Apple's Next Big Thing: Augmented Reality (bloomberg.com) 94
Apple is beefing up its staff with acquisitions and some big hires to help design augmented reality glasses and iPhone features, according to Bloomberg. From a report: Apple is working on "digital spectacles" that could connect to an iPhone and beam content like movies and maps, Bloomberg's Mark Gurman reported on Monday. The Cupertino, Calif.- based company is also working on augmented reality features for the iPhone that are similar to Snapchat, Bloomberg said. To make its augmented reality push, Apple has acquired augmented reality start-ups FlyBy Media and Metaio, and hired major players from Amazon, Facebook's Oculus, Microsoft's HoloLens, and Dolby.
Re:Comey to Congress: TRUMP DID IT! (Score:4, Funny)
Meh (Score:3, Insightful)
hello_reality.m (Score:2)
Actual Actual Reality (Score:2, Informative)
Headphone jack ships via adapter sold with every single iPhone7.
if you don't know that by now... Apple Haters have to be the stupidest and most ignorant people on the planet.
Just how stupid? Apparently this person thinks you need a headphone jack to connect Augmented Reality glasses.
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Seriously dude, Steve is dead. You can stop sucking him off.
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Headphone jack ships via adapter sold with every single iPhone7.
And they make the coolest adapters... [youtube.com]
Re: Actual Actual Reality (Score:2)
How do you plug it into an Aux port and keep it charged at the same time without spending even more money for an easily lost adapter?
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Re: Actual Actual Reality (Score:2)
A dock? Why should I have to buy that or an adapter which is what I was talking about? I'm going to save my money by keeping my 6s for a few years. Maybe Apple will have pulled their heads out of their arses and added the socket back by the time I need to replace it. If not then it's back to Android.
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Re: Actual Actual Reality (Score:2)
What the fuck are you talking about? Of course I don't lose my car. Exactly how big is this unnecessary dock and what advantage would owning it and an iPhone 7 give me over owning a 6s with a headphone jack? You fucking fanbois are insane. If Apple made a phone you had to stick up your arse to use, you'd be first in line for the fucking lube and you'd be all over the internet shitting on people for objecting.
I knew it (Score:3)
Re:I knew it (Score:5, Insightful)
AR was always going to be the "Next Big Thing". VR is a fun, limited-use-case solution looking for a problem. AR keeps the user productive. AR keeps the user engaged in the world around him/her.
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You've obviously never seen a Pokemon GO or Ingress player fumbling through a crowded place eyes glued to their handset.
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You can't fix stupid.
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AR was always going to be the "Next Big Thing". VR is a fun, limited-use-case solution looking for a problem. AR keeps the user productive. AR keeps the user engaged in the world around him/her.
I would think the ultimate trend will be convergence. AR glasses with a wide field of view, that can completely block out the environment if you wish.
Re:I knew it (Score:4, Interesting)
As a VR/AR researcher, I have to disagree. The two are similar technologies, but they have fundamentally different use cases. VR isn't "looking for a problem", the problems are all around. Any area where you want to do fully-immersive experiential training, for example (shock/trauma training on board a Navy vessel / Basic firearms training with any weapon and no risk of injury / cyber visualizations where traditional rules of distance don't always apply). In those cases, VR can often make more sense than AR (where sunlight, clutter, or room geometry may degrade the experience).
Is AR a superset of VR? From a technical standpoint, you could make that claim, but from a design standpoint, that's like saying a heads-up display is a superset of a television. Maybe true, but they're not really used for the same things.
The fact that AR is less likely to make someone motion sick is a great benefit to AR, but it also belies one of the underlying shortcomings as well: AR is not as fully as immersive as VR is right now (The degree of immersion in commodity hardware with a good room configuration is startling). It's unclear if AR ever will be, and if it is, will it just be because it blocks out the real-world?
Consider this:
If you're locally piloting a robot, AR is often more convenient because you can be aware of the robot in the context of your current surroundings. However, when remotely piloting a robot, it's often preferable to get the increased situational awareness from the robot's perspective.
Humans can only pay attention to so many things. Ultimately, it comes down to the design and purpose of communication.
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My Vive doesn't give me motion sickness. My PlayStation VR is puke city in three minutes or less. :(
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Google Glass wasn't a failure dumbshit.
It's literally going into production already.
So did the Samsung Note7 and look how that turned out.. Just because something goes in to production and even enters the market doesn't preclude it from being a failure.
Google Glass was outright HATED by many.. To the point of people wearing them being physically assaulted, yelled out and called Glassholes.
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No dumbass, GG is going into production again.
You're so out of touch. Glassholes was just a smear campaign started by drunk people. Who cares what they think?
Even with the smear GG was a success and is now being produced again.
You seem to lack reading comprehension
"So did the Samsung Note7 and look how that turned out.. Just because something goes in to production and even enters the market doesn't preclude it from being a failure."
Re:I knew it (Score:5, Insightful)
This is Apple investing in Google Glass. Remember that thing that Google did that failed miserably and that they gave up on years ago?
Apple is going to do that now, with the exact same result.
I've heard that one before about MP3 players, mobile phones, and tablets. All great examples of products where Apple was predicted to fail miserably, and failed miserably to fail miserably.
Don't bet against Apple in cases like this. On technical grounds I am not convinced AR can be done well, but if someone can do it, it is Apple.
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But there are plenty of markets where Apple did fail miserably - enterprise/servers, TV, netbook competition (the air), to name a few.
Servers I grant you; that just isn't Apple's strong point. TV was always presented as a hobby, and is not a market where anybody has done remarkably well. I don't see how you can describe the Air as a failure. Just about their entire laptop lineup has some Air DNA nowadays, and they are still doing pretty well in a shrinking market. No, the Air was not a netbook killer, but Apple never pretended it was, and netbooks did not need a killer.
Apple's success rate is well below 50%, so betting against them is actually a pretty good bet, especially in the post Steve era where all innovation has been killed off by Mr Cook.
Measuring success rates is a bit more complicated than just counting t
Wrong again AC (Score:2)
This is Apple investing in Google Glass. Remember that thing that Google did that failed miserably and that they gave up on years ago?
I do. Do you? Apparently not, because Glass was not AR. It was a floating display without relation to the real world, nor any possibility of such because it lacked any kind of sensors to do so. From the article, it is apparent that what Apple is doing is way more Hololens (actual AR) than Glass.
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I've logged hours, in one sitting, on Cardboard-based and Oculus-based VR systems. Cardboard does have a bit of a lag on some phones (performance isn't that great on my Galaxy S4, for example), but on a Pixel it's just fine. And Oculus is pretty smooth as well in both its Samsung phone-based iteration and the stand-alone PC-based hardware. By in large the motion sickness problems have been solved by a combination of high refresh rates, very sensitive positional data, and "blurring on movement".
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VR is troublesome in terms of head motions and screen motions but of course if you take the motion out and just go with a fixed view, is becomes the cheapest way to provide a massive screen in terms of viewer viewpoint. So glasses done properly at an optometrist to minimise size, no adjustable lenses, just user specific fit, it hugely expands the use of smart phones. Augmented reality is a part of that, low process, see through the glasses, high process, cameras mounted on the glasses that present an extern
Define "big thing" (Score:2)
Success is not a flop... (Score:2)
or the flop that is "Apple Watch" big thing?
Apple is second only to Rolex [wornandwound.com] in sales.
So even that is not a "flop".
It's actually a much bigger thing than you are giving it credit for. Yet another person blindsided by Apple's approach to incremental success; in just a year or two even people such as yourself will be unable to ignore the obvious success Apple is having.
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Virtual reality à la Apple way (Score:2)
What will be next, virtual reality without the graphics?
Amazing...
Let me get this right... (Score:3)
Apple's next big thing is basically a white walled garden rehash of Google's old things? (Google Glass/Phone VR)
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Anything Like Alternative Facts? (Score:2)
I've said it once and I'll say it again (Score:2)
The first company to bring anime-style virtual waifus to nerds will dominate the market.
Bonus points if you establish partnerships with companies to license already-existing characters.
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Check out some of the apps for Cardboard. They're coming.
Apple (Score:2)
Wasn't it already here? (Score:2)
With What? (Score:2)
AR with what? Phones? Maybe. Their desktops? Please. The GPUs in their desktops are garbage. Even the ones in the Mac Pros. I was a Mac user for ten years (sold my 2012 Mac Pro last month) and I I have always been disappointed by their choice of graphics chips.
You mean they're becoming news media? (Score:1)
iSpect-hol (Score:1)
No innovation left uncopied.
Surprised they're not already calling it "iGlass" ! may be "iSpectacle"?
better than SCO vs THE WORLD (Score:2)
show me (Score:2, Insightful)
This news would have been really interesting were Jobs at the helm because he'd established a track record for nearly perfect execution and you could bank on that the final product would be polished. Apple has done nothing in the Cook era to suggest that we can rely on that any more. That said it would be nice if Apple put out something novel.
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I'm no apple fan boy. The ipod, the iphone and the ipad were instant market owner products that did nothing that wasn't done before by others. They just executed better. Nobody's perfect but they nailed the 3 most important consumer electronics devices in modern history. If that isn't textbook execution, then the term has no meaning. I've never owned any the above mentioned devices, and I had a cheepo mac book pro that I got refurbished from apple because I figured getting a used machine from them would be
AR: Next term to be misrepresented? (Score:2)
Remember TVs labelled as HD-compatible even though they had displays with native resolutions of 720x600?....or gyroscopically stabilized wheeled boards being misadvertised as "hoverboards" even though they can't actually hover at all?.
Next up will be the abuse of the term "Augmented Reality" to mean the display of anything/everything on a transparent HMD (such as notice of incoming texts etc), even though it has absolutely no relevance to your current physical environment.