Future Vision Technologies

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Future Vision Technologies (FVT), operating from 1991 to 1995, was part of the second wave of companies working to commercialize virtual reality technology. The company was founded by a team out of the Advanced Digital Systems Laboratory in the department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The three original members, Matt Klapman, David Frerichs[1], and Kevin Lee, were later joined by John Belmonte. The company ceased to be an active entity when it's PC card business was sold to Fujitsu Microelectronics[2].

[edit] Products

The company produced a number of products which appear to be first of their kind in the market.

  • Stuntmaster Head Mounted Display (HMD) - Stuntmaster was the first consumer head mounted display to ship in the market[3] The low-resolution, monocular device shipped with a patented[4] [5] mechanical head tracker which had fast response times and accurate positioning. The product itself was marketed and sold under license by Victormaxx.
  • Sapphire IME with Pixel Bus - Sapphire IME integrated 3D graphics card graphics and audio output. A major innovation, demonstrated at AES 94 in Washington, DC and at Siggraph 94 in Orlando, FL, USA, was the ability to chain multiple cards together across multiple Pentium-class personal computers to create a single simulation environment known as a VR CAVE. The Siggraph 94 demonstration consisted of three Sapphire IME cards installed in three Pentium (90MHz) computers driving three sychronized Barco projectors. Each screen was running frame-interlaced stereo, allowing users wearing LCD shutter glasses to be fully immersed in the scene. Until this demonstration, VR CAVE implementations had only been implemented using high-end graphics workstations from companies like Silicon Graphics.[6]
  • InterFACE Portable Virtual Environment Generator

[edit] Contemporary Virtual Reality Companies

  • Autodesk (Cyberspace Developer Kit Group)
  • Division
  • Fakespace
  • Micron Green
  • Polhemus
  • Sense8
  • Vream

[edit] References

  1. ^ Frerichs Bio[1]
  2. ^ Fujitsu Microelectronics Purchases FVT[2]
  3. ^ Newsgroup post referencing initial release of Stuntmaster[3]
  4. ^ FVT First Headtracker Patent[4]
  5. ^ FVT Second Headtracker Patent[5]
  6. ^ [6]UIC VR CAVE Historical Overview