Tag: augmentedreality

6th Sense

Students at the MIT Media Lab have developed a wearable computing system that turns any surface into an interactive display screen. The wearer can summon virtual gadgets and internet data at will, then dispel them like smoke when they’re done.

We don’t have sense organs for data. Thanks to efforts such as Tim Berner-Lee’s all of this knowledge has become available online. Could we evolve a 6th sense that would give us access to meta-information that may help us make the right decisions? When you go to supermarket and you look at all the different kinds of toilet papers, you don’t pull out your cell phone to look for which brand is the most eco-friendly. Pattie is wearing web-camera, a battery-powered projection system with mirror. It lets you walk up to any surface (including your hand) and interact with the projected interface. It responds to his gestures. If you hold your hands like you are taking a photo, the camera takes a photo, and then when you go back to the office, you can project all your photos and sort through them using natural gestures. She showed a projection of a phone keypad on her palm and dialed a number to make a call. She shows a video of a guy looking at products in a supermarket. It projects a green, yellow, or red dot on a product, telling you whether or not it’s eco-friendly (or whatever criteria you set up). If you look at a book, it’ll project the Amazon rating on the book.

i ignored this when i read about the 6th sense bla bla, but it is genuinely interesting. could we overlay our perception of the world with a sense for data?

Bike Lanes


Augmented reality again. Similar to that projected pedestrian crossing. The system projects a virtual bike lane (using lasers!) on the ground around the cyclists, providing drivers with a recognizable boundary they can easily avoid.
2013-05-11: this is the kind of stuff needing to be shoved down the throats of the many NIMBY assholes around town.

NYC DOT found that protected bikeways had a significant positive impact on local business strength. After the construction of a protected bicycle lane on 9th Avenue, local businesses saw a 49% increase in retail sales.

2016-09-21: I approve

shadowy activists, who seem to have a warehouse of orange cones, have been erecting protected lanes around San Francisco that last for brief periods before they (or someone else) remove them. The group joins others nationwide to push for safe roads with guerrilla actions, including organizations in New York, Boston, and Portland.

2023-03-11: NYPD right of way regulations

  1. Marked NYPD vehicles
  2. Unmarked NYPD vehicles
  3. Vehicles with a Thin Blue Line flag bumper sticker
  4. A dumpster with the Punisher logo on it
  5. Film crews for Blue Bloods
  6. Vehicles whose owner’s cousin used to work for the city (any city is fine)
  7. Amazon delivery trucks
  8. Pedestrians walking against traffic
  9. Any double-parked motorized vehicle
  10. Regular film crews

50. Cyclists

Enkin

“Enkin” introduces a new handheld navigation concept. It displays location-based content in a unique way that bridges the gap between reality and classic map-like representations. It combines GPS, orientation sensors, 3D graphics, live video, several web services and a novel user interface into an intuitive and light navigation system for mobile devices.

wow. headmap, here we come

Pico-projectors

The first commercial pico-projectors will probably appear in 2009-10, initially as stand-alone devices, and perhaps as plug-in accessories for mobile phones (rather like the plug-in cameras that predated full camera-phones). If they prove popular, projectors could then be incorporated into all kinds of devices. Will they be powered by DLP, single mirrors or holographic diffraction? Consumers will not be bothered by such details—they will be looking at the bigger picture.

for use in phones, etc