[HN Gopher] Multivox: Volumetric Display
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       Multivox: Volumetric Display
        
       Author : jk_tech
       Score  : 193 points
       Date   : 2025-12-04 16:58 UTC (6 hours ago)
        
 (HTM) web link (github.com)
 (TXT) w3m dump (github.com)
        
       | JKCalhoun wrote:
       | In case you miss it, a video of the thing in operation is linked:
       | https://youtu.be/pcAEqbYwixU
       | 
       | Reminds me that there are limitations to volumetric displays--
       | namely that, since you have no idea where the viewer is located,
       | there is no backface culling you can perform. So it seems to work
       | best for "cutaway" views.
       | 
       | I'd like to see one in person. Might be "magical" -- the video
       | only kind of hints at this.
        
         | lawlessone wrote:
         | I can see it making a great "radar" peripheral for 3d space
         | games, think Elite Dangerous or No Mans Sky that both have one
         | in their cockpits.
        
       | thesz wrote:
       | These displays use rotating mechanisms.
       | 
       | This ones does not: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wrfBjRp61iY
       | 
       | Volumetric display in the video above uses static projector whose
       | pixels light up etchings inside solid glass.
        
         | probablycorey wrote:
         | The same person built both of these.
        
         | ge96 wrote:
         | feel like I saw this in a hackaday, at least remember hearing
         | the podcast about projecting all the rays at all intersections,
         | it was green though maybe I'm thinking of something else
         | 
         | oh wow yeah I've seen a lot of this channel's work before the
         | lego display, the CV fiber optic bundle display
        
         | yboris wrote:
         | Thank you for sharing - it's a brilliant piece of tech. I
         | posted this earlier but it didn't catch on with upvoting
         | 
         | https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46137203
        
       | dllu wrote:
       | I once considered making a spinning persistence of vision similar
       | to this one specifically for visualizing lidar data from a
       | spinning automotive lidar. The lidar has 128 beams and you could
       | make a spinning array of 128 1D LED displays at exactly the same
       | beam angles to recreate the point cloud from the lidar.
       | 
       | Anyway, I was too lazy to make it, but it's super neat to see
       | that someone actually made something similar.
        
       | tra3 wrote:
       | Whoa, the intersection of different skills necessary is
       | incredible.
       | 
       | - software
       | 
       | - math
       | 
       | - 3d printing
       | 
       | - electronics
       | 
       | Very impressive.
        
       | qoez wrote:
       | Never knew this was possible. I hope some huge company with lots
       | of resources jumps on this and drives up the resolution and
       | price.
        
         | Night_Thastus wrote:
         | Why would they?
         | 
         | I mean, I think it's SUPER cool and would not mind one sitting
         | on my desk.
         | 
         | But from a _product_ standpoint...? It doesn 't scale well in
         | size, resolution or refresh rate.
         | 
         | VR is pretty much better if you want a the kind of immersion I
         | think you'd be looking for, and even selling _that_ is hard.
        
         | tclancy wrote:
         | >drives up the resolution and price.
         | 
         | Uh, I get the former but why the latter?
        
         | andblac wrote:
         | Check out Voxon [1]. From the specs and youtube videos it seems
         | like it's working on the same principle (rotating LED screen).
         | Fun fact, it was co-founded by none other than Ken Silverman
         | (the creator of Build engine) [2]. They've been pushing
         | commercialization of this technology for years now.
         | 
         | [1] https://www.voxon.co/ [2]
         | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Silverman
        
       | ge96 wrote:
       | interesting it is different than these kinds
       | 
       | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nM7wsXcYQFM
       | 
       | which I guess is the "volume" part
        
       | iberator wrote:
       | DOES IT RUN DOOM?! seriously
        
         | ZeWaka wrote:
         | yes.
        
         | genpfault wrote:
         | It was right there[1] in the assembly video.
         | 
         | [1]: https://youtu.be/pcAEqbYwixU?t=1038
        
       | bananananna3654 wrote:
       | This one uses a projector on oscillating rubber bands so that you
       | can reach in and touch it:
       | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wwKOXxX9Ck
        
       | limbicsystem wrote:
       | This guy's entire output is incredible (from alien tellitubbies
       | onwards). Go moose! https://mastodon.social/@ancientjames
        
         | ceejayoz wrote:
         | My fav: a two-by-two LEGO block that can run _and show_ Doom.
         | https://www.hackster.io/news/james-brown-s-tiny-lego-brick-c...
        
           | eps wrote:
           | An earlier iteration of the same block is imo more impressive
           | in its creativity -
           | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wBrOV2FJM8&t=720 - such an
           | unexpected and yet completely natural extension of the brick
           | set.
        
       | simultsop wrote:
       | Amazing, finally a refreshing, motivation source!
        
       | msuniverse2026 wrote:
       | I wonder if you could have a vibrating chladni plate with sand on
       | it and you match when the sand should jump with the light that's
       | meant to be at that spot. You get the interruption of light
       | looking like a mid-air pixel and then when it isn't needed it
       | drops back down allowing light to pass through. Kind of like one
       | of those mist-screens except there isn't mist where you don't
       | need it.
        
       | btbuildem wrote:
       | Before I watched the video, my brain ran ahead and I imagined it
       | would be one of those led "fans", except also rotating around
       | it's base. It might be harder to sync the two rotations, but
       | you'd have much less mass in motion that way.
       | 
       | The solid state ones are cool! The real mystery there is how the
       | pixel volume was manufactured -- it doesn't seem like something
       | easily DIY'd
        
         | raphman wrote:
         | There are companies that laser-'etch' 3D images into glass. I
         | guess it's not that hard to find one that accepts a list of xyz
         | coordinates.
        
       | lifty wrote:
       | Would be great having one of these hooked up to an LLM agent so
       | it can be somehow "embodied". Like a Siri + volumetric display +
       | speaker. Waiting for a company to build this.
        
         | kridsdale3 wrote:
         | Like the Morpheus character near the end of Deus Ex.
        
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