Here's some details on the other eight demos, each of which have their own website you can check out for more info and videos:
Doppeldancer uses full-body 3D scanning to create a wireframe image of a person, which can then be turned into a super-dance avatar. Chaotic Moon used the tech to create avatars at its SXSW party, then put all of those avatars on a dance floor together. Could this be the photo booth of future parties?
Notifly is simple: it uses a sensor to tell when someone's zipper is down but button is clasped and sends a text message letting the person know about the potential social faux pas. Dumb? Maybe, but super useful if you've ever been in that situation.
Invoc adds gesture controls to a Samsung Gear smartwatch.
Undercurrents can nudge employees with alerts using haptic feedback pads sewn into the clothing.
Slaytime is a fun VR minigame in which players try to defeat a dragon by putting together a large crossbow contraption using the controllers of an HTC Vive device.
Lari is an intriguing idea: capturing hundreds or thousands of brainwaves related to specific words from different people then using that technology to predict people's words as they're thinking them.
CM Tour de Jour employs modified Cardboards VR goggles to make virtual objects. In its demos, Chaotic Moon used posters for its nine tech demos to make Tour de Jour come to live with animations, stickers and other objects that would appear when viewing the posters with the goggles.
And lastly, perhaps the tech that most intrigued me was Mockzy AI, an artificial intelligence demo that takes all of the writing of a famous person (say Shakespeare), then makes conversations with users in the voice of that person. It's an idea right out of "Black Mirror," and a little creepy, but you can imagine the fun possibilities of being able to talk with authors and philosophers of the past, or, say even current political candidates based on their autobiographies and Tweets.
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