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DLS: Anthony Rowe, "Weaving the Next Web with Spatial Computing"

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Illinois Computer Science
Location
HYBRID: 2405 SC AND https://illinois.zoom.us/j/89246878749?pwd=dUppQmg1Qk1sNmlPMzhpNGQ2RTJNUT09
Date
Dec 1, 2021   3:30 pm  
Views
140
Originating Calendar
Computer Science Colloquium Series

Abstract:
Many have predicted the future of the Web to be the integration of Web content with the real-world through technologies such as augmented reality. This overlay of virtual content on top of the physical world, called the Spatial Web (in different contexts AR Cloud, MetaVerse, Digital Twin), holds promise for dramatically changing the Internet as we see it today, and has broad applications.

In this talk, I will give a brief background on mixed reality systems and then present on ARENA, a new Spatial Computing architecture being developed by the CONIX Research Center (a six-university collaboration funded by the semiconductor industry and DARPA).  The ARENA is a multi-user and multi-application environment that simplifies the development of mixed reality applications. It allows cross-platform interaction with 3D content that can be generated by any number of network-connected agents (human or machine) in real-time. It is network transparent in that users and data can execute and migrate seamlessly (and safely) across any number of connected computing resources that could include edge servers, in-network processing units, or end-user devices like headsets and mobile phones.  I will discuss several systems designed using ARENA with networked sensors and actuators for digitizing real-world environments. These projects expose a number of bottlenecks and future challenges we face when developing more immersive spatial computing systems.

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Bio:
Anthony Rowe is the Daniel and Karon Walker Siewiorek Professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at Carnegie Mellon University. His research interests are in networked real-time embedded systems with a focus on wireless communication. His most recent projects have related to large-scale sensing for critical infrastructure monitoring, indoor localization, building energy-efficiency and technologies for microgrids. His past work has led to dozens of hardware and software systems deployed in industry, five best paper awards and several widely adopted open-source research platforms. He earned a Ph.D in Electrical and Computer Engineering from CMU in 2010, received the Lutron Joel and Ruth Spira Excellence in Teaching Award in 2013, the CMU CIT Early Career Fellowship and the Steven Ferves Award for Systems Research in 2015 and the Dr. William D. and Nancy W. Strecker Early Career chair in 2016.

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Part of the Illinois Computer Science Speakers Series. Faculty Host: Sarita Adve & Elahe Soltanaghai

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