| Home > OpenPHIGS: How an enthusiastic game developer accidentially helped to save LEP data | 
| Talk | |||||||||||||||
| Title | OpenPHIGS: How an enthusiastic game developer accidentially helped to save LEP data | ||||||||||||||
| Video | 
    
    
        
 
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| Author(s) | Schwickerath, Ulrich (speaker) (CERN) | ||||||||||||||
| Corporate author(s) | CERN. Geneva | ||||||||||||||
| Publication | 2025 | ||||||||||||||
| Imprint | 2025-10-23 | ||||||||||||||
| Number of pages | 378 | ||||||||||||||
| Series | (Open Source) (Open Source at CERN in 2025/2026)  | ||||||||||||||
| Lecture note |  on 2025-10-23T16:10:00 | ||||||||||||||
| Subject category | Open Source | ||||||||||||||
| Abstract | Event displays are an excellent tool to visualise HEP events, for physicist but also for outreach. In the old days,these 3d visualisation tools were a challenge, and thus some experiments decided to use a commercial closed source back-end solution. This talk tells the story of how a little open source project of an enthusiastic game developer helped to resurrect these useful tools for two of the LEP experiments. | ||||||||||||||
| Copyright/License | © 2025 CERN | ||||||||||||||
| Submitted by | giacomo.tenaglia@cern.ch | ||||||||||||||