Augmented Reality: Enhanced Perception 242
Webratta writes: "Can you imagine wearing glasses or goggles that, when looking at a person, a built-in display would tell you everything you wanted to know about that person? According to an article in Popular Science the day of cyborg-like enhanced perception could be closer than we imagined. Just imagine the privacy concerns stemming from this..."
Privacy issues - not necessarily (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Privacy issues - not necessarily (Score:3, Insightful)
Link it via bluetooth to your PDA and it could remind you of meetings that you're meant to have with the person you've just met face-to-face. You could conveniently re-schedule the meeting to have right now instead. I'd certainly like that, because countless times I've been too submersed in whatever project I'm working on to think about the more real-world things, and I often program things into the organizer on my phone to remind me to go and see someone, etc. This could pop-up a message in front of me saying "Reminder: You are to talk to this person about project xyz at some point today". Thinking of it this way, it could be good for members of the non-geek community who have problems with their memory too.
Re:Privacy issues - not necessarily (Score:1)
okay maybe not the last bit but just because *you* can't think of a use for the infor doesn't mean someone else can't!
Re:Privacy issues - not necessarily (Score:1)
What makes this any different?
There's no "privacy issues" brought in to play by this technology.
Re:Privacy issues - not necessarily (Score:1)
Re:Privacy issues - not necessarily (Score:2)
M@
Re:Privacy issues - not necessarily (Score:2)
If you have already personally collected that much information about the person then you probably know them well enough not to need a face-recognition software to pull that information up.
I think the real value in having a display like this is for Location Based Services. Want to see a movie but don't know where one is? Just overlay all the theatres in a 20 minute walk with what they're playing and next showtime. If you're driving, the HUD can give you advance warning signs that there's unseen traffic ahead. Thinking a bit further into the future, imagine having the outline of the road you're on highlighted -- so dark roads become just as safe as fully illumated ones.
Also imagine being able to stand in the middle of a city, look around you and see the menus of the restaurants you can see. Or real-time table availability. That restaurant has a 40 minute wait? No problem -- the one over there has immediate seating.
The crutch to all of this, of course, is how to pull that type of information. Web Services is a step in the right direction, but now combine it with the power of P2P (see Jini, JXTA, Groove.net or LimeWire) and automatic device and network discovery and you have a real killer app.
Miniaturization would allow all of this data to be fed into contact lenses, so you get a permanent, "augmented" view of the world. What a great thing.
Dating (Score:4, Funny)
Goes both ways (Score:2, Funny)
But she could also find out that you're a geek and run for her life.
Oh, wait. They can spot that easily already now...
Re:Goes both ways (Score:1)
Not all women flee geeks, but yeah, it probably requires no more than "Hello, how are you?" to get all the information she needs to know, and a lot more she doesn't, technology would be superfluous n this realm.
Now, consider this app being used by geek chicks. Uh, huh, better think about hacking the database guys, before they find out how short your sliderule is!
Re:Dating (Score:1)
Imagine a Beowulf Cluster of Bodacious Babes, all laughing at you, as you show up with your 'Specs', Laptop and 802.11 wireless networking stuff.
Re:Dating (Score:2)
The specs seem like they'd be more of a problem. If he doesn't want to focus his attention on ME and what I'm telling him while having a conversation, that isn't much of a conversation, is it? Doesn't make for much of a relationship, does it? Now, I need time to work and play by myself just as much as the next gal/guy (or even more so when I'm carrying a graduate courseload, plus the rest of an undergraduate's, plus research), but mixing it with the glasses is just not a good idea.
Lea
Re:Dating (Score:1)
Yes, but imagine the abuses of this information:
WARNING: Subject currently in menstruation cycle
Hmmm, guess I'll ask her out in another week or so...
Re:Dating (Score:2)
Re:Dating (Score:1)
Re:Dating (Score:2)
Or:
Host has entered runlevel 0.
Re:Dating (Score:1)
Re:Dating (Score:2)
Re:Dating (Score:1)
Finding "The One" was an activity I enjoyed doing offline.
Re:Dating (Score:1)
You could probably have built in web access to these things too and check out her online profile.
And you could use her online profile to find out her IP and hack her bionic goggles to match her idea of a perfect mate, her bionic ears so you sound good and maybe her nose too, if your cleaning habits are questionnable...
Of course, when she removes the goggle, she's in for a shock ;-)
Alex
Re:Dating (Score:2)
Re:Dating (Score:2)
If:
1. She looks away, she's probably not interested.
2. She looks back, smiling slightly, she might be interested.
3. She looks back and glares, she's definitely not interested.
4. She looks back and glares, then whispers something angrily to the 250-lb guy with his arm around her, you better fade into the crowd.
Reality (Score:3, Funny)
You've lost me.. what is this thing? Is it new? </geek>
Nothing new, move along. (Score:1)
Re:Nothing new, move along. (Score:1)
"Just imagine the privacy concerns" (Score:3, Funny)
I pray I don't live to see it.
Re:"Just imagine the privacy concerns" (Score:3, Funny)
Instructions (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Instructions (Score:2)
Can you imagine wearing glasses or goggles that, when looking at a person, a built-in display would tell you everything you wanted to know about that person?
I wonder how long it would take for someone to create a little nice program that can approximate how the person would look without clothes and run it on the goggles ;)
privacy? (Score:2)
Personally I think it would be more of a social intrusion, as in "ugh...it's that white faced geek again". Sorta like when wireless ethernet hit my old college campus (cmu.edu) and people started checking email in the middle of a movie (as in, an annoyingly bright view of someone's window manager).
Nonetheless it has its cool factor, although I would look at some of the more productive applications.
Re:privacy? (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah, real cool, and useful!
Look at those screenshots. The restaurant has a text label superimposed over it, so the wearer can just read the label instead of the sign above the restaurant! No more messy reality for me!
Oh joy. Yet another form of advertising. (Score:4, Interesting)
Or the complete opposite (Score:2, Interesting)
We might get an escalation of the spyware-adblocker war.
Nuts to Augmented Reality! (Score:3, Funny)
Think about it. Why should only those who are willing to suffer the effects of shrooms for days, or LSD for years, be the ones who get to see bleeding walls or leaking phones?! With a helmet around your head that filters your video and audio input (err, vision and hearing), you could have all the trippy hallucinations you wanted, when you wanted! Is that girl really wearing a purple elephant on her necklace, or would she be offended if you tried to feed it a peanut? Are there really bugs crawling into your skin? Better ask the piano!
What a time to be alive!
I wanna be a gargoyle (Score:1)
If everyone is carrying wirless devices, pumping out whatever info they want to passers by... this could remove the need to *talk* to strangers!
It would be pretty cool though - all the advantages of meeting and chatting online, but with the advantage of being in the *real* world.
a deepness in the sky (Score:2, Interesting)
One of the more interesting uses was allowing someone else to temporarily take control of your display - no more damn powerpoint slides at meetings!
And imagine the military uses - targeting computers built into your field of vision, zoom in with enhanced vision, etc.
Re:a deepness in the sky (Score:2)
The website also suggests that once databases are going to be linked, new contact with strangers about your (or their) matters will no longer amount to 'surprise' or offensive. In fact what you see no longer will be believable in the sense that people might have tampered with the metaintel you are seeing. You are also more vulnerable to sneak attacks or surprises. You depend on technology to stay alive. You depend on agencies to protect and double-check and verify your data. I Automatically get the reflex to say that hacking would mean freedom of mind in such a datadriven world.
A better use. (Score:2)
Closer than we imagined? (Score:1)
It's kinda like back in 1990 hearing "the days of high-definition television are closer than you imagined!". In reality, they're working out to be farther than I imagined...
Requirements (Score:1)
Re:Requirements (Score:2)
How to find a date... (Score:2, Insightful)
Thinking about it, this could create something of a Cupid's Arrow Effect. Say you are looking at someone in a room and the lights go out - instantly you end up targetted in their display.
Maybe a more reliable system would be needed, but it sure would be interesting.
otoh, how attractive can a person be wearing goggles?
TJ
Re:How to find a date... (Score:2, Funny)
Well, when I'm wearing my beer goggles, most women are pretty attractive...
New Scientist Article (Score:2, Interesting)
Reminded me of HUD technologies (with AWACS support), where when a plane's radar picks up another plane, the HUD shows its location with a square, and various other information appears, generated from the AWACS feed, or other embedded signals in the radar (for friend/foe recognition etc.)
There's an interesting article in New Scientist about similar technology, used to "supplement" what your eyes can see. A guy from the Fraunhofer Institute for Computer Graphics in Rostock has come up with a "Virtual Showcase" that has the target artefact in, and then with the aid of special goggles the wearer sees a superimposed image, with a likely representation of what the artefact may have looked like originally.
You can find the link here [newscientist.com]i cl e.jsp?id=99991959&sub=Hot%20Stories)
(http://www.newscientist.com/hottopics/tech/art
Re:New Scientist Article (Score:2)
Then see how fast you pretend they're just reading glasses.
Personally, I wanna be that guy in the IBM commercial sitting in the middle of a Venecian square scaring all the pigeons.
Can You Imagine.. (Score:1)
XRay Glasses? Sure, they cost a couple bucks in the back of old comic books
Seriously, I wear beer goggles when I need corrected vision, though after last night, I fear I'll need the beer to quell a broken heart. And by the way, I'm already imagining how this could lead to the great-granddaddy of all time Invasion of Privacy, or just plain old You Sick Pervert tiffs.
Back to the Future 2 (Score:2)
Of course, I'm also still waiting for video phones. The best part of that scene? At the end when the show the AT&T logo and say something like "This call brought to you by AT&T". By 2015, it'll probably be "This call brought to you by AOL Time Warner Sony Viacom Verizon".
Have you heard of Steve Mann? (Score:5, Interesting)
His page is at the University of Toronto [toronto.edu] now, and those glasses he's wearing are exactly the ones that I mentioned - at least, they're the fourth draft of the ones I mentioned.
Yes, I have heard of Steve Mann (Score:1)
http://www.wearcam.org [wearcam.org] is (or at least, was) a good place to start looking for information on his projects. (Look here [wearcam.org] for an interesting screen shot of his view of the world, text interface and all.) There's also http://eyetap.org [eyetap.org]- a site actually described on wearcam as "a more organized and more desktop computer friendly site". Mann's older sites are not very "prettified" with nice tables and formatting; they're a fairly random pile of information, which probably woul;dn't look bad in a text-only browser, like what he'd have been using
Re:Have you heard of Steve Mann? (Score:2)
two years ago he did a talk on his research. it was great. although, he was quite awkward and it appeared as if he had little patience for questions. he might have been having a bad day, but the question period after was very tense.
nevertheless, he adds alot of credibility to my school.
Re:Have you heard of Steve Mann? (Score:2)
Of course, being a geek, there can't be any other reason for him to start sweating, right?
This is old news.. (Score:3, Funny)
Virtual Light (Score:1)
I love when this happens, and it seems to happen more and more often.
I always wanted ... (Score:1)
--trb
Everything you wanted to know? (Score:2, Funny)
What about the stuff you don't want to know? Here are some things I wouldn't like to know about someone I walk by in the local mall:
Bisexual, but won't admit it
Enjoys viewing squirrel porn scenes
Works for Microsoft
Has severe case of explosive diarrhea
Etc...
Somebody read Virtual Light, I'd say (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Somebody read Virtual Light, I'd say (Score:2)
Of course they were rightly considered the biggest nerds around. The analogy was the same as people who had slide-rule belt holsters.
Re:Somebody read Virtual Light, I'd say (Score:2)
We have a ways to go until we catch-up.
Besides, you wouldn't want a pair of those anyway, you'd just have Warbaby and the Russians chasing you around all over.
Popular Science (Score:1, Flamebait)
Popular Science == Popular Hucksterism (Score:2)
I'm sure many of the stories really do represent new applications for halfway-grounded-in-reality technology, but they extend it so far beyond reality. It'd be amusing to take 20 year old popular science cover stories and see what percentage even remotely resemble developed technologies.
Re:Popular Science == Popular Hucksterism (Score:2)
Re:Popular Science == Popular Hucksterism (Score:2)
What is it with the privacy concerns? (Score:2)
Re:What is it with the privacy concerns? (Score:2)
An ambivalent reaction... (Score:1)
Communication ? (Score:2)
The problem, IMHO, is that this may reduce the communication between people.
Also, how exhaustive is the collected info ?
Maybe this could be useful for some guardians willing to authentify incoming visitors but else, well, I don't perceive this invention, however breathtaking, technically speaking, as a step toward the right direction which is making people happy to co-exist.
kind of reminds me of... (Score:2)
How will they make such information compact enough to be useful and not dangerous (I don't want to have 2KB oftext to read while driving) ?
Not totally bad... (Score:1)
More pics, background infos.. (Score:2, Informative)
So check out the
official page [columbia.edu]
Car HUD (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Car HUD (Score:1)
The big problem for enhancing object outside the car is registration. How to make each of the things line up correctly. Gaze tracking and magnetic head tracking have/are being tested, but it's a big problem.
Already in use. (Score:3, Interesting)
All of the various privacy concerns are unfounded at the moment. The large challenge with any AR system is to figure out what you're looking at. For it to work with people you would either need some kind of facial recognition system built-in or the person would have to be willingly broadcasting a location AND identity signal to be used by such a system.
Personally, I think the best Sci Fi example of this stuff is in California Vodoo Game. In this case Niven and Barnes used AR to deal with the fact that the previously expected Star Trek hologram technology hasn't been able to catch up to "reality" yet. The neat thing about that was that you had the combination of AR and MMORPG technology blended together to make LARP'ing really fun. (If you couldn't decipher all of those acronyms than you probably wouldn't be interested anyway.)
Re:Already in use. (Score:2)
That makes a lot of sense though, when you think about it. A short range broadcast would be a great idea. IF, and only IF, it could be turned off. If you are among friends, or in a single's bar, you switch it on, and vilo.. if you are out on the street, you switch it off, and no one is the wiser.
Gaming Interface for Ease of Use (Score:3, Interesting)
I Imagine that the interface would have to be something familiar that most geeks can deal with.
I suggest a gaming interface like Doom [unm.edu]. There was that admin tool for killing off zombie processes. Something similar could be used to symbolically represent the people you meet. Bill Gates As Satan, for Example.
Of course, you would have different patches depending on your tastes and opinions.
Augmented Reality Quake (Score:2)
Cyberpunk (Score:2)
Wow, am I a geek or what...
Other uses... (Score:1)
Seriously though, I do have to wonder how long it would take before someone ends up making an analyzer to do just that considering the porn industry in this country.
(I have also been suspicious about those little mini-cameras. My paranoia says that 25% are probably ending up in places noone would ever want them.)
Re:Other uses... (Score:1)
Yeah, like in the damn popup and popunder adverts!
Maran
Another use for it (Score:2, Interesting)
Cool (Score:1)
I like the diminished reality.... (Score:3, Funny)
Privacy...it's eventually going to go away (Score:1)
Privacy concerns in general, it's a losing battle. Personally I don't really care if you can find out what my preferences are, what I really want though is for the SPAM etc that comes my way be truly worth it. Could you imagine if little stories popped into your display that you actually wanted to read. Who would be annoyed if slashdot-esque information came and found you?
Beer goggles. (Score:1)
They're called " beer goggles [lasalle.edu]"....7 or 8 pints of Hefeweizen and I know all I ever need to know about that woman. All I don't know is "why I never realized she was hot before".
Now, if only they could invent something to avoid the Coyote Ugly Syndrome of the next morning...like some sort of shoe-horn or spatula. I'm sick of having to gnaw my arm off to escape the bear trap.
(Score -5. Chauvanistic Jackcass)
Thoughts... (Score:2, Insightful)
I think a link to a personal datasource is the way to go, with various connections to trusted information providers. If the map company decides to put ads in its building descriptions, disconnect from their service and join with one who doesn't. You should be able to put on your goggles and see NOTHING AT ALL, and add only the stuff you want.
Personal datasources might link to other people's sources, in a kind of collaberative system that allows feedback ("you liked that bar? It SUCKED!") and filtering (browsing the world at +5 to avoid the trolls and goatse.cx).
In order to further clean up the datastream, rocksolid specs for different types of data should be established, probably using XML. No executables either, that way people can't stick Flash animations or viruses in their location descriptions.
I wonder if use of these kind of info-tools will result in weakened memory, sense of direction, etc... not to mention the social awkwardness of people staring off into space while they process the latest blip.
Oh, kinda off-topic: I googled and found what looks to be the full text of Virtual Light [lib.ru] by William Gibson.
What about safety issues? (Score:1)
Think about it: You're walking down the street, too distracted by all the information popping up in your display to pay attention to your immediate surroundings. You accidentally step out into the crosswalk, not noticing the traffic heading towards you at a high rate of speed.....
How about wearing this contraption while driving? Cell phones, passengers, radio controls, etc, are enough distraction for the driver, do we really need another distraction?
What was the SF story about "Norman Lights?" (Score:1)
I don't remember the plot device that explained why people voluntarily wore the things.
Big deal... (Score:1)
possible commercial names for this device.. (Score:1)
searches for something based on that input
displays some results from the search
hmmmmmmm
Googles anyone?
i'll shut up now.
I think the tail is wagging the dog here (Score:2, Insightful)
rant() {
I can't help but imagine somewhere some marketing wank telling the VP of R&D that he can convince people that we can't exist without some high-tech widget that humanity has existed tens of thousands of years without, and having convined us, make bank off it. Never in my life have I heard anyone musing "hmmm I wish I could walk around town with dorky looking goggles that would tell me everything about the people I look at. I already have a pair of glasses that tell me every thing I want to know about the people around me...they're Ray Bans, and they tell me nothing.
It just seems to me that in some cases, the tail is wagging the dog with this gadgetry. And that would be fine if the gadgets weren't forced down the throat of pop-culture to the point that is it impossible or at least extremely inconvenient to avoid participating.
}
Great for the bar scene.... (Score:4, Funny)
Age: 23
Height: 5'9"
Weight: 120lbs
Measurements: 38-24-36
Status: Single - 3 months
Favorite Drink: Anything with kick
Residence: 1 bdr apt - 3 blocks away
Warning : Syphillis!!!
Shoot... well, it was a good daydream while it lasted...
Sensors for non-visible spectrum (Score:3, Interesting)
Crap crap crap (Score:2)
Does anyone really need to read further than that to know that the technology is all pie-in-the-sky bullshit?
Quoting from Popular Science is like quoting from The Enquirer. Shouldn't
Re:Crap crap crap (Score:2)
what, you new here?
hmmm.... (Score:2)
Re:hmmm.... (Score:2)
I doubt it. Remember that a tank can be taken out by a lone infantryman carrying a LAW-80. In Somalia, American troops with state of the art military technology got their asses handed to them on a plate by untrained tribesman carrying WWII vintage weapons. And the Afghans defeated the might of the Soviet Empire, despite the Soviet's incalculable (on paper) superiority (back when they were on our side, of course).
Technology does give you domination in the air, but on the ground, things are a little more subtle, and relying on technology more often than not ends in disaster. Could a single soldier with the best technology currently available take on 100 WWII era soldiers? Not a chance. 1000 spear-carrying Zulus? No way - he would run out of ammo long before he'd killed a small fraction of them.
The US Marines are an effective fighting force because they've never forgotten that you're an infantryman first, and APCs, Apaches and F18s are just the icing on the cake.
Next is Super/Extra/Limited Sensory Perception (Score:2, Interesting)
Jono
Ouch! (Score:2, Funny)
Boeing... (Score:3, Interesting)
From what I understood, the idea was to get the tech to the point where a worker could simply look at the connection points, and the AR system would show what wires went where, via an overlay. I suppose some kind of tracking system would have been needed, to position the overlay properly (and from what I have been following lately, that problem is still unsolved in general AR/VR applications - but getting there rapidly). The whole idea was to eliminate the need for a worker to stop what he is doing, exit the frame, pick up the book of diagrams, leaf through them, and figure out what goes where "abstractly". With such an AR system, production and install times would be lowered - I am sure it could be applied to a number of other areas as well (including repair after the plane is built).
Not sure where they went with it - if it was a limited trial, how well it worked, whether the equipment was up to task (I tend to think it wasn't), how workers liked it, etc. By the lack of talk on it, I tend to think it wasn't too successful - but the idea gives an example of what really can be done with AR.
What is funny about all of this is that the first "real" VR style system (ie, the "Sword of Damaecles" (sp) by Ivan Sutherland in the late 1960's) was an AR system, complete with see-through optics and "wire-frame" virtual objects...
Don't need the vision component part (Score:2)
-- oh and page up & down. Is that too hard ? Can I have it embedded please?
Let me know when its in beta
Winton
Re:Finally... (Score:1)
Only if they don't deploy it first, and better. I can just imagine the first article on slashdot "Converted pr0n Specs With Linux Showing Anime" No wonder we're geeks!