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Exploring Disney Research Labs' 'Holotile Floor' with National Inventors Hall of Fame inductee Lanny Smoot
Exploring Disney Research Labs' 'Holotile Floor' with National Inventors Hall of Fame inductee Lanny Smoot
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I had the same thought. It's interesting, at least to me, who becomes more public facing and gets a lot of credit (and blame) for projects and become household names in the parks community and who is more quietly behind the scenes not getting much public recognition. And then Lanny seems to straddle the two by getting some of the recognition he deserves for his work while still not receiving enough to be more well known in the community.He is a much better inventor than actor. I wish they had done the interview off the cuff instead of scripted just to better see into Lanny's personality.
They could bring the WDW experience to the home with this technology and VR. There can even be an in-app upgrade charge to wait on a shorter line.I see a lot of future applications of this technology, including a dream attraction of mine, "Standing in Line, featuring Flash the Sloth."
Given how much of WDW’s clientele have walking issues and the liability issues, I could see this sort of insertion being viewed as ableist.I doubt a guest will ever step on this type of floor, but it could make for some really interesting performances. Kind of like the Rey treadmill from Star cruiser, if they ever do another Star Wars stunt show it could be a very cool effect.
I can also see it used as a tool for filming. People can walk without actually going anywhere. It can save on studio space for certain scenes.I doubt a guest will ever step on this type of floor, but it could make for some really interesting performances. Kind of like the Rey treadmill from Star cruiser, if they ever do another Star Wars stunt show it could be a very cool effect.
Obviously this is for a MJ moonwalkthrough attraction.......I could see this being interesting in an Encanto attraction. There are a lot of similarities between the motion it produces and how Casita works, and you could use it with objects instead of guests.
An office.All future walk-through attractions will be just one small room.
Say what you want about Starcruiser, but things like the Lightsaber training and many other functions of the experience were incredible. The problem is that a lot of these experiences are not (practically) scalable. And that’s (one of many reasons) why they got “locked” behind a paywall.In the video, I noticed a segment where there's a wooden crate moving across the holotile and someone in the foreground is waving their hand as if to use the Force to move it!
Loads of people around here insist WDI has lost it ("Disney forgot how to innovate"), but Lanny's work, and stuff we've seen from WDI's stuntronics/robotics divisions prove that any struggles at the parks are a management issue, not a creative one.
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