Login | Register

Next!

December 2009

Cover Story

Related Stories:
  • WELCOME TO THE REPUTATION ECONOMY

    In a world where a tweet or a website posting can torpedo a brand, kibosh a deal or bury a career, the race is on to find a common currency for trust writes Colin Brown

  • NEVER SAY DIE

    It’s the Holy Grail of medicine – but scientists say they’re on the verge of conquering old age

  • GREAT MALL OF CHINA

    China's liveliest and most lucrative marketplace is online. But will it ever welcome foreigners?

  • OPEN GOAL

    In the US, soccer has long been touted as the Next Big Thing. A new breed of investors believe it's finally taking off


Tags:
Cover Story

 

Next!

50 THINGS THAT WILL CHANGE YOUR WORLD IN 2010

By Jo Bowman, Colin Brown, Neil Jaques, Boyd Farrow, Lucy Fitzgeorge-Parker, Richard Lofthouse, Lee Marshall, Chris Owen, Carlton Reid, John Rumsey, Ross Tieman and Brandon Zatt.

01 THE NEXT... MOBILE REVOLUTION
AUGMENTED REALITY


ILLUSTRATION: MAC FUNAMIZU/petitinvention.wordpress.com

IMAGINE HOLDING up your mobile phone to the scene around you and instantly seeing streams of relevant text and visual data superimposed over the picture. You could see which houses are for sale, where the nearest good restaurants might be together with customer feedback and critic reviews, and whether you have anything in common with that fetching individual by the bar before you make your advances.

If this sounds far-fetched, think again. Augmented Reality, or AR as this nascent technology has already been dubbed, is coming to a smart-phone near you very soon. And, at the moment, most of the pioneering work is being done by European software developers.

Some 125,000 people are said to have downloaded Wikitude, a travel-guide application by Austria’s Mobilizy for G1 handsets powered by Google’s Android software. Nearest Tube, another app, takes advantage of the new compass-enabled iPhone 3GS to point you to the nearest London Underground station. Finland’s Nokia is fine-tuning its first tranche of AR apps and Amsterdam-based Layar’s work includes an ING-sponsored app that allows people to find an ATM simply by pointing their phone camera lenses. At their most rudimentary, such overlays match your GPS coordinates with cloud-sourced data that has been geo-tagged with background information. But it is the next generation of AR technology that is bothexciting – and scaring – the mobile phone community. Combine high-definition resolutions and mind-blowing, face-recognition software with real-time information gleaned from micro-blogging databases and social networks and, presto, you have a tool that will tell everything you want to know, and maybe things you didn’t, about people in your vicinity.

Indeed, you could also have an invasion of privacy battle that will make Google’s legal tussles seem like a virtual stroll in the park.


Pages:




Tags:
Cover Story

Comments

  • Someone said: “2010 a year to live”

    2010 seems to be the year when most changes on the world would happen. Too many techie changes, international debates leading to a global union, super-powers changing places. It's definetely a year to live and make history.

    Posted on Mon 07 Dec 2009 13:07:03

You must be a registered user to post comments. Forgot password? | Register




Related Stories:
  1. WELCOME TO THE REPUTATION ECONOMY

    In a world where a tweet or a website posting can torpedo a brand, kibosh a deal or bury a career, the race is on to find a common currency...

    Go to Article »

  2. NEVER SAY DIE

    It’s the Holy Grail of medicine – but scientists say they’re on the verge of conquering old age

    Go to Article »

  3. GREAT MALL OF CHINA

    China's liveliest and most lucrative marketplace is online. But will it ever welcome foreigners?

    Go to Article »

  4. OPEN GOAL

    In the US, soccer has long been touted as the Next Big Thing. A new breed of investors believe it's finally taking off

    Go to Article »




Back to top

    MAGAZINE

  1. Advertise
  2. Contacts
  3. Media Kit
  4. Feedback and Suggestions

    INTERACTIVE

  1. Register
  2. Emagazine
  3. Advertisers Index

    ARCHIVES

  1. Issues
  2. Enterprises
  3. Innovation
  4. Investment