Augmented Reality: A Practical Guide

Tags: , , , ,
Categories: Offline Products, architecture, electronic culture
Hits for this post:444
Tiny URL: http://r-echos.net/lk/11975
Tuesday, February 5th, 2008 at 7:36 pm
Bookmark on del.icio.us | Twitter This Stumble This

Augmented Reality: A Practical Guide: ”

By Tim O’Reilly

cover of Augmented Reality book
I’m jealous. The Prags have just published a book I wish I’d thought of first: Augmented Reality: A Practical Guide.

I’ve been talking quite a bit about augmented reality lately, especially when people ask me about what I think might represent a discontinuity significant enough to represent a paradigm shift of the scale of the PC revolution or Web 2.0. Sensors instrumenting the world and driving collective intelligence applications that provide new information layers in our everyday experience is one big element of this next revolution.

The topic also comes up whenever people ask me about Second Life, because I’m much more fascinated by the possibility of SL to create additional information layers on top of this world than I am about the idea of it as a complete alternate reality. I usually point to an SAP project I learned of last year, in which SAP is working with a Swiss property management firm to build instrumented models of their buildings in Second Life. That is, you open a door in the building, a door opens in the SL model. The building catches fire, so does the SL model. And of course, that’s why I was so excited about Google’s acquisition of Sketchup. It seems to me to be a really important long-term play in the mapping space. After all, so much of the built world we interact with isn’t represented at all on the maps we use. An address on the 37th floor of a building looks just the same to our mapping system as one on the first floor. But does it need to be that way? Not in a future where we’ve populated our maps (at first perhaps Google Earth, but eventually web-based maps as well) with additional layers representing the human-built world.

Augmented reality is also coming at us in the news, especially forward looking news outlets (hint: ‘News for nerds. Stuff that matters.’) Take a look at these recent Slashdot headlines and think about them as all part of an emerging augmented reality trend: Smart ‘Lego’ Set Conjures Up Virtual 3D Twin, Cellphone App Developed that Could Allow For ‘Pocket Supercomputers’, Stanford’s New Website Converts Your Photos to 3D, and The Coming Wave of Gadgets That Listen and Obey. Add in the recent Radar posts The Future of Cell Phone Headsets and More on the Virtual Reality Audio Headset. Season with a dash of Nintendo Wii and innovative cell phone games like Mobzombies (Radar post.)

We’re clearly careening towards a world in which virtual worlds are overlaid on the real world, bits interpenetrated with atoms.

I should be clear that this broad-strokes definition of augmented reality isn’t what’s covered in the Prags’ new book. They are focused on a more traditional definition: ‘to create the sensation that virtual objects are present in the real world.’ They provide some first tools for developers to explore interfaces and techniques for doing so, with an emphasis on overlaying rendered objects onto real time digital video. This is a subset of the big picture I’m drawing in this post, but an important one. And perhaps even more to the point, this book will help to socialize the idea and to get people started building the new skills that will be required as augmented reality interfaces go mainstream.”

(Via O’Reilly Radar.)

Related Posts




Leave a Reply

R-Echos

Subscribe in a reader




R-Echos context

Collections

* at the occasion of R-Echos issue 1 we organised some pages into topic oriented piles:

  • Displaying
  • un-Realisation
  • Physical Interface
  • Augmented Reality
  • Publishing
  • Geometry
  • Visualisation
  • Open Source Mobile Phone
  • Fab


  • Since 2004, R-Echos is an experimental online magazine dedicated to republication; topics vary from biology to graphic design, from ecology to business. It agglomerates anything which is about art, computing, science. His form is made out of collages of texts, links, images, references, videos and sounds - choosen with care to take part to this very personnal publication.



  • About
  • Articles
  • Beta version
  • Categories
  • Defragmentation
  • Directory
  • Fab
  • Index
  • Links
  • Monthly Archives
  • Open Source Mobile Phone
  • R-Echos issue 1
  • Somewhere else
  • Tags
  • Visual Index
  • Visualisation


  • Search R-Echos



    * curation / edition / selection is made by Electronest

    On Purpose: Design Concepts

    On Purpose: Design Concepts

    On Purpose: Design Concepts looks at conceptual design practices, the emergence of ‘meta design’, and the question of who or what can define something as design…
    With Åbäke, Droog Design, Daniel Eatock, Electronest, Ann-Sofie Back, Will Holder, Peter Jensen, Onkar Kular & Noam Toran, Metahaven, Alex Rich, Savage, Yuri Suzuki
    September 13 - [...]

    websites and White Cubes

    websites and White Cubes

    Dumb sign, originally uploaded by blackbeltjones.
    Been asked to work on the nominations for designs of the year again at the Design Museum, which is very nice.But it leads me back to this hoary old question – how should interactive work best be shown in a museum or gallery context? Should it be [...]

    R-Echos issue 1 - AMP001

    R-Echos issue 1

    An experiment in the economics of production: how can we shift focus from consumption of a finished product to investment in the processes of design, print & production?

    This is a poster and a text: an analog R-Echos
    Would you be interested in investing in the tangible production of this work?
    1. You can download the digital archive
    and [...]

    What if, VACANT LOT, Hoxton, London

    What if, VACANT LOT, Hoxton, London

    Related PostsBuilding and designing Digitalism’s IdealisticPaper Circuitssub-studio design blog: Herzog and de Meuron Parisian PyramidThe best CNC project machines - Hack a Daygreenpix zero-energy massive LED displayDIY Blubber BotBotanicalls Twitter DIYBuild Your Own War Bot - Wired How-To WikiHOW TO - Embroider digital imagesThe Shipyard ReturnsBottoms Up DoorbellThey [...]

    magazines as objects exhibition

    Colophon events this week

    Colophon events this week

    There are a couple of Colophon-related events in Europe this week. First up, Andrew Losowsky – that’s him above next to a copy of IsNotMagazine – has curated an exhibition of magazines as objects in Milan. CR Blog has an in-depth report with details – it sounds great, lots of magazine-y-ness. Andrew’s [...]



    R-Echos has its own tiny url system:

    * tiny url are url you can copy/paste into email without the risk of having a long line that surely will get broken and a link unusable.

    To get updates via email:

    mailinglist delivered via FeedBurner



    free advertising network