Guide for the IEEE World Haptics Conference 2021 Student Innovation Challenge: videos
https://2021.worldhaptics.org/sic/
Your contributions are welcome, here are your options to help us improve this guide:
- review and open issues
- create pull requests
- contact WHC 2021 SIC chairs at sic@2021.worldhaptics.org
Generated with npm run toc
, see INSTALL.md.
Once this guide becomes very comprehensive, the main file can be split in multiple files and reference these files.
Teams will submit by 11:59 p.m. PST on June 25 18 a twothree-minute video with captions and voice over. The video should briefly explain the problem being solved and show the application in action.
Please follow the video guidelines from WHC 2021.
The duration for SIC videos should be around 2 3 minutes.
The WHC 2021 video guidelines recommends these settings:
- Resolution: 1280 x 720
- Format: 720p (HD)
We advise you also render a second version of your video with the maximum Resolution and Format that your video editing tool and computer both support, for archival purposes.
From the WHC 2021 video guidelines:
Because of the virtual platform used, captions must be directly “burned” into the video. In other words, they are not “closed captions” included as a text file, but rather, subtitles in the video itself (this is called “open captioning” because the captions are always visible). Our virtual platform does not support closed captioning formats, so all videos must have open captions.
We advise you to export a separate closed captions file, for future uploads of your video to different platforms, and for your future presentations.
You will be notified by email on how to access virtual platforms for WHC 2021.
Please follow the Instructions for Uploading Your Presentation Materials from WHC 2021.
SIC chairs would like to thank Evan Pezent, Zane A. Zook and Marcia O'Malley from MAHI Lab at Rice University for having distributed to them 2 Syntacts kits for the IROS 2020 Intro to Haptics for XR Tutorial. SIC co-chair Christian Frisson would like to thank Edu Meneses and Johnty Wang from IDMIL at McGill University for their recommendations on Raspberry Pi hats for audio and sensors.
This documentation is released under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 International license (see LICENSE.txt).