UK - Laser Electronics Ltd has introduced three new versions of its laser lightshow and multimedia software packages to include: Millennium - an entry level package, which allows 2D control of any laser system; Zion, which offers advanced features such as importation of 3D Studio max files and one of the most advanced 3D engines ever developed for laser lightshow use. Finally V3D, which not only allows the control of any laser system, but also offers the user the ability to emulate any laser effect from a standard video projector.

The Zion package is the simplest to use, true 3D system on the market. Ideally it is suited to creating long, complex shows from scratch utilizing the latest in virtual reality style instant feedback and attacks the most time consuming aspect of Laser Lightshow programming - generating animations. Features include: Free-form 3D; trace scanned-in bitmapped pictures or images; multi-channel operation, on screen preview, trigger inputs and outputs; DMX control and real-time q's for timing shows from CD and real-time image manipulation whilst the show is running.

V3D creates the ability to produce laser effects which are totally safe for crowd scanning, by using a high output video projector to produce all of the effects. Any video projector with a standard SVGA input can be connected to V3D, which is based around Laser Electronics Ltd proprietary 3D engine. Currently all laser software is based around vector graphics and all video software is based around raster scanning, this is where V3D differs, the company's development team came up with the concept of applying the definition of computer graphics used in computer games, converting them into laser images and direct drawn composite video images. V3D allows the creation of true 3D Lissajous images, real 3D objects such as cubes with hidden line removal and real true type fonts. V3D has all of the capabilities of Millennium and Zion, plus simultaneous output of both video and laser images; switch-able between laser, video or both; direct SVGA output for connection to any in house video system; no health and safety restrictions when using video projector for crowd scanning effects, live editing of graphics and hidden line removal for creating 3D images.(Sarah Rushton-Read)


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