'Parallel Reality' Display Debuts At CES (fastcompany.com) 37
harrymcc writes: This week at CES, Delta is previewing a display technology called parallel reality. Created by a startup called Misapplied Sciences, it uses pixels that can aim different colors at different physical locations, allowing for signage that shows different information to multiple people at the same time. Delta plans to install it at the Detroit Metropolitan Airport by midyear to allow travelers to see just their own travel info rather than a sea of flights. I talked with the CEOs of Delta and Misapplied Sciences, along with others, for a story on the tech over at Fast Company.
Misapplied Sciences (Score:3)
"Misapplied Sciences"
Well, at least their company's name is honest.
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FINALLY!!! I can hack your eyeballs!!!
To be used for good and Evil (Score:5, Interesting)
Having custom information shown to a person, say guiding them to useful locations, and applying information they need to see without weeding a list of data where people are wading front of a display searching for their information.
However it can be misused just as well, giving people inappropriate, harmful, misleading information without any other witness of this happening.
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Part of being able to adjust the message on the sign for different people is being able to identify them, which is the more terrifying part of the technology.
The delta trial will have customers scan their boarding pass (once past TSA) to trigger the sign to show them their info. So there's nothing fancy at all with identifying people; that's not what this solves.
What's worse, IMO, is that anyone standing behind you will see all of your information. Their samples shows the persons name, flight, gate, departure time, flight status... that's plenty for someone else to use to impersonate you, or at least give them a leg up on it, or use to target people on certain f
Re: To be used for good and Evil (Score:2)
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This or worse. Imagine an American named Mike looking for his plane schedule, standing next to another Mike. Yeah, this is a communication mishap waiting to happen. But then again, I feel like that's the real plan here anyway.
I will take two of these (Score:1)
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It will probably backfire when your boss is standing behind you looking at static code while you are twitching and convulsing violently in your seat.
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Interesting application of this tech (Score:3)
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Seems like a better use for the tech might be traffic lights which show you a different thing depending on what lane you're in. If you're in t
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So presumably, the airport sign will have to know who is looking from what angle. Will it use facial recognition for that (perhaps using a snap of your face taken at check-in)? In any case this gives a whole new dimension to shoulder surfing. Stand behind someone and you'll be able to see who they are and where they are going...
From reading TFA (I know, right) they mention scanning your boarding pass when you are in front of the display and then use cameras to anonymously track you when you move about. Still doesn't fix the shoulder surfing though.
Lenticular lenses (Score:3)
Pretty cool, and lenticular lenses were only invented a couple centuries ago...
2 people? (Score:3)
How about my 2 eyes, giving us 3d without the damn glasses?
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Even if it's the same image to each eye, some cool stuff could be done.
Like a wall display that showed an "outdoor" scene, and as you walked by you'd see a different angle.
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Will it scale? (Score:2)
The TFA shows a large tri-split screen and 3 people standing in front of the display. But when I am at an airport trying to find gate and flight information there can be literally 50 people standing around looking at the same departing flight information. So how does this system scale up to handle that many people simultaneously?
And I'm already carrying around a device with a display that has my ticket information. Why not leverage that and send me the same personally tailored information directly to me
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Yes, it'll scale up to 50 currently, but plans are in the works for larger numbers. My friend works for them up here and the tech really is amazing.
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Yes, it'll scale up to 50 currently, but plans are in the works for larger numbers. My friend works for them up here and the tech really is amazing.
I re-read the TFA and it mentioned up to 100. It also said that it was possible to shoulder surf other peoples details "if you invade their personal space". At every airport I have been to, space has been at a premium and being shoulder to shoulder with someone while looking at the departure board is standard operating procedure. Yet for this system to work securely you need to give everyone around you a wide berth.
Re: Will it scale? (Score:2)
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Its hilarious to see people worrying about the privacy implications of other people shoulder surfing what gate your flight departs from when the whole fucking system relies on massive scale facial recognition.
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My friend works for them and the tech is amazing (Score:2)
My friend works for them and the tech is amazing. Multiple viewers on a single screen see info tailored specifically to them, even as they walk around and move freely.
Eventual home use? (Score:2)
They'll need to get the resolution and color a lot higher, and throw in some of that tech that pinpoints sound to a certain person's ears... but I would throw money at them if they made a TV that would let my wife watch an action movie while on the same screen my eldest kid watched weird anime, middle kid watched whatever cartoons, and littlest kid watched something educational, and I didn't have to see or hear any of it.
Special glasses (Score:1)
The tech works, but you have to wear special glasses to see the effect.
https://i.redd.it/ak5ejwle2li01.jpg [i.redd.it]
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Re: Parallel Reality lulz (Score:2)
Meh (Score:2)
Japan had TVs with similar tech years ago, designed to let the dad watch sports while the moms and kids watched their hentai, or vice versa.
Theoretically (and less creepy) (Score:1)
CES Repeats (Score:2)
I recall about 10 years ago, there were displays at CES that did this - at the time they were aiming at the automotive market so the passenger could watch video on the same screen the driver was using for navigation.
Yeah, but your scientists were so preoccupied with (Score:1)