Hackzurich, Fluelisee, Memento, Jobs and Books

Cool topics for today:

Zurich Hackathon Projects and Winner: Immersive

The

Zurich hackathon
completed with

101 new projects submitted
.

The winner, both overall and of the Autodesk ‘best 3D app’ challenge, is

Immersive

(GitHub repository).

Congratulations!

It uses regular smartphones and inexpensive devices like Google Cardboard to create an immersive stereoscopic virtual reality impression.

Scenes are shot using two smartphone cameras to create a stereoscopic effect.

Even the mount for the recording camera devices was custom made with the 3D printer provided by Autodesk during the Hackathon.

All rendering is done inside the browser of your smartphone using WebGL and ThreeJS.

Solitude and relaxation at the Flueseeli Lake

I recuperated from the Zurich hackathon with a quick hike in the mountains, from Lenk up to the

Flueseeli Lake
.

On my way up, I helped a farmer beside the path to saw a log of wood:

Sawing a wood log

The lake provides both solitude and relaxation.

Here is an impression of the solitude – I am in the middle of it, relatively small indeed:

Solitude at the Flueseeli

This is what my relaxation can look like:

Relaxing at the Flueseeli

Aaah.

Project Memento and a Webinar


Project Memento
is
an Autodesk Labs technology preview of an end-to-end solution for converting any reality capture input (photos, scans) into high quality 3D mesh that can be cleaned up, fixed, and optimized for Web and mobile experiences, for further digital use or for fabrication.

You can sign up for a
free project Memento webinar if
you like.

More Job Opportunities

Autodesk is still hiring.

We have lots of opportunities for software engineer and other clever and motivated people interested in cloud, mobile, modelling and 3D technologies, especially in Hyderabad, Montreal, San Francisco, Shanghai and Singapore.

Shoot me a note if you would like to work for one of the recognized top worldwide employers.

My Favourite Books

I love reading, when I find the time.

I actually still read books printed on paper.

No kindle, no screen, no digital – real paper, dead trees (sorry!).

I just put together my current favourites for the
#bookchallenge:

  1. Jose Saramago, La Caverna
  2. David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas
  3. Jaques Abeille, Les jardins statuaires
  4. Juli Zeh, Spieltrieb
  5. Jonathan Safran Foer, Everything is Illuminated
  6. Kazuo Ishiguro, The Remains of the Day
  7. Håkan Nesser, Styckerskan från lilla Burma
  8. Herbert Neidhöfer, HannaH & Sesylus oder Eine Reise aus der Welt in drei Tagen
  9. Fred Vargas, Sous les vents de Neptune
  10. Michel Houellebecq, La carte et le territoire

Comments

2 responses to “Hackzurich, Fluelisee, Memento, Jobs and Books”

  1. Jeremy,
    First I want to say that I really appreciate all of the excellent information provided on The Building Coder.
    Now, I have a question. First, I’m not sure if there is an official way to ask one. I searched around and didn’t find anything that looked like a place to pose one. If there is, please feel free to point it out, and I will gladly re-post my question there.
    I did quite a bit of searching, both in the samples and on the internet, and couldn’t come up with anything.
    Using the API, I have a need to generate a DXF floor plan from the Revit model (project) that contains a closed polyline boundary of the outside of the building walls (the building gross area boundary). I have found export options to generate polyline boundaries for rooms and areas, but I can’t find anything to generate one for the outside of the exterior wall. It would be nice to do the inside of the exterior wall too.
    Any information you can provide on how I would go about that would really help.
    Thank you again, for all of the great information and discussion you provide.
    Ed

  2. Dear Ed,
    Thank you for your appreciation. I am very glad The Building Coder has proved useful for you.
    Submitting your query here as a comment is perfectly ok.
    Alternatively, you can also use the Revit API discussion forum to get help from the entire ADN team plus the entire external add-in developer community, or the ADN DevHelp online to ask us directly:
    http://thebuildingcoder.typepad.com/blog/about-the-author.html#1
    I can think of a number of ways to approach the task you describe. It depends on your exact needs.
    What support does the user interface offer for this? It is always best to follow that lead, if you can.
    Do you care at all how the DXF file is structured?
    By the way, why does it have to be DXF at all?
    You just need to access the closed polygon data, don’t you?
    Then you can do whatever you want with it, including but not limited to exporting it to DXF.
    Can you provide a minimal reproducible case to test?
    http://thebuildingcoder.typepad.com/blog/about-the-author.html#1b
    Thank you!
    Cheers, Jeremy.

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