For three months in 1997, Cognetics Corporation Senior Designer, Paul S. Hoffman,
volunteered as the Art Director for a multi-media space journey through the solar system.
This unique project for the Kerry County Museum in Tralee, Ireland, was built entirely by
volunteers working through the Internet.
The project began with a request from John Griffin
of the Kerry County Museum. His email was directed to Silicon Graphics, Incorporated
(SGI), one of the companies most heavily involved in Virtual Reality technology on the
Internet. The museum was planning an exhibit on space exploration, featuring materials
borrowed from both NASA and the European Space Agency. They were interested in providing a
multi-media experience for the school children who would be visiting this exhibit,
Irelands first ever on space travel. Mr. Griffins first request was whether
there was already in existence a virtual reality tour of the solar system. He explained
that the museum did not have the funds to contract the production of a new computer
project.
The request was posted to a mailing list on the
Internet which focuses on the Virtual Reality Modeling Language (VRML), the still-evolving
Internet standard for 3-dimensional graphics. Len Bullard, a VRML enthusiast and pioneer
from Huntsville, Alabama (the original home of the American space program), picked up the
ball and said, in effect, "this sounds like fun - anybody want to join in and do this
for the kids of Ireland?" Ultimately, there were about a dozen people who joined in
to create computer models of planets, satellites, spacecraft, and extra-terrestrial
colonies. It was truly an international project, with contributions from individuals from
around the globe, including Australia, Alaska, Sweden, and France.
Ultimately, the idea came to model the space trip on
the emigrations which took place during the Irish potato famine in the 19th Century. The
Voyage of the Jeanie Johnston II takes place in the middle of the next century. Famine
and sickness have blanketed the globe in the wake of an asteroid strike. People are
emigrating to colonies on the moon and Mars. As we head out on a colony ship, we learn of
emergency conditions at a mining outpost on Jupiters moon Europa. Ultimately we
visit each of the planets of the solar system in what is essentially a humanitarian effort
to save and preserve life.
Len Bullard acted
as primary coordinator of the project, and took on scripting the dialog and narration
which was ultimately recorded by actors in Ireland. He also headed up the other
significant aspect of the audio portion, background music. Lens band , Ground Level
Sound, performed most of the music heard in the program, much of it composed or arranged
by Len.
The computer program runs in a Web Browser, using
the CosmoPlayer VRML plugin. The team worked hard to create a seamless integration between
text-based HTML interface elements (buttons and links) and the 3-dimensional VRML
graphics. Not only did Paul coordinate the artistic effort of the various world-builders
and modelers, but he also designed and programmed the final interface, as well as creating
the majority of the planet and satellite models. He estimates that he devoted more than
300 hours total to the project.
The final, unified program represents a real
breakthrough in working with this fledgling technology. This is the first program of its
size and scope to make use of VRML this extensively. [And six years later, it has not been
equalled or surpassed.] Also, the project broke new ground in cooperative work; it was
done completely by volunteers who never met each other, who cooperated well with little or
no rancor; and it was delivered on time, taking only 3 months from start to finish.
Both Len and Paul managed to go to Tralee for the
opening of the exhibit on April 18, 1997. They were glad they had decided to do so, since
they ended up having to spend almost 30 hours straight doing final integration of the
audio with the graphics. The computers, donated by Compaq, were being installed just
minutes before a crowd of children were ushered in accompanying the official host for the
opening, American astronaut and the first man to walk on the moon, Neil Armstrong.
Click on any image to see a full-screen JPEG version in a new window.
These images are large - 200-300K each.
For more information about this project, please visit the Irish Space Web site. |