Think back: you’ve just dumped a bin of LEGO® bricks onto the floor with a satisfying crash, and you have the whole day ahead of you to build whatever you want. There’s something pretty amazing about being able to piece together your ideas with just a collection of colorful bricks.
Google has released an interesting Build with Chrome web application. It allows you to play with LEGO bricks on your web browser. Chrome + LEGO: You can build whatever you like page tells that the idea behind Build with Chrome, a collaboration between Chrome and the LEGO Group that brought these colorful bricks to the web using WebGL, a 3D graphics technology. Is this the ultimate time waster for LEGO lovers?
Chrome + LEGO: You can build whatever you like page has a nice teaser video of the application:
After the video just go to http://www.buildwithchrome.com/ and start building or explore the building different people have made.
Build with Chrome is designed for Chrome web browser in mind, but builder part seems to work OK also on Firefox. It works well and fast on modern desktop PC, but can be a little bit slower on older PCs.
I tried it also on Android smartphone, but failed to get it work, maybe because I have read that on mobile environment it needs quite powerful graphics hardware to work well.
5 Comments
super stal says:
Having read this I thought it was really informative.
I appreciate you spending some time and effort to put this article together.
I once again find myself spending a significant amount of
time both reading and leaving comments. But so
what, it was still worthwhile!
playstation 3 jailbreak says:
Somebody essentially help to make seriously articles I might state.
This is the first time I frequented your website
page and so far? I surprised with the research you made to make this particular post
amazing. Magnificent job!
Tomi Engdahl says:
The Lego Movie: Thinking outside the box
http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/features/the-lego-movie-thinking-outside-the-box-9120175.html
The Lego Movie opened with record box office in the US and, after clever TV advertising, is sure to build a good audience on its UK release this week.
Most recently, the Danish company partnered with Google to create virtual Lego which can be built online.
But perhaps the app, called Build with Chrome, isn’t exactly aimed at the little ones.
Tomi Engdahl says:
Check also LEGO Digital Designer application for Windows and OSX
http://ldd.lego.com/en-us/
Tomi Engdahl says:
Software That Turns Your Lego Masterpiece Into a Digital Building
http://www.wired.com/2015/02/gravity-lego-x/
It’s the frustration of many a designer: You grow up sketching and making with your hands, only to find yourself 20 years later spending the day in front of a glowing screen. The reality is, building in 3-D requires doing a lot of 2-D work first.
But what if you could build your design in real life, then tweak it virtually? That’s the idea behind Lego X, which uses networked plastic bricks to build digital 3-D files.
Lego X comes from the same team of designers behind Gravity Sketch, the bonkers Oculus Rift program that lets you draw in 3-D using augmented reality.
Lego X taps something more basic: Our desire to play with toys.
The underside of each brick (they’re Duplo, not Lego, but Duplo X doesn’t have the same ring) has a sensor and a gyroscope, which allow the toys to communicate wirelessly with each other and the software. As you stack one brick atop another, a rendering appears on your tablet in real time. Once you have your digital file, you can modify it to remove the nubs from the bricks, smooth corners, add windows and make other mods to ensure your design look less like blocks and more like a skyscraper.
You might wonder if it isn’t faster to simply design with software from the start. Yes, in some cases. But the Gravity team believes there’s much to be gained from being able to actually build something.
Gravity is still pondering how to build custom electronic components that can be added to the Lego blocks available in any toy store, but this will require additional time and money.
But Lego X offers compelling glimpse of what’s possible. Just imagine how incredibly cool—and useful—something like Lego’s Architecture Studio will be once your ideas can be manipulated in a computer.
A Lego Set for Budding Architects, With No Instructions
http://www.wired.com/2013/08/a-lego-set-with-no-instructions-for-budding-architects/