ImmersiVision

ImmersiVsion
Available in English
Website Official Website

ImmersiVision Interactive Technologies Inc. is a Whistler, British Columbia, Canada based company, founded in early 2004, whose primarily revenue source was the production of immersive virtual reality. The product is similar to Google Streetview. The Immersive media is a mixture of both indoor and outdoor content. In early 2008 it licensed its technology to VTour Interactive[1] and shortly after ceased active production. VTour is currently active in the production of immersive virtual reality under that licensee agreement and has since expanded upon the technology originally developed by ImmersiVision.

ImmersiVision's virtual destinations:

City Region Country
Whistler British Columbia Canada
Vancouver British Columbia Canada

VTour destinations - under ImmersiVision production license:

City Region Country
Alpine Meadows California United States
Alta Ski Resort Utah United States
Brighton Ski Resort Utah United States
The Canyons Utah United States
Deer Valley Utah United States
Heavenly Mountain Resort California United States
Incline Village Nevada United States
Mammoth Mountain Ski Area California United States
Northstar at Tahoe California United States
Park City Mountain Resort Utah United States
Reno Nevada United States
Salt Lake City Utah United States
Snowbird Ski Resort Utah United States
Squaw Valley Ski Resort California United States
Sugar Bowl Ski Resort California United States
Wendover Nevada United States

Development

The ImmersiVision technology was launched in June 2004 with an online demonstration of an immersive walking tour of Whistler Village. This initial public launch was the first[2] of several StreetView type technologies. A couple years later other similar technologies started appearing such as MotionVR and SuperTour (which later became Everyscape). Google Streetview made its debut in 2007 bringing the concept into the realm of popular culture.

The ImmersiVision player was a series of nested interactive QuickTime files placed within a single QuickTime skin.[3] Active development of the technology carried on from early 2003 until December 11, 2007 when Apple launched QuickTime 7.3.1 which removed Flash and the advanced interactive features from within QuickTime. Shortly after that the underlying media player was converted over to a component structure consisting of both Adobe Flash and JavaScript.

By the end of 2008 technological development of the immersive virtual reality player was handed over to First Tracks Publishing and the player was renamed VTour. The technology continues to evolve under a licensee agreement and the patronage of 'VTour Interactive'.

Award

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.