An asynchronous architecture to manage communicationdisplay, and user interaction in distributed virtual environments
From LRDE
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- Authors
- Yoann Fabre, Guillaume Pitel, Laurent Soubrevilla, Emmanuel Marchand, Thierry Géraud, Akim Demaille
- Where
- Virtual Environments 2000, Proceedings of the 6th Eurographics Workshop on Virtual Environments (EGVE)
- Place
- Amsterdam, The Netherlands
- Type
- inproceedings
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag WienNewYork
- Projects
- URBI
- Date
- 2000-06-01
Abstract
In Distributed Virtual Environments, each machine runs the same software, which is in charge of handling the communications over the network, providing the user with a view of the world, and processing his requests. A major issue in the design of such a software is to ensure that network communication does not degrade the interactivity between the machine and the user. In this paper, we present a software designed to achieve this goal, based on tools rarely used in this area.
Bibtex (lrde.bib)
@InProceedings{ fabre.00.egve, author = {Yoann Fabre and Guillaume Pitel and Laurent Soubrevilla and Emmanuel Marchand and Thierry G\'eraud and Akim Demaille}, title = {An asynchronous architecture to manage communication, display, and user interaction in distributed virtual environments}, booktitle = {Virtual Environments 2000, Proceedings of the 6th Eurographics Workshop on Virtual Environments (EGVE)}, year = 2000, address = {Amsterdam, The Netherlands}, month = jun, pages = {105--113}, series = {Computer Science / Eurographics Series}, editor = {J.D. Mulder and R. van Liere}, publisher = {Springer-Verlag WienNewYork}, abstract = {In Distributed Virtual Environments, each machine runs the same software, which is in charge of handling the communications over the network, providing the user with a view of the world, and processing his requests. A major issue in the design of such a software is to ensure that network communication does not degrade the interactivity between the machine and the user. In this paper, we present a software designed to achieve this goal, based on tools rarely used in this area.} }