Archive for December 29th, 2008

Virtually Travel To Ancient China

You now can virtually travel around the world without leaving your home. There are several sites offering web surfers the opportunity to become a virtual tourist. The latest one offers a tour of Beijing’s 178-acre Forbidden City, the exclusive home of China’s emperors for centuries. You can also watch the emperor feast at the dinner table, practice archery with the help of a courtesan, play a board game called Weiqi, train fighting crickets, and feed them mosquitoes. Maybe the last one is a little too real. Virtual tours can also be narrowed down by topic, including: symbolic animals, Imperial Garden, and dragons.

When a virtual tourist enters the Forbidden City, they are offered a choice of their own avatar character with 9 historical costumes for a sense of history and decorum. Running (and flying) isn’t allowed but you can interact with other virtual visitors.

The website development was created by IBM and is based on 3-D immersive gaming software. The project took 3 years and at a cost of $3 million. To fully view the journey, a user would require a 204MB download for Windows owners and Linux/Mac users are offered their own versions.

IBM offers additional “cultural heritage projects” such as the Vatican Library, Eternal Egypt, the Hermitage Museum, and the Pieta.