Tag Archive for iPhone

Augmented Reality it’s not just for news

Over the past few months I’ve been working on the Nesta & Nominet Trust funded project HypARlocal (we really should get around to changing the name, suggestions?), where we are focussing on taking geolocated news content from hyperlocal blogs and publishing it for smart devices to find based on their location.

I’ve been quite wrapped up in the geolocation of content and pushing it out to Layar & Wikitude that I had stopped looking at what other AR things were out there.

I’ve been revisiting the app store and playing about with some of the new and some of the old apps to see whats new or how they have changed.

String, install the app print off some targets, point your phone at them and watch what they do. Along the same lines as Blippar & Aurasma where image recognition is used to trigger actions.

Aurasma, we have played with this quite a bit recently and have come up with some interesting public service uses for Aurasma and other image recognition apps. I’ll be writing a bit more on that soon but if you were at the Nesta event a few weeks ago you will have seen Will and I demonstrating one of our ideas.

One of my favourite apps that sort of falls in to the Augmented Reality group is Star Chart for the iPhone, for £1.99 I think it is worth the money. Fire it up point it at the sky roughly where you are looking and the stars and planets are shown relative to your location so you can work out what you are looking at.

screen capture of the star chart app showing the Lion

because it doesn’t use the camera it just uses your location and the direction the phone is pointing, it also works during the day.

If you often lie on your back in a park watching planes fly over head and wonder where they are going then the Plane Finder app is the one for you. Again it is a paid for app but based on your location it finds planes and then overlays them on to the camera view of the sky. There is a free (ad supported) version and a paid for version.

I’ve nicked a screen shot from the app page here because it is raining in Stoke and there are actually no planes around to see.

I’m sure you have all seen the ads on TV for the Halifax home finder app? An obvious and interesting use of geolocation and AR, worth a look even if you aren’t looking for a new house.

And finally if you want to see Zombies climbing out of your tiled floor then Zombie Hunt is the app for you.

 

What are your favourite Augmented Reality apps? Share them in the comments below.

iPhone 5 and augmented reality – a potential game changer?

It’s most unlike me to contribute to the rumour frenzy around an Apple launch, but i wanted to put a marker down about Augmented Reality. At Talk About Local we have been doing a lot of work with phone based AR in the field, mainly using iOS devices.

It’s clear that AR apps stress the phone more than almost anything else – the GPS, camera, 3G and CPU all hammering away. My iPhone4 gets hot when using Layar or Aurasma for a time and iPhone3s really struggle.  iPads though, work great – much more grunt.  If you really want to stretch the hardware and show what a phone can do that your competitors can’t then AR is a prime battleground. Indeed, Nokia’s new Lumia 920 phone majors on AR (although it isn’t clear yet where the content will come from).  I’m also struck that Blackberry (remember them) use Wikitude AR to advertise their new handsets.

Apple filed a patent on AR earlier in the year.  And if you have been to an Apple store in a quiet moment recently the sales staff are keen to show you the Apple Store app that reads barcodes very snappily, even if the back end sometimes goes wrong.

But, and it’s a big but, the content for AR at present is fairly weak – mainly bits of often well crafted but ultimately empty marketing stuff.   Talk About Local has been exploring new ways for local bloggers to get their content into AR environment via a simple RSS feed, we’ve even demonstrated it on BBC TV.

But Apple have the new Apple Maps service up their sleeve.  One of the strengths of geo-triggered AR is it’s marvelous ability to show you things around you that aren’t necessarily in your immediate field of vision.  It can help you break out of your tunnel to your destination and explore more serendipitous things, in a flaneur walk sort of way.  Satnav, by eschewing the trad map display for a simple ’3D view’ is part way down this track, but focuses on the tunnel.

So Apple Maps teamed up with the processing power of a new iPhone with baked-in AR could see a fascinating leap forward for AR in general.

Of course Apple could differentiate itself from Google by embracing third party geo-tagged content and rescuing us all from the dreaded Starbucks Street of closed AR mobile search environments culled from tired corporate listings.  Or even try some sort of ‘apple map store’, where you could buy in map layers – but again they would have to be good third party content.  If Apple Maps essentially just gives us a fancy satnav then it might be a missed opportunity.  If it gives us AR native to the handset, baked into the OS then it could be a game changer.

Anyway, we’ll know in a couple of weeks and you can tell me if this post is fluffy iphone link bait of the sort that i should be ashamed of or a cogent contribution to the debate on the new wonder product (ducks for cover).

Locist

I came across this iPhone app over the weekend, Locist (app store link), I have only just started to play around with it today.

According to the description on the app store Locist is a real-time, location-based messaging platform that lets you pin content to specific locations and hold spontaneous and open conversations about it with anyone nearby. Read more

  • Newsletter sign up

  • New posts sign up