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- 91-05/Bob.Europe.1
- From: cyberoid@milton.u.washington.edu (Robert Jacobson)
- Subject: My European Trip Report, Part 1: Philips and the EC
- Date: Fri, 17 May 1991 07:43:49 GMT
- Organization: Human Interface Technology Lab, Univ. of Wash., Seattle
-
-
-
-
- My Cyberspace Trip Report, Part One:
- Philips and the European Commission
-
- Philips
- -------
-
- On 7 April 1991, after a pleasant 9-1/2 hour flight on SAS
- via Copenhagen, I touched down in Schipol Airport, Amsterdam. A
- short train ride later -- well, actually two train rides, as I took
- the wrong one the first time -- I was disembarking in Eindhoven,
- the mythical homeland of Philips B.V., the world's largest
- electronics consumer manufacturer. Philips, currently going
- through tough economic times (with losses of almost a billion
- dollars a year), is taking a hard look at its current and future
- operations.
-
- Waiting to meet me at the utilitarian but tulip-planted
- train station was Jack Gerrissen, a friend and researcher at the
- Institute for Perception Research (IPO), Technical University at
- Eindhoven. Jack's work centers on human-computer interaction
- and groupwork, including the sharing of common video images on
- remote computer terminals, to enhance design work. Jack
- enlisted at IPO, an organi-zation jointly funded by the TU and
- Philips, three years ago. Since that time he has been an advocate
- of change within Philips, bringing in guest researchers and
- speakers with odd new ideas. My own assignment was to speak to
- the assembled research managers from the Philips company and
- their colleagues at IPO.
-
- After a pleasant night at a local hotel situated in a park
- bordered by blooming tulips, I rose to take a nice walk across
- town. Passing under the railroad station, I soon found myself on
- the impressive campus of the Technical University of Eindhoven.
- TUE is one of three Dutch technical institutions situation on a
- modern site not unlike the Philips installations nearby. As I
- walked along the campus roads, admiring their cleanliness, I
- came upon a trailer installation featuring Silicon Graphics
- products. (I learned later that this was the larger of two such
- traveling displays commissioned by SG; the other is in the U.S.)
- How incongruous, I thought, to be here on a special mission for
- the virtual worlds industry, and the main current platform for
- our work is over there, and never the twain shall meet....
-
- My meeting at IPO was in the afternoon following a
- pleasant lunch. (Unfortunately, this lunch proved the undoing of
- some of the Philips research managers, who proceeded to nap as
- soon as they entered the lecture hall.) I received a good hearing
- about the HIT Lab, the Virtual Worlds Consortium, and our nascent
- industry generally from Mr. Waumans, one of the real shakers and
- movers within the Philips R&D establishment. The questions
- asked by Waumans illuminated his thinking about how Philips can
- take some new directions in the use of VR technology within the
- constraints imposed by its continuing dedication to the consumer
- electronics market. Philips, it turns out, is also a manufacturer
- of very impressive high-end technical and medical
- instrumentation and devices, for which our technology might be
- well-suited. Except for Waumans's and Gerrissen's interest,
- there is no formal VR activity within Philips.
-
- After the managers had come and gone, a livelier crowd of
- young IPO researchers -- several of them Jack's disciples --
- spent about 90 minutes grilling me. They questioned just how
- real virtual reality might be, what its technical foundational
- requirements are, and how VR will be tangibly applied in the next
- five years. A certain skepticism among these researchers can be
- attributed to the general malaise affecting the Philips
- organization. But more importantly, perhaps, is the media hype
- for VR that these researchers have read in the European VR,
- without accessible demonstrations of the technology itself.
-
- In fact, there is a virtual worlds installation at the
- University of Delft, one of the Netherlands' superb perception-
- research oriented research institutions. It's a sophisticated
- variety of garage-VR being used to describe the spatial metrics
- experienced by subjects in a virtual world. These subjects
- parade down the hall behind a sort of walker which is used to
- measure the objective distance travelled by the subjects. These
- measurements are compared with the subjective distance
- perceived to have been travelled by the subjects them-selves.
- It's a crude but ingenious first step toward developing virtual-
- spatial metrics, typical of the unique style of the Dutch
- perception laboratories. (The other two major institutions in
- this field are IPO and the University of Utrecht. Perception
- research has a long tradition in Holland, worth looking into. I
- hypothesize that this tradition has roots in the Dutch Masters art
- scene, when people started noticing the world around them and
- depicting it in both realistic and fantastic style, epitomized by
- Rembrandt and Bosch.)
-
- After a roisterous dinner with the Gerrissen family and
- friends, I bedded down at my hotel and contemplated by trip to
- Brussels and the European Community, in the morning.
-
- [To contact Jack Gerrissen, email gerris@philipo.prl.philips.nl .]
-
- * * *
-
- The typical full Dutch breakfast, with lots of good dark
- coffee and Gouda cheese, well-equipped me for my two hour
- luxury train ride to Brussels. My arrival was easy. Another
- traveler, a young American, was not so lucky: he had left his
- passport on the train and had a flight back home in two hours.
- Wow, I thought...was this me a couple of decades ago? Thank
- goodness for experience!
-
- A short trip on Brussel's charming trams, miniatures of the
- clanging Amsterdam monster snakes, brought me to the executive
- officers of the European Commission (EC), a famous tri-winged
- building whose form will become more familiar to non-Europeans
- as 1992 approaches. That is when the EC begins to assert its
- unifying principles and brings the (currently) 12 member nations
- of the EC into closer alignment. Brussels is a hive of activity as
- new buildings are being erected for the coming European
- Government. The blue flag of united Europe, with its circle of12
- gold five-pointed stars (reminiscent of early American flags), is
- flying everywhere.
-
- Finding my way through the local maze of small shops and
- government offices, I finally located the building that houses the
- telecommunications directorate of the EC. There I met Ms. Geist
- and Mr. Ben-Sassoon of the ESPRIT program. ESPRIT is Europe's
- answer to the U.S. High Speed Computing Initiative. and Japan's
- ongoing broadband fiber experiments. They discussed with me
- the favorable implications of virtual worlds technology for the
- applications to be carried over the ESPRIT networks, and
- promised to discuss the field with their colleagues at the various
- nationUs labs.
-
- While acknowledging the personal energy of Geist and Ben-
- Sassoon (who smokes the finest small cigars), I observed that
- the EC establishment represents a fascinating overlay of French
- diplomatic ritual on classical German bureaucracy. The arrival of
- "1992" should be interesting....
-
- I spent the better part of Tuesday afternoon walking the
- bridges of the medieval town of Bruges, whose antique character
- has been preserved despite the crowded congregation of visiting
- tourists. Belgium does indeed have its charms. My Canaries
- Islands dinner, watching the sun process toward the horizon, was
- wonderful.
-
- Leisurely training back to Brussels, I prepared for an
- overnight sleeper, on my way to the Munich "Im Cyberspace"
- event. As it turned out, I had the cabin to myself and bedded
- down in sweet luxury....
-
- [NEXT: "IM CYBERSPACE," IN MUNICH]
-
- --
-
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