Images: Visiting the 'Scalable City'
Software looks at ways video games and urban planning can take advantage of computational power.
1 of 3 Bill Detwiler/ZDNET
"Scalable City"
Sheldon Brown's "Scalable City" software aims to show how fields like video games and urban planning can take advantage of computational power, and in the process automate work that previously might have required dozens or hundreds of animators and artists.
2 of 3 Bill Detwiler/ZDNET
Cityscapes
Brown's algorithms automatically create cityscapes that urban planners might love for their aerial aesthetic value, but that create fundamental problems of scale.
3 of 3 Bill Detwiler/ZDNET
Road in Scalable City
Based on so-called "L-curves," which Brown said are similar to fractals, the Scalable City multimedia system can rapidly terraform barren landscapes, filling them in with gracefully curved roads and neighborhoods full of new houses.
Related Galleries
Holiday wallpaper for your phone: Christmas, Hanukkah, New Year's, and winter scenes
Related Galleries
Holiday wallpaper for your phone: Christmas, Hanukkah, New Year's, and winter scenes
21 Photos
Winter backgrounds for your next virtual meeting
Related Galleries
Winter backgrounds for your next virtual meeting
21 Photos
Holiday backgrounds for Zoom: Christmas cheer, New Year's Eve, Hanukkah and winter scenes
Related Galleries
Holiday backgrounds for Zoom: Christmas cheer, New Year's Eve, Hanukkah and winter scenes
21 Photos
Hyundai Ioniq 5 and Kia EV6: Electric vehicle extravaganza
Related Galleries
Hyundai Ioniq 5 and Kia EV6: Electric vehicle extravaganza
26 Photos
A weekend with Google's Chrome OS Flex
Related Galleries
A weekend with Google's Chrome OS Flex
22 Photos
Cybersecurity flaws, customer experiences, smartphone losses, and more: ZDNet's research roundup
Related Galleries
Cybersecurity flaws, customer experiences, smartphone losses, and more: ZDNet's research roundup
8 Photos
Inside a fake $20 '16TB external M.2 SSD'