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From left] Harlan Cleveland, Paul Ehrlich, and George Mitchell at the Third Woodlands Conference, 1979. Schmandt, v.
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Student Work

Points screenshot

Title

Points

Authors
Mesut Sallah

Course
Virtual Futures

Project Description

In a future where advanced neuroscience and virtual reality converge, our memory aims to restore the lost architecture by translating neural data into virtual point clouds. The memories are distorted, fragmented, and sometimes unreliable, creating a surreal and dreamlike experience within the virtual realm. Users look into the shattered remnants of a collective memory, encountering fragments of buildings, landscapes, and cities that once existed.

In the VR, users explore a virtual museum set in the future, dedicated to lost civilizations and historical wonders that no longer exist. Users witness key events, explore lost cities, and interact with artifacts from civilizations long gone. Users experience a future where technology allows glimpses into the past and holographic echoes.

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