<aside>
⭐ L Wilson-Spiro, TroikaTronix Technical Support Staff and Beta Program Coordinator, has generously offered to provide Chimerik’s Virtual Live Art Database tutorials, resources, and references from their own expansive work and experience with Isadora. We will be adding their contributions over time, so please check back on this page for any updates.
L has shared their work under a Creative Commons Attribute-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. See below for the examples of the offerings L is sharing with us.
We want to acknowledge our deepest gratitude to L, as they have asked us to donate all of their contribution fee to charity. “ One of my partners is serving in the Ukrainian military, so I try to help the cause when I can.” they said.
This is the charity info:
Come Back Alive (https://www.assist-ukraine.org/tactical-survival-equipment/) provides humanitarian aid, medical supplies, and tactical survival equipment (no weapons) to Ukraine.
</aside>
Example Patch Links
<aside>
💻 Here’s a breakdown of L’s knowledge sharing (coming soon):
- Using Isadora and ZoomOSC to build a bi-directional chat bridge to take messages from meeting A and output them into meeting B (and vice versa) which they then used during Zoomtopia
- Making an Isadora and ZoomOSC system that controlled about 30 computers running ZoomOSC for an online event with ~10,000 Zoom participants in simultaneous meetings, keeping track of which participants were supposed to be in which Meeting ID, applying search functions to manage meetings
- Using ZoomOSC and Isadora to cycle participants through breakout rooms at set time intervals (this functionality was a world first)
- A project using ZoomISO to make a custom Zoom gallery (built in Isadora and pumped back into Zoom via a virtual webcam), that is controlled by logic running on a website, communicating with Isadora via the Get/Post URL Text actor
- Development of ZoomOSC trivia games:
- Choose-your-own-adventure type branching storytelling affected by Zoom chat
- Real-time word cloud built out of Zoom Chat
- A simple version of the game Asteroids where Zoom chat could control where the spaceship went by putting commands into chat
- A patch that sent a message to global chat with a numbered list of the performer's virtual background images and changed the performer's virtual background to a matching image if someone put the name or number of that image into chat
- Other smaller projects involving custom integrations of Isadora and ZoomOSC for chat commands, meeting automation and logic, and visualizations of Zoom actions like chat, reactions, automatically spotlighting the active speaker.
</aside>
Return to Home page