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Google Kills Measure, its AR-based Measurement-Taking App (androidpolice.com) 27

The latest thing to be shuttered by Google is an app. AndroidPolice blog writes: Google's AR plans have changed over the years, from the standalone Project Tango to modern web-based efforts. But it's the AR-based Measure app that's the subject of today's eulogy. The app leveraged your camera on ARCore-supported devices to (as the name suggests) measure the dimensions of stuff, and now it's being retired. Google has suspended both support and updates for Measure.
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Google Kills Measure, its AR-based Measurement-Taking App

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  • As google kills almost all of its projects fast. They are well known for that.

    • Android store should already have plenty of competition.

    • by Krishnoid ( 984597 ) on Thursday June 10, 2021 @06:55PM (#61475062) Journal
      In all fairness, they were probably getting pressure from big, uh, laser rangefinder and big tape measure. You don't want to mess with those guys.
      • Seems like an odd one to kill though. iOS has a similar app with an equally bland name that I can't remember (it might even be called Measure as well), and I've found it invaluable. While it is very accurate, I likely wouldn't use it for fine measurements, but I was able to use it a few months back to measure out a flower bed's dimensions in a few seconds so I could get a decent estimate for how much fill we needed.

        Of course, as we stood in the store with a cart nearly full after just 25 bags of fill materi

        • it is called measure on iOS. my experiences with it have been less than stellar. maybe it works better on the newer iphones with 283468156 cameras on the back.

    • And this is why Google can't startup anything anymore. Unless it's wildly successful, Google immediatly kills it and everybody knows it's what they do.

      This is the #1 reason why Stadia is dead. No game developer or hardware manufacturer is going to waste time on a platform Google is going to kill off in less than three years, and no consumer is going to pay $100 for a controller that will be a brick once Google kills it off in less than three years. Everybody saw what Google did with the Daydream platform an

      • by leptons ( 891340 )
        I had no idea (as likely most people didn't) that this "measure" app even existed. I would have been using it constantly if I knew about it. Google has a problem of killing off cool things that no one uses, because nobody knows about them.
  • Seems like we should have a template for this that would go something like:

    Google kills $x, $desc

  • by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Thursday June 10, 2021 @07:10PM (#61475086) Journal

    Apple still has this capability with a "Measure" app they include as part of iOS. So seems odd to me that Google would drop it, just telling people to go with third party alternatives.

  • by Randseed ( 132501 ) on Thursday June 10, 2021 @07:25PM (#61475130)
    Most likely Google was using it to spy on people and their employees got sick of people measuring their dicks.
  • Largely their income comes from data collection and ads.
    They don't charge 30% for being on their store, they allow side loading and other stores.

    I didn't even know they had their own AR measure app.
    I use another that I am satisfied with.
    I don't think this a big deal as there are options.
    Losing Google groups was much bigger.

    • They don't charge 30% for being on their store,

      Really? They charge me 30% of sales through their store. (Well, okay, now less because they just dropped their percentage, but the point holds even if the percentage is different.)

  • Google: the poster child for ADHD.
  • Another one to add to their massive collection of killed projects. https://killedbygoogle.com/ [killedbygoogle.com]
  • In what reality did they think it might succeed? I suppose if the projectile made a sound whose frequency provided the speed, and also made a very distinctive sound on impact, a smartphone could listen and provide an estimate. I'd think the object being measured would suffer impact damage, though. The whole concept comes across like a lawsuit waiting to happen, so attorneys might sponsor it.
  • you can't get reliable and precise measurements out of shit-tier hardware with an aberrant plastic lens that calls itself "ARCore"-compatible. google probably got tired of trying to correct for quirks and support it across hundreds of poorly-documented variant models.

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