What have you seen thats been particularly inspiring this year at SIGGRAPH ?
I had some time to kill this week at SIGGRAPH and I managed to roll up a few changes as Wilbur 1.66 ( http://www.fracterra.com/software.html ). http://www.fracterra.com/FunWithWilburVol3/index.html shows the most interesting new feature, the river finder.
Last edited by waldronate; 09-18-2017 at 09:16 PM.
What have you seen thats been particularly inspiring this year at SIGGRAPH ?
Thats pretty cool joe!
It is really hard to tell where the rivers are coming from and going to in those images, but it looks really sweet!
There was a whole lot of good stuff this year. Not too much of it directly applied to what I do for a living, though.
I'm not much an artist so the art / animation parts of the conference didn't do a whole lot for me. The late Thrusday showing of Clone Wars was sorta fun, though (even if the movie wasn't particularly good).
The classes were excellent, with the Line Drawings from 3D models and Beyond Programmable Shading ones being my favorites. The line drawing class was a review of past papers but well done. The Beyond Programmable Shading classes covered the theory of the major vendors' 3D architectures/libraries with practical examples at the afternoon session.
Of the papers, I liked Multiscale Texture Synthesis ( http://www.cs.columbia.edu/cg/mts/ ) for obvious reasons. After that was Finding Paths through the World's Photos ( http://phototour.cs.washington.edu/findingpaths/ ). Data-Driven Enhancement of Facial Attractiveness ( http://www.cs.tau.ac.il/~tommer/beautification2008/ ) was also quite entertaining.
Single Image Dehazing ( http://www.cs.huji.ac.il/~raananf/pr...fog/index.html ) and High-Quality Motion Deblurring from a Single Image ( http://www.cse.cuhk.edu.hk/~leojia/p...siggraph08.pdf ) have great potential for what I need to do at work.
The new tech demo of Origami Optics ( http://www.siggraph.org/s2008/attendees/newtech/1.php ) was interesting but I'm not sure how applicable it was except in the context of high-end, high-priced systems.
Everywhere you turned at SIGGRAPH there was something interesting and/or useful for something or other.
The default colors aren't the best on that background, I admit, but they are controllable. This feature has been on my list of things to do for a while but it really needs another feature to work well so it was sort of a hack job in its current state.
I'm considering putting another slider on there for exponent to allow for better control of the river liength slider, which is very heavily weighted toward its left edge at the moment.