of operational World War II fighters, patrol planes, Airborne transport planes and more. It's a tribute to courage, valor and bravery offered on behalf of freedom!

Thursday, May 24, 2007

The Exponential Development of 3D World Technology

It is both stressful and exciting to try and keep up with the pace of new development of 3D world technologies. The press release below describes a new technology that can automatically produce photo-realistic avatars from a single photograph. It is probably just a matter of time before the same technology can be applied to architectural structures.

3Dwalkthroughs.com believes that the more realistic the experience within the various 3D worlds, the quicker the resident populations will grow, as well as the migration of real life businesses into these worlds.


CyberExtruder Brings 2D to 3D Technology to Second Life

NewswireToday - /newswire/ - Newark, NJ, United States, 05/23/2007 - CyberExtruder, the leader in 3D imaging solutions, announces the creation of Avatar Island, its presence within Second Life. For the first time, Second Life® residents will have the ability to create photo-realistic avatars by just uploading a photo.

For the first time, Second Life residents will have the ability to create photo-realistic avatars by simply uploading a single photograph--like a passport photo. Avatar Island will be the only avatar skinning facility in-world that can automatically produce photo-realistic avatars from a single photograph.

Prior to Avatar Island, the only way to produce this level of vivid realism was to hire professional 3D artists skilled in software packages like 3D StudioMax, Maya or Poser. Now, all a resident needs to do is take a reasonably good photograph, submit it to the system for processing and wait a few minutes for the results to be delivered to the resident’s email address. The new texture file is an impressive blending of photographic detail and animation magic.

At the same time they began construction of Avatar Island, CyberExtruder also announced the initiation of its search for tenant-partners that will be given free real estate on Avatar Island for the purpose of setting up symbiotic presences.

“We’re actively looking for tenant-partners that have relevant offerings for Second Life residents,” says Jack Ives, Chief Operating Officer of CyberExtruder. “Our plan is to build the focal point for avatar customization within Second Life. We want to attract the best avatar skinners and designers and bring them all together in one place. To that end, we’re supporting Avatar Island and will give space at no charge to others that bring relevant value to the group.”

To compliment CyberExtruder’s avatar creation system, plans are in the works to have a resident 3D animation studio that will provide regular classes and seminars in the use of Second Life’s tools and scripting as well as a 3D printing company that will be able to provide 3D replicas of resident’s avatars.

CyberExtruder has contracted the services of Cranial Tap, Inc. a Virginia based developer of 3D worlds to do the actual build out of Avatar Island. “We are both pleased and excited to help CyberExtruder bring this truly unique service to Second Life users, says Dave Levinson, CEO of Cranial Tap. “Reducing the barrier to character customization will have a far reaching and meaningful impact on this active community.”

Avatar Island is scheduled to open up on June 14. For more information on becoming a tenant-partner, please call Jack Ives between 9am and 5pm EDT or email him.

About CyberExtruder
CyberExtruder (cyberextruder.com) is a software development company whose technology enables the automatic conversion of a 2D facial image (e.g. passport photo) to an accurate 3D model of the subject’s face or head. CyberExtruder’s technology leverages advanced statistical models to interpret the third dimension from a 2D image. CyberExtruder’s software and back-end delivery systems are completely scalable, personalized avatars can be produced and delivered without limitation.

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

The Release of a Great New Sales Tool

If you get a chance please check out Virt2go.com.
We
came across their new product release which utilizes cutting edge media formats to build an interactive virtual sales force. Cool stuff...

Virt2go Releases Virtual Specialist™

Virt2go Uses Power of Virtualization to Deliver an
Engaging, Interactive Sales Force Over the Web


ATLANTA, May 22, 2007 – Virt2go Inc., which continues to build on its goal of delivering virtual workforce solutions, released today Virtual Specialist™. Virtual Specialist uses state-ofthe-art video, flash animation and interactive content to virtualize and scale a sales force over the Web or offline via CD.
“Virtual Specialist is like sending your very best sales and product specialists out on every sales call,” explained Virt2go CEO Bentley Radcliff. “As a customer-facing solution, it enables you to exponentially expand your workforce and increase your revenue without the cost of hiring and training new personnel. It can even close the deal and take the order via the web.”

Virt2go has delivered the first fully enabled Virtual Specialist solution to support sales initiatives for Hewlett-Packard BladeSystem servers. It can be experienced at
http://www.virt2go.com/demo/vs. Virtual Specialist is ideal for complex products or services that typically require extensive knowledge and sales focus. Virtual Specialist can be used as unassisted (standalone) sales tools, or by salespeople to assist them in face-to-face meetings with prospects. Importantly, Virtual Specialist can be enhanced or updated as product or service offerings evolve.

“Many companies have told us they can’t get their sales teams up to speed quickly enough on every product they produce – Virtual Specialist is designed to answer this challenge,” said Radcliff. “It ensures prospects receive a consistently knowledgeable and effectively delivered value proposition every time. Its interactive content also lets customers focus on issues of relevance to them and learn how the product resolves their specific business needs.”

About Virt2go
Virt2go is committed to helping companies be at the forefront of the virtual age. By providing businesses and organizations with the critical services and technology needed to “go virtual”, Virt2go can help its clients immediately leverage the tremendous cost-savings and operational benefits of virtualization technology. Based in Atlanta, Georgia, Virt2go is a member of the Greater Atlanta Chamber of Commerce. The company’s CEO, Bentley Radcliff, also sits on the Chamber’s Technology Alliance team, which plays an integral role in driving initiatives to establish Atlanta as the next major technology hub of the United States.
For more information about Virt2go, its products or the rising trend of virtualization, visit: www.virt2go.com.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

Real Estate Brokers Go High-Tech

Below is an interesting article from NJBiz.com.

Real Estate Brokers Go High-Tech
By Evelyn Lee - 5/21/2007

LIVINGSTON - A small but growing number of New Jersey firms are developing products and services that are helping to change the way the local real estate industry does business. These innovations, which allow companies to operate more efficiently, save money and market their properties, are becoming more widely adopted as the industry grows more open to new technologies.

“Real estate professionals are becoming more and more tech savvy,” says John G. J. Ritter, president of the Industrial and Office Real Estate Brokers Association of the New York Metropolitan Area (IOREBA), which hosted its first Technology Night last month in Hackensack to showcase new technologies to its members. “Those companies that harness technology in their businesses will have a leg up or an advantage” over less technologically advanced firms, Ritter says.

He estimates that about 80 percent of office brokers use databases such as CoStar or MrOffice

Space.com, which provide listings of available office space in New Jersey and other areas, while 99 percent of commercial real estate companies use Web sites to market their properties.

One small local company that is enhancing the technological capabilities of real estate firms is Bavelle Technologies, a Livingston-based concern with 10 employees. In the past year, Bavelle has helped more than a dozen real estate clients adopt or upgrade software programs for their property management systems, including some clients that automated their operations for the first time. “We still encounter companies who are still working with paper ledgers to maintain their tenant list and their client list and payments,” says Oren David, a partner at Bavelle, which has about 20 to 25 real estate customers.

For more high-tech real estate clients, Bavelle works on developing Web sites, either by creating new ones to showcase a company’s properties and services, or to make existing sites more interactive so tenants or clients can submit requests or inquiries. Bavelle recently collaborated with another Livingston-based company, Computer Presentation Group (CPG), on a project for Prime Retail, the outlet mall subsidiary of The Lightstone Group, a Lakewood-based real estate firm. CPG worked on the Web design while Bavelle set up customer databases and did programming for the site.

“We definitely see a move toward either introducing technology to the business or improving on what’s already in existence,” says David.

“Everyone is really forced into [adopting new technologies] because it is the most efficient way to operate,” concurs Bruno de Vinck, director and chief operating officer of Lightstone Value Plus Real Estate Investment Trust, a Mahwah-based subsidiary of The Lightstone Group, and another client of Bavelle.

In the past year, The Lightstone Group has promoted its residential properties with online photographs, floor plans and a list of amenities. This helped bring in more than 900 Internet leads in the first quarter of 2007 alone, according to de Vinck. The interactive marketing allowed prospective tenants to run a credit check on themselves before filling out an application, which de Vinck says has generated a 60 to 70 percent success rate in terms of closing on residential units. This compares with a 10 to 20 percent closing rate for non-Internet leads such as walk-ins and applications that are mailed.

Another new technology that is starting to catch on with developers and construction companies comes from Hackensack-based EarthCam. The 11-year-old company, which has fewer than 50 employees, installs and monitors Web-based video cameras at some of the most high-profile construction projects in the state, including Red Bull Park—the 25,000-seat stadium that will be part of the Harrison MetroCentre in Harrison— the Prudential Center that will house the New Jersey Devils in Newark, and the Xanadu project in East Rutherford.

“When I founded the company, construction companies and real estate developers had no need for these cameras,” says Brian Cury, CEO and founder of EarthCam.

Today, he says, that attitude has changed.

With a Web cam installation, companies can monitor a construction site from a remote location to ensure that work is being completed on schedule. Cury says this saves the time and expense of traveling to sites to check up on crews and their progress. Monitoring workers online also tends to improve the quality of the construction, he says.

Web cams also provide a visual record of the entire construction process that clients can use to create a time-lapse movie for promotional purposes. “To be able to roll out a 30-second movie that shows one year of progress, that’s very impressive,” says Cury, who estimates that real estate and construction companies make up about 30 percent of EarthCam’s business.

Digital Vision, an architectural design and illustration company in Elizabeth, creates virtual tours of commercial or residential properties using computer-generated renderings and 3-D animation. Recent projects include Blu Asbury, a 25-unit apartment complex in Asbury Park, and the Eisenhower Corporate Campus, a 385,000-square-foot office building in Livingston that is being renovated by Livingston-based developer Eastman Companies.

Virtual tours help bring a building project to life, says Helder Santos, president of Digital Vision, a two-year-old company with 20 to 30 real estate clients. “In three minutes, you basically give them a very fast overview and at the same time a very complete overview of their project,” Santos says. “It’s much more exciting than sitting through PowerPoint slides.”

He says some residential developers have approached Digital Vision to produce renderings and animation to make their projects stand out. “What people are coming to us for is to give them outstanding images that set them apart from the other projects, which at this point is difficult, because there’s a good amount of competition out there,” says Santos.

He says Digital Vision must contend with 30 to 40 international rivals when competing for projects. Educating real estate firms about Digital Vision technology is another challenge. “Getting people informed is the most difficult portion of what we do,” Santos says. “They think it’s a very simple process, it’s a click of a button.”

In reality, renderings and animation are a labor-intensive and time-consuming process, he says. A completed sketch requires three to five days, while animation can take another two months. Santos says this makes the price of his digital products, which range from $2,200 for a rendering to as much as $20,000 for an animation, hard for prospective clients to comprehend.

“What’s holding us back right now is the lack of exposure of the brokers to the technology,” he says. “They’re so familiar with traditional ways of showing things that sometimes they undervalue the power of the technology.”

Monday, May 21, 2007

Interactive 3D Mall Provides Relief From The Frustrations of Search Engines


What blows me away about this use of 3D Technology is that I had this same idea about many years ago, way before the available technology or bandwidth could handle it. Anyway you should check out this site because it is very interesting and I think it has a lot of potential.

May 21, 2007 ( PowerHomeBiz ) - Cape Coral, FL--- Soaring gas prices, increased traffic on roadways, time restrictions, product availability, price and “FREE SHIPPING” promotions are just a few of the contributing factors outside of convenience, that are cause for the increased number of consumers shopping the internet.
As consumers surf into the virtual realm of e-commerce to find that particular product for potential purchase, they commonly depend on search engines for assistance; this is where the consumer’s frustrations begin. It is common to find the same results will appear repeatedly, no matter what product is entered into the search. These results are due to the increased number of websites bidding to achieve the top levels of search engine results. This increased demand has triggered rising cost of website search optimization. The increased cost has exceeded the budget within the companies that have not yet achieved high levels of profit and notoriety, therefore limiting search results to only those accomplished companies whose names we are already familiar with.
To overcome this insufficiency, UWalkTheMall.com has created virtual storefronts for everything retail.Implementing cutting edge technology, UWalkTheMall.com provides a shopping atmosphere that consumers are familiar with. While guiding their personal shopper through the mall, consumers will find a unique variety of specialty shops, boutiques, designers and department stores, all together in one location. To assist shoppers in locating that particular product, a categorical search engine is available in the Mall Directory along with the keyword search that is located within the individual storefronts.
Another unique feature that makes the mall so versatile to business owners is the flexibility of the storefronts (interactive 3D renderings) located within the corridors of UWalkTheMall.com. They allow business owners to create their individual mall based website, by choosing one of the shopping cart templates to display their products, or services, the templates are provided with the storefront. Business owners can also link their storefront to their existing website. Having this flexibility makes the mall unique, appealing and cost effective to all business owners.

Saturday, May 19, 2007

1stWorks Corporation Launches eTradeShowsOnline 3D Virtual Events System

Here is an interesting article from Exhibitor Online Magazine about 3D Technology being used to create a online virtual trade shows.

5/16/2007 - 1stWorks, a real-time software communications company with solutions for secure collaboration, conferencing, and multimedia content delivery, announces the availability of eTradeShowsOnline, an easily customizable interactive platform for hosting multi-vendor virtual events. The simple user-interface simplifies attendee access to keynote presentations, webinars, training events and company exhibits. eTradeShowsOnline includes real-time presentation services, virtual event design tools and a complete show reporting system.

Combining the power of real time content delivery through the interactive conferencing capabilities of hotComm from 1stWorks, eTradeShowsOnline incorporates a graphical web interface to create and deliver a virtual replica of a physical trade show. This virtual trade show includes virtual presentation rooms for keynote speakers that support larger audiences and virtual booths for interactive access to each exhibitor’s booth staff. With this interactive access, questions and requirements can be addressed immediately by knowledgeable experts. On-demand access to all the exhibitor materials can be delivered instantly to the desktop.

Show Managers, Exhibitors and Attendees can substantially reduce the expense and disruption associated with traditional trade shows. Attendees can visit any of the Exhibitors at the virtual trade show online at their convenience and attend presentations. An automated event scheduler assists customers and prospects to keep track of keynote presentations and special events, while access to the main Exhibit hall is available for the duration of the show to registered attendees.

eTradeShowsOnline was recently selected as the platform to deliver the Tradersworld Online Expo, a virtual event for Futures Traders, sponsored by Tradersworld magazine. The 5-day show attracted 2200 registered attendees from 61 countries who experienced presentations from 60 industry experts and access to 35 Exhibitors and their staff who presented in virtual booths.

Reaction among Attendees, Speakers and Exhibitors alike, was overwhelmingly positive, proving the convenience and effectiveness of this virtual format, so much so that the same magazine plans another event for 2007.

For more information, go to www.etradeshowsonline.com.

1stWorks Corporation is a real-time software communications company with solutions for secure collaboration, conferencing and multimedia content delivery, incorporating its patent pending data compression technology. 10,000 customers around the world in more than 70 countries already use its hotComm software platform. Executives from several earlier successful companies, including Alloy Computer Products, Microsystems Software, and Fast Engines, founded 1stWorks in 2000. It is headquartered in the Boston area.

Friday, May 18, 2007

NAR - Washington DC - Small but Worthwhile

The staff at 3dwalkthroughs.com just returned from the NAR mid-year conference in Washington DC.
While it was significantly smaller than the November conference in New Orleans, we met a lot of really good contacts and potential partners.
The theme of this show seemed to be geared towards Real Estate Websites, Single Property Websites and back end Real Estate Management tools as opposed to imaging products.

All in all, the smaller show led to a much more relaxed environment suitable for better networking. We are definitely looking forward to Las Vegas in November. Who knows...we might even visit the conference.

Thursday, May 17, 2007

The staff of 3dwalkthroughs.com is visiting our nations capital for the NAR Mid-Year Conference. We will post a full run down of all our our experiences and discoveries after the show today.

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Linkin Park Celebrates New Album Release with Fans in Virtual MTV ...

About a month ago, I posted an article about an independent band, Buddahead, throwing a live concert which was also simulcast in Second Life. Now, Linkin Park, is following suit by greeting fans in Virtual MTV to promote the release of their new album.

As we circle the boundaries of the various virtual worlds, one thing is clear: The most innovative companies across all industries will define how interacting in a virtual world can improve communication on very real world matters.

3dwalkthroughs.com will be announcing its first venture into the metaverse in the next month.

Tuesday, May 15, 2007

Here come Virtual World Intranets… Seriously

An interesting article from Gigaom.com. Imagine being able to creating a company wide intranet where employees can interact in a rich immersive virtual environment. 3dwalkthroughs.com believes that it is these type of innovative ideas that will make Fortune 500 companies think twice before dismissing the potential of the various 3D Worlds.

Here come Virtual World Intranets… Seriously
Posted in: Online Games

Online worlds on the Internet? That’s so last month ago. Judging by recent initiatives from Sun and IBM, the latest trend is a corporate-controlled, business-centric virtual world architected for internal use only– call it the intranet metaverse. In Sun’s case, it’s MPK20, a “a virtual 3D environment in which employees can accomplish their real work, share documents, and meet with colleagues using natural voice communication.”

The idea is to bring remote workers in Sun’s worldwide offices together into a single embodied space, “where the spacial layout of the 3D world coupled with the immersive audio provides strong cognitive cues that enhance collaboration.” (Via 3pointD, where blogger Mark Wallace has worthwhile commentary.) In IBM’s case, it’s a rough-and-ready 3D environment created by their Innovate Quick team, using the Torque graphics engine from Garage Games.

“The project team is exploring ways to scale, and also applying different models of operation,” Ian Hughes of IBM’s UK branch tells me. “We are building a user base of interested users and developers as part of our CIO office technology adoption program.” Hughes spearheaded IBM’s early explorations of Second Life as a private development lab for the future 3D Internet, where the team creates cool applications like a universal language translator for avatars.

In SL, Ian goes by the unlikely Resident name epredator Potato, and looks less like an IT specialist than an alien hunter the Governor of California memorably dubbed, “One ugly mother****er.” The trouble with using Second Life for IBM business, writes Hughes, is that’s it inaccessible behind Big Blue’s firewall, and they were looking to bolster the companies existing internal communication channels. “What we need is the ability to gather some people together and use the human aspects of the avatar interaction to be more effective in our communications.”

While some Net pundits have quickly dismissed Fortune 500 interest in virtual worlds as mere marketing hype, it’s projects like these which suggest that high tech companies are serious about their potential to transform the Internet. If they privately come up with new protocols and technology that adds real value to the way they do business, the future of the broader Net as a 3D medium is all but insured. By the same token, they may just end up adding another level of aggravation to the conference call.

Monday, May 14, 2007

May 14th, 2007 - The Beta release of 3dWalkthroughs.com


Today is May 14th, 2007 and we are proud to announce the beta release of 3dwalkthroughs.com.

3DWalkthroughs.com offers cutting edge technology solutions that give property owners, developers, and marketers the tools they need to bring their properties to life on the web. These tools include an easy to use 2D floor plan drawing tool, 3d floor plans, 3d walkthroughs, custom 3d walkthroughs, 3d renderings, search engine marketing, and tools for realtors.

We are also the first licensed company in the United States to offer a proprietary 3D Walkthrough Technology that makes it affordable for anyone to add High
Quality 2D/3D Floor Plans and 3D Walkthroughs to their property listings.

Sunday, May 13, 2007

Revolutionizing the Property Market with Online Mapping Technology

As we get set to officially launch the Beta version of 3Dwalkthroughs.com, it is exciting to see the rapid convergence and improvement of a few important technologies that will undoubtedly change the landscape of shopping for properties online. In the not too distant future, online mapping tools, 3D walkthroughs, 3D floor plans and 3D renderings will all be integrated together to form a new breed of virtual tour.Revolutionising the Property Market with Online Mapping Technology (Press Release in Directions Magazine)
May 10, 2007

Company: Microsoft Corporation
Industry: Real Estate
Location: Reading, United Kingdom

The advanced aerial imagery provided by Microsoft Virtual Earth is bringing greater realism and efficiency to online property searches.

In response to the imminent requirement for Home Information Packs (HIPs), Legal Marketing Services is developing Home Navigator based on Virtual Earth. For more information, please read this case study.

Stamford Homes has been pleased with its implementation of Virtual Earth. For more information, please read this case study.

With the help of Virtual Earth, OfficeBroker consultants can now respond to a client’s property inquiry in roughly half the time it took previously. For more information, please read this case study.

A couple of interesting excerpts from the case study:

“By using Virtual Earth as their online mapping and location based search platform, property firms have removed a lot of guesswork from the property hunt. Now, property hunters can begin with an online search — starting for example, with a desired location — and end with a photo-realistic, aerial map that includes their collection of favourite properties, including locally-relevant information that plays a huge role in the final decision-making process.”

Real estate companies in the UK, Europe and across North America are seeing significant benefits associated with a Virtual Earth-powered solution. John L Scott, a residential real estate firm based in the US saw an increase of 15 per cent in new visitors to their site following their launch of Virtual Earth. Additionally, returning visitors increased by 46 per cent over the previous month.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

RisMedia: NAR Survey Shows Realtors Investing in and Demanding More Technology

A new survey released by NAR validates our quest to offer the most most cutting edge technology products in the industry. According to this survey, the majority of real estate professionals are continually increasing the amount of money they spend on technology.

3Dwalkthroughs.com believes that very soon, adding a 3D Walkthrough and a 3D Floor Plan to every listing will become the norm.
Here is the article from RisMedia

Friday, May 11, 2007

The American Airpower Museum


3dwalkthroughs.com is proud to announce that our interactive services partner, Launchsight Solutions, has just launched the re-designed website for the American Airpower Museum.
Some sixty five years ago, the current home of the American Airpower Museum at Republic Airport was a crucial part of the "Arsenal of Democracy". Home to the Republic Aviation, the complex produced over 9,000 P-47 Thunderbolts in Farmingdale.

The new website can be Viewed Here>>

Thursday, May 10, 2007

The Fitness Studio Downtown Delray Beach


3Dwalkthroughs.com is proud to announce that our interactive division, Launchsight Solutions, has been selected to re-design the website for The Fitness Studio, located in downtown Delray Beach Florida.

At The Fitness Studio Downtown of Delray Beach you can have all the benefits of a wellness clinic combined with the programs and social environment of today's contemporary fitness clubs.

Wednesday, May 9, 2007

Starwood's Virtual Aloft Hotel Launches Today

Today is launch day for the new Virtual Aloft Hotel. What we find interesting about this project is that many of the changes to the Aloft Hotel are a result of suggestions made by Second Life users, with a plan to implement a lot of these same design changes in their real hotels as well.

Here is an exerpt from the Aloft website describing the launch.
Aloha! We are pleased to announce the reopening of the virtual aloft. Over the past few months, we have actively solicited input from you, the Second Life residents, on such design features as public spaces, guest rooms and exteriors – everything from color palette to space planning. After reviewing all of your comments, several changes to the overall design of aloft are a direct result from your feedback. Not only have these changes been applied to the virtual hotel, they will also be reflected in the “real-life” aloft hotels.

We are unveiling the newly renovated virtual hotel this Tuesday, May 8th. You will be able to walk through the hotel, sit down on the new furniture, and enjoy all the other new textiles and prints and much more. We are also celebrating the re-opening of the hotel in Second Life with a meet-and-greet session and an informal Q & A with the real-life aloft team later on Tuesday at 8PM ET/5PM Second Life time.

As aloft segues from the virtual world to the physical world, the donation of the aloft land to the Second Life community will also be announced at the re-opening ceremony. Until Friday, June 1st, Second Life residents can submit ideas on the best use of the land once the virtual aloft closes. Submissions should be 500 words or less and can be emailed to Cider Starbrook or through a notecard drop box inside the virtual aloft hotel. In early June, the aloft team will announce who won the rights to the island and will present the land to the new owner.

Tuesday, May 8, 2007

Blending Traditional Skills with New Online Marketing Tools



Below is an interesting article from RisMedia about the the importance of using both the internet as well as traditional skills in order to effectively stay competitive in the real estate industry. This includes the use of 3d walkthroughs, 3d floor plans, and also search engine marketing tools.
By Mike Parker

RISMEDIA, May 8, 2007-As your Web site just sits there, do you ever wonder what the big hullabaloo is about the Internet? Many folks just like you write me each month and ask if all the traditional skills they have nurtured are now made obsolete by "online marketing."

The answer is an emphatic "NO!" What we all need to do is think of how to blend our skills with this new way of reaching so many prospects searching for homes in our neighborhoods. How well one is able to be creative and blend these skills, determines what level of success one ultimately has when attracting Internet buyers.

For example, Richard Beckman and his company, the Richard Beckman Group in Shelton, Washington, near Seattle, continue to baffle and frustrate their competition while having tremendous success with their clients. In Richard's corner of the real estate universe, he has blended traditional skills while using the Internet in a creative but simple way.

Richard does not let his Web site ‘just sit there;' last year, he sold and listed 56 properties. In 2005, Richard sold 25 houses and listed 32 more, all using the same blend of traditional tools and the Internet.. This is no fluke, and like all Internet success, gets stronger with age.

His Web address, www.WashingtonRealEstateResource.com, is on his yard signs, letterhead, and everything he does. Beckman-in his independent, "non-affiliated-with-giant-franchises" office-came up with a great technique that has him outselling just about every other Realtor in the county.

First, he realized that if he could secure top billing on Internet searches when people look for homes in his target neighborhood, he'd have a leg up on competitors. Secondly, if he could achieve that, he would then use that position to attract more buyers and sellers. Beckman attained the first goal, and he now promotes that achievement in all his marketing materials. Moreover, every time a home is sold in his target marketplace, Beckman sends a letter to every resident of the marketplace. But he doesn't stop there.

The letter has a format: Beckman's sign at the top, his photo on the right, his information in the middle. Below his sign, the letter is addressed to the resident homeowner by name and address and the opening sentence is "91 East Ocean Lane just SOLD for $485,000-ANOTHER Richard Beckman Group listing SOLD!" A photo of the property is nicely inserted on the left third of the page. Then, the text:" Are you thinking of selling your property? I'm the agent that can put the SOLD sign on your property. Visit www.WashingtonRealEstateResource.com for more information."

"If you list your property with me, I will guarantee that your property will be the first property seen on these Internet sites: Google, Yahoo, MSN, Alta Vista and more when people type in "Alderbrook Real Estate, Alderbrook Homes or Alderbrook Golf Homes. Visit any of these search engines and see how I show up at the top of the first page. More than 80% of buyers are going online, and that's where I can put your listing-on the first page where 80% of the buyers are looking!"

That approach landed Beckman 35 listings in Alderbrook last year. Why? Because prospects recognize the importance of the Internet in real estate today and they want an agent who can put them where Internet buyers can find their listing. Beckman has been operating this way for years, now, and he has a virtual stronghold on his target market as a result. He has a lot of competition: all bigger and better funded than he was when he started, yet he consistently is a top agent in his county. How can an independent out- muscle and outperform his counterparts at the giant franchises?

"It's really simple," Beckman stated. "The business is migrating more and more to the Internet…If people can find you on the Internet, you have a chance to land Internet buyers. Once you are on top of the search engines, more buyers find you and more come to you. I manage to have a pipeline full of good properties because my clients recognize that Internet buyers come to me because I come up on the first pages. Also, I own property in Alderbrook and I am well-known there. We work hard and provide excellent service to our clients. We are like every other top professional Realtor with one exception: we've got the power of the Internet working for us and I can show my clients that we have that power to come up on the first page where their property will be seen by Internet buyers looking for property in Alderbrook."

I asked Beckman another question: "It's selfless of you to share your methods. Aren't you concerned that others will use your strategy?" His answers surprised me: "One-there's plenty of business for everyone; two-you can't believe how many Realtors won't spend $8 a day to make placement happen for them; and three-I've been doing this for three years and my position is well seasoned; as long as I keep up my subscription, I'll remain on top!"

To summarize Beckman's method: step one seems to be making sure your Web site can be found. (If you would like to know if it can or cannot be found, click here and we will tell you which is the case-free).

Once you know that, you can do something to change that or to take advantage of it. Step two of this technique is a neighborhood mailing program to your farm whenever you sell a property. In that mail, which is personally addressed to each homeowner, you use your Internet mastery to show them why you should be their agent-buying or selling.

Beckman is currently in Maui for a well earned vacation. When was the last time you were able to take two weeks off? With the Internet as your team member, that can happen, too. The Internet is a tool and you are the one who determines how effective that tool is for you.

Monday, May 7, 2007

Maybe One Day You Will Be Able To Print Your Own House

I read an interesting article about companies that are working to bring 3D printers, which can create a solid object from three-dimensional plans, into a price range much more affordable for the small business owner or home user. The price will start at around $4995 but this is expected to drop to $1,000 in a few years.
Perhaps if this technology becomes mainstreamed, real estate brokers for new development projects will show their clients 2D Floor Plans and then print out a model of what the house will actually look like.


Technology News
May 6, 2007, 10:03PM
3-D printers that create plastic items coming to homes
By SAUL HANSELL
New York Times


PASADENA, CALIF. — Sometimes a particular piece of plastic is just what you need. You have lost the battery cover to your cell phone, perhaps. Or your daughter needs to have the golden princess doll she saw on television. Now.

In a few years, it will be possible to make these items yourself. You will be able to download three-dimensional plans online, then push Print. Hours later, a solid object will be ready to remove from your printer.

It's not quite the transporter of Star Trek, but it is a step closer.

Three-dimensional printers have been seen in industrial design shops for about a decade. They are used to test part designs for cars, airplanes, and other products before they are sent to manufacturing. Once well over $100,000 each, such machines can now be had for $15,000. In the next two years, prices are expected to fall further, putting the printers in reach of small offices and even corner copy stores.

The next frontier will be the home. One company that wants to be the first to deliver a 3-D printer for consumers is Desktop Factory, started by IdeaLab. The company will start selling its first printer for $4,995 this year.

Bill Gross, chairman of IdeaLab, says the technology it has developed, which uses a halogen light bulb to melt nylon powder, will allow the price of the printers to fall to $1,000 in four years.

"We are Easy-Bake Ovening a 3-D model," he said. "The really powerful thing about this idea is that the fundamental engineering allows us to make it for $300 in materials."

Others are working on the same idea.

"In the future, everyone will have a printer like this at home," said Hod Lipson, a professor at Cornell University, who has led a project that published a design for a 3-D printer that can be made with about $2,000 in parts. "You can imagine printing a toothbrush, a fork, a shoe. Who knows where it will go from here?"

Three-dimensional printers, often called rapid prototypers, assemble objects out of an array of specks of material, just as traditional printers create images out of dots of ink or toner. They build models in a stack of very thin layers, each created by a liquid or powdered plastic that can be hardened in small spots by precisely applied heat, light, or chemicals.

3D Systems plans to introduce a three-dimensional printer later this year that will sell for $9,900.

"We think we can deliver systems for under $2,000 in three to five years," said Abe Reichental, the company's chief executive. "That will open a market of people who are not just engineers — collectors, hobbyists, interior decorators."

Even at today's prices, uses for 3-D printers are multiplying.

Dental labs are using them to shape crowns and bridges. Doctors print models from CT scans to help plan complex surgery. And the Army Corps of Engineers used the technology to build a topographical map of New Orleans to help plan reconstruction.

Source: Chron.com

Saturday, May 5, 2007

Sat-Nav in 3D Makes Cities Come Alive

Back in April, we posted an article about 3D Satellite Navigation being launched in Singapore. This technology is now being launched in Europe and will be coming to the US within the next year. It seems to me the logical next step is to provide the end user with an ability to do 3D Walkthroughs of properties that interest them.

Satellite Navigation News
GadgetsNews Satellite Navigation
Phil Lattimore
May 04 2007
50 cities to get rendered in 3D by Tele Atlas

European sat-nav users will soon be able to navigate through cities with 3D models of buildings and landmarks displayed life-like onscreen. Digital map provider Tele Atlas is set to release detailed 3D maps of nearly 50 cities for use in navigation devices and location-based applications.

The first detailed 3D city maps from Tele Atlas will become available in July, with cities such as London, Berlin, and Rome included. Further European, US and Asian city maps will follow over the next year. Tele Atlas provides mapping information for many major sat-nav and location-based product and service developers, including market leader TomTom.

The 3D maps will make navigation easier in cities, Tele Atlas managing director and COO Jack Reinelt told Tech.co.uk. They will present onscreen images that look more like the user's surroundings as they're moving through a city. As well as displaying prominent landmarks in 3D, Tele Atlas maps will feature textured cityscapes rather than flat representations.

Major landmarks, such as the Tower of London and Berlin's Brandenburg Gate will be modelled in detail on the 3D maps. The 3D maps will initially cover around 40 square kilometres per city.

Reinelt told Tech.co.uk that as the move towards pedestrian navigation and location services gathers pace, 3D imaging of street level points of interest such as train stations, bus stops and so on will become more important.

Richer 3D mapping is also expected to boost demand for new sat-nav systems. Tele Atlas claims its research shows that 81 per cent of consumers prefer 3D maps over 2D versions, with stronger interest in 3D city maps.

Thursday, May 3, 2007

3Dconnexion Navigation Devices Now Supported By Microsoft’s Live Search Maps Offering Advanced 3D Control and Navigation Delivers


Here is a new device that I believe will radically improve the experience of exploring 3D Worlds, building 3D models and working with other 3D applications. Anyone that has experienced the frustration of navigating 3D Worlds using only their keyboard should be excited by this new product. We will be looking into how this device can be used to improve the experience of viewing 3d walkthroughs, 3d renderings and 3d floor plans.
Company: 3Dconnexion,a Logitech company
Location: San Jose, CA, United States of America

Immersive Discovery and Exploration in the Virtual 3D World

SAN JOSE,CA–-3Dconnexion, a Logitech company, today announced its line of 3D navigation devices are now supported by the Microsoft Virtual Earth platform, enabling customers to fly through the Live Search Maps 3D world in a manner not previously possible with a mouse and keyboard alone. With 3Dconnexion’s SpaceNavigator™ device, geo-browsing enthusiasts can take advantage of the same powerful navigation control popular with 3D artists and computer-aided design (CAD) professionals.

3Dconnexion’s devices significantly enhance the Live Search Maps experience. When navigating 3D worlds with a mouse and keyboard alone, people must repeatedly stop to switch tools or toggle keyboard shortcuts to change directions. Using a 3Dconnexion device, people can fly seamlessly through the visually rich 3D world of Live Search Maps to learn, discover and explore by gently manipulating a controller cap. Within 3D mode in Live Search Maps, an online local search and mapping Web site powered by the Virtual Earth platform, customers can use a 3Dconnexion device to navigate through immersive 3D environments within a browser interface.

“The ease with which people can now navigate in Live Search Maps using a 3Dconnexion device is truly exceptional, and on top of that, it makes for an engaging 3D exploration experience,” said Aric Weiker, director of product management for the Virtual Earth platform at Microsoft Corp. “3Dconnexion’s devices dramatically change how our customers interact with both Virtual Earth and Live Search Maps.”

“The Live Search Maps high-quality graphics, coupled with impressive mapping functionality, provide an immersive visual experience,” said Rory Dooley, president of 3Dconnexion. “Our navigation devices further enhance the experience by connecting people to the content more powerfully, enhancing understanding and encouraging exploration.”

The SpaceNavigator device is a companion to the mouse and is held in the alternate hand. Users apply very slight movements to the device’s controller cap to simultaneously pan, zoom and rotate 3D objects. The entire 3Dconnexion product line is supported by more than 100 of today’s most popular 3D applications, including Adobe® Acrobat 3D, Adobe Photoshop® CS3 Extended and all of the top-tier 3D CAD applications.

Availability
Live Search Maps supports 3Dconnexion devices natively (without additional installation of a plug-in) on Windows® XP and Vista™ and is currently available free of charge at maps.live.com. 3Dconnexion SpaceNavigator Personal Edition (MSRP $59), and SpaceNavigator Standard Edition (MSRP $99) are available from major online resellers including Amazon, CDW and PC Mall as well as directly at www.3Dconnexion.com.

The SpaceNavigator Personal Edition license supports non-commercial use of the device and offers online technical support only. The SpaceNavigator Standard Edition license supports both commercial and non-commercial use and offers online, e-mail and phone technical support. Upgrades from SpaceNavigator Personal Edition to SpaceNavigator Standard Edition licenses are $40 and are available online at www.3Dconnexion.com.

About 3Dconnexion, a Logitech Company
3Dconnexion, a wholly owned subsidiary of Logitech (SWX: LOGN) (Nasdaq: LOGI), is the leading provider of 3D navigation devices for 3D design and visualization. 3Dconnexion devices support today’s most popular and powerful 3D applications by offering users a more intuitive and natural way to interact with computer-generated 3D content. 3Dconnexion’s award-winning devices serve a wide variety of industries and are used by 3D designers, animators and artists worldwide. 3Dconnexion is headquartered in San Jose, Calif., with European headquarters in Seefeld, Germany and offices worldwide.

Wednesday, May 2, 2007

American Airpower Museum To Launch Later This Week

3Dwalkthroughs.com is proud to announce that the new website for the American Airpower Museum, created by our interactive services partner, Launchsight Solutions, will be launching late this week. We will let you know as soon as it is LIVE.

Some sixty five years ago, the current home of the American Airpower Museum at Republic Airport was a crucial part of the “Arsenal of Democracy”. Home to the Republic Aviation, the complex produced over 9,000 P-47 Thunderbolts in Farmingdale.

The “Jug”, as it was called because of its robust assembly line construction, went on to defeat the best fighter pilots the German Luftwaffe could muster.

Today, no American aviation museum with a squadron of operational World War II aircrafts has a more appropriate setting for its flight operations. Taxing to the very runways and hangars that dispatched Thunderbolts to war, vintage aircrafts recreate those turbulent years and allow the public to watch these planes in their natural environment - the air.