Brett Nortje
10-02-2017, 07:57 AM
That was fun, making hover boards, but it was many moons ago. today i want to make holograms, like you see in star wars a lot? these would be where you see a picture with sound - let's work on the pictures first? - then we can work on sound, which would be easier, of course. i see this being very popular if kept cheap, yes?
So, where on earth do we find technology to make pictures in the air? this would be possible with lasers, of course, where they would shine around the base of the hologram, like in star wars. this would require them changing frequency half way through, though, so, how so we get them to change like that, what i call density, as black is dark white, and purple is dark yellow, into this diagram in the air?
This could be done by charge, of course. the more charged the laser it, it will automatically get lighter the further it goes, as it loses charge, yes? this would mean that we would need to make it gain and lose charge, through circuitry, by 'making the lasers affect each other.' this could be where they will carry a combined charge, where they will simply lose charge as others take control of the picture and control the charge through their greater density.
I suspect it could take about a eighty lasers to do this properly, with binary configurations dominating the current scene. this would be where the lights would be charged by others, taking over the picture from other lasers as they are programmed to stop charging, or use up their whole charge on the picture, of course.
So, where on earth do we find technology to make pictures in the air? this would be possible with lasers, of course, where they would shine around the base of the hologram, like in star wars. this would require them changing frequency half way through, though, so, how so we get them to change like that, what i call density, as black is dark white, and purple is dark yellow, into this diagram in the air?
This could be done by charge, of course. the more charged the laser it, it will automatically get lighter the further it goes, as it loses charge, yes? this would mean that we would need to make it gain and lose charge, through circuitry, by 'making the lasers affect each other.' this could be where they will carry a combined charge, where they will simply lose charge as others take control of the picture and control the charge through their greater density.
I suspect it could take about a eighty lasers to do this properly, with binary configurations dominating the current scene. this would be where the lights would be charged by others, taking over the picture from other lasers as they are programmed to stop charging, or use up their whole charge on the picture, of course.