Google has unveiled a prototype smartphone (photo) with "customised hardware and software" that enables it to create 3D maps of a user's surroundings. The device's sensors allow it make over a quarter-million 3D measurements every second and update its position in real-time.Rico says ain't technology grand?
Google said potential applications may include indoor mapping, helping the visually-impaired navigate unfamiliar indoor places unassisted, and gaming. It has offered two hundred prototypes to developers keen to make apps for it. Google said its Advanced Technology and Projects (ATAP) unit developed the phone as part of a project called Project Tango with help from researchers at various institutions. "We are physical beings that live in a 3D world. Yet, our mobile devices assume that physical world ends at the boundaries of the screen," the firm said.
Tech savvy blind people have excitedly embraced GPS apps, especially on the iPhone, which has built-in speech screen reading.
Finding your way independently is a highly-prized ability, but GPS only works when you're outside with a clear line of sight to satellites orbiting the earth.
Though GPS is only accurate to within a few meters, and not necessarily powerful enough to help you find the front door of a shop, it can put you in the general vicinity and people are finding it very useful. But, as soon as you walk into a shopping center, a school, or a museum, for instance, you lose your ability to find your way because your satellite connection is cut.
3D sensor navigation could give directions to a checkout, the meat counter, or screen 5 at the local cinema, either by the user dropping markers, or points of interest, or by an establishment providing their own digital indoor maps to aid accessibility.
"The goal of Project Tango is to give mobile devices a human-scale understanding of space and motion. We're ready to put early prototypes into the hands of developers that can imagine the possibilities and help bring those ideas into reality," Google added.
Various firms, including Google, have been looking at developing niche technology.
For its part, Google has already unveiled its Google Glass, intelligent specs due to go on sale later this year. Earlier this year, the firm said it is also working on a "smart contact lens" that can help measure glucose levels in tears.
Also in January of 2014, it bought DeepMind, a UK firm that specializes in artificial intelligence. According to DeepMind's website, it builds "powerful general-purpose learning algorithms".
Analysts say that firms have been looking at ways to help bring the advances made in technology to practical use in every day life in an attempt to attract more customers.
"The focus is not just on the hardware or the device, but on what the gadget can actually do," Bryan Ma, associate vice president at research firm IDC told the BBC. "It is all about taking it to the next level of usage, be it augmented reality, help with basic healthcare, or even just creating better maps." Ma added that, once fully developed, such gadgets could have huge commercial applications as well, which would help drive demand, not only among individual consumers, but also businesses and corporate users. "There could be a lot of opportunity waiting to be exploited in this area," he said.
Last year, Japanese firm Sony filed a patent for a SmartWig, with healthcare cited as one of its potential uses along with the ability to help blind people navigate roads. It said the wig could use a combination of sensors to help collect information such as the temperature, pulse, and blood pressure of the wearer.
21 February 2014
Google unveils smartphone with 3D sensors
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