![]() ![]() In June, 3D4Medical won an Apple Design Award for its app Complete Anatomy, which, since launching late last year, has topped the App Store medical category charts in 82 countries. “Our excellent 3D graphics team are constantly refining the model accuracy and prepping for this hyper-realistic user experience,” said Walsh, adding that the final development of the product will “completely transform” how anatomy is taught. 3D4Medical: New dawn for anatomy teaching Looking at Project Esper, it’s clear just what project they will be working on. The preview of Project Esper comes on the back of a major expansion at 3D4Medical, with 70 jobs announced at the company in January. Over the 18-month recruitment drive, the company will more than triple its headcount, with software developers, 3D graphic artists and medical writers in demand. “We’re at the early stages of development, working on our gestural interface and also on a triage of the functions we’d like to release for our beta product,” she said, with the finished product set to be a ‘living’ mixed-reality model with selectable structures.Īs yet, it is unclear what hardware will be required by users when interacting on Project Esper, with that side of things not as far along line as the software at the moment. The app will not be coming on stream until early 2017, but Walsh noted that “a lot of the donkey work” behind what seems a massive undertaking is already done, given that it is built on the company’s own 3D engine. Technologies like virtual reality, a computer-generated simulation of a 3D image or environment, and augmented reality, superimposing a computer-generated image on a users view of the real world. Gesture-controlled investigations into the human body – revealing the brain and the organs layer by layer, showing how they work or even the composition of various limbs – could make both doctor training and patient interaction something from a sci-fi movie.Īlready armed with popular apps in the industry, 3D4Medical’s Project Esper is the “next logical step” for the company, according to Irene Walsh, head of design. Project Esper is the name of 3D4Medical’s latest attempt to revolutionise medical training and, on first looks, the Blackrock company could be on to something.Īn augmented reality app, Project Esper is still some six months from its beta release but the sneak preview the company has provided shows just how far this technology could take us in the future. ![]() Irish-based 3D4Medical is well on the way to releasing an immersive, augmented reality app that could bring medical training to a level previously thought impossible. ![]()
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