For Australian game studio Opaque Space,mary oliver and eroticism you could say life has been imitating art recently.
The Melbourne-based studio is behind Earthlight, a virtual reality game that is possibly the closest you can get to walking in space without being there, which has gotten plenty of attention from NASA.
SEE ALSO: Elon Musk will give a big SpaceX talk about Mars this week. Here's what we knowNow Boeing has hired Opaque Space to help with future capabilities on a VR training system the aerospace company has developed for its forthcoming CST-100 Starliner capsule.
The spacecraft's primary function is to transport NASA astronauts and other crew members to and from the International Space Station.
"[It's an] immensely critical opportunity for us to showcase our work as Australian developers but also to showcase the development work happening in Australia," Emre Deniz, Opaque Space CEO and director, said.
The CST-100 Starliner virtual reality training system will supplement the physical Starliner simulator, and is a low-cost training method for astronauts. For Starliner, Boeing decided to look outside its research and technology hub in Brisbane for inspiration.
"We wanted to expand our vision and capabilities," Leighton Carr, Boeing research and technology engineer, explained.
"So we looked across the industry, looked at who was really pushing the envelope and doing the best in virtual reality in Australia. We found Opaque Space and contacted them."
The CST-100 Starliner virtual reality training system will initially help to instruct astronauts on how to dock with the International Space Station in low-earth orbit, as well as re-entry procedures for the spacecraft. VR can also be a useful tool for when astronauts might not be living close enough to a physical simulator.
"Obviously astronauts have to spend a long time on the ISS, six month stints up there, so the ability to do training in virtual reality [makes it] possible to do that on the base station and have them have a refresher course effectively the day before re-entry," Carr said.
Like Earthlight, the trainer uses Unreal Engine 4, which NASA has also used in the form of a mixed reality space station to train astronauts. The next generation of the CST-100 Starliner virtual reality training system will aim to increase the accuracy of the simulation, so that it matches the actual capsule itself.
"We're also going to be working with Opaque to help expand the number of training scenarios we can do, and to add things like better multiplayer support," Carr said.
For Deniz, the project is "one of many milestones" for the serious games industry locally, and a chance to show that VR can help with training people for extreme environments.
"What it means is we'll start to see a surge in serious games being a focus of the Australian [gaming] industry, and again it's a great opportunity to showcase that we're punching well above our weight," he said.
"The work Boeing is doing is so rapidly ahead of the curve that it's one we're using as an example to discuss how virtual reality, or supplementation of physical training, is essentially the way we're going with future extreme environment operators, such as astronauts.
SEE ALSO: Australia's new space agency will coordinate the country's 'somewhat disjointed' capabilities"I think this will serve as a good indicator to both Australian and international industries that this is a new paradigm of how we're going to train people for these environments and it's great to see there's an industry that's taken the lead on this."
To us mere space nerds, Starliner's VR training system looks like an incredibly fun game to play with.
Correction:An earlier version of this article incorrectly stated Opaque Space developed the CST-100 Starliner virtual reality training system, when it in fact Boeing did. The studio has been employed to help with future capabilities.
Patrick Cowley’s hiEvliya Çelebi’ Is One of History’s Great StorytellersRedeeming Greek Speak: An Interview with Ben NugentStaff Picks: Stranger Things, Kei Miller, a Seinfeld Spec ScriptStaff Picks: Scott McClanahan, Abner Dean, Todd SolondzJon Stewart walks away from Apple TV show after dispute over AI, China episodesMourning the Unrealized Promise of Aerosolized FoodsHamtramck Disneyland, a Cubist Carnival in MichiganScammers weaponize iPhone 15 overheating issue to steal users' phonesStaff Picks: Wharton, Fermor, and Faking Your Own DeathPoem: Kate Ellen Braverman’s “Classified Ad”It Is Very, Very, Very Hard to Adapt a Philip Roth NovelLong Gone and Missing: Paintings by Peyton FreimanMicrosoft's AI Copilot can take meetings for you nowA Fan’s Notes: How Sports Taught Me to Think'Lessons in Chemistry' gives us the goodest boy of 2023Tinder for readers: Klerb is the new social app based on books you love'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for August 25Michael Kidner’s “Visual Anarchy”Mahasweta Devi, 1926–2016 'Nimona's directors and animators break down the film's delightful jailbreak A Space Odyssey Failed screenwriter outed as QAnon influencer used conspiracy to carry out personal vendettas Happy Fourth! by Sadie Stein Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for July 3 'Hamilton Sing “I Ducked Behind My Paris Review...” by Sadie Stein How 'Nimona' changed ND Stevenson's life How to advocate for climate change action A Residential Library by Sadie Stein Taking It to the Mattress Bumble reinstates political filters after complaints from users Trump left a note for Biden in the White House and the memes write themselves Light and Dark by Ethan Hauser Daring Daisy Ashford, the Greatest Ever Nine From the Notebooks of Jorge Luis Borges Notes on Comedy, My Own and Others’ by Pedro Almodóvar Drinking in the Golden Age by Ezra Glinter Watch Lady Gaga's perfect inauguration performance of the national anthem Where to find photography classes online
3.3734s , 10194.1953125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【mary oliver and eroticism】,Prosperous Times Information Network