Friday, June 22, 2012

Handheld Augmented Reality



Even in an increasingly virtual environments, physical space matters. The rise of accessible augmented reality technologies makes physical location matter more. Place-based social media like Foursquare have done tremendously well in attracting both users and attention. Who, or what, will be the Foursquare of Augmented Visualization and Interaction? Companies like Layar are taking an active stab at it. But Apple's IOS and appstore ecosystem — as well as Android's and Microsoft/Nokia's new innovation efforts — now makes it far easier to link visual overlays, "enotations" and virtual Post-It notes to geo-spatial coordinates. In other words, don't just read the Foursquare comments but "see" graffiti, sketches, maps and comments simply by peering through your tablet or mobile phone. Instead of "taking" pictures and images, it lets you "see" them as a function of the "augmented reality" layer of data and information stored in the digisphere.
A store like Macy's or Home Depot could use augmented reality layers to let people see underlying details of clothes or tools that a simple tag or QR code might not. Indeed, expect a tussle between retailers and product suppliers over whose "augmented reality" deserves in-store primacy. We may see "augmented reality" fees replace stocking fees as part of physical retailing business models. But that's a battle for beyond 2012. What's next is the first wave of mobile devices becoming augmented reality viewers for their users. Expect to see QR code/augmented reality mashups as a 2012 investment to facilitate the virtual transition.

Source - http://blogs.hbr.org/schrage/2011/12/six-innovative-ideas-to-watch.html

No comments:

Post a Comment