Another, called Object Capture, lets you scan real-world objects and turn them into digital ones.
This a device that analyzes a real-world object or environment to collect data on its shape and possibly color.
For example, a simple digital alarm clock is a real-world object that a lay person can use and understand.
Similarly, random fractals have been used to describe/create many highly irregular real-world objects.
But the real-world objects that corresponded to the datastore's concepts were far less precise.
Data components are the basic business data elements that represent real-world objects and concepts.
By some interpretations the real-world object, in this case a cat, must be in two states simultaneously until it is observed.
Most real-world objects are not point-like nor perfectly rigid.
Point clouds are typically generated from 3D laser scanning of real-world objects.
Technology can be used theoretically or practically to render real-world objects invisible: