Central Fla. magazine 1 of first to include augmented reality technology

Back to why I started this blog from the Church&State Local Media hackathon: to use augmented reality to make media more engaging and interactive. For the hackathon I actually started with the Layar app also but then switched to wikitude when Layar took forever (couple of days) to send me the api key. The second video also describes some of the vision I had for phillyar to use ar to explore the history and city of philadelphia.

Video 1:  http://www.kaltura.com/index.php/kwidget/wid/1_98tbulj2/uiconf_id/12411312

Central Fla. magazine 1 of first to include augmented reality technology

Readers can use Layar app with this month’s Lake Mary Healthy Living magazine

AKE MARY, Fla. –

Are you a “Harry Potter” fan? Remember the scenes where the newspapers come alive with moving pictures?

That fantastical effect could soon be reality. In fact, experts say we’re on the cusp of a new age — an age of augmented reality, an age when a simple magazine article can lead you down a rabbit hole of information.

Video 2: http://www.kaltura.com/index.php/kwidget/wid/1_98tbulj2/uiconf_id/12411312

Publisher Judith Topper and graphic artist Renee Blair are putting the finishing touches on the latest edition of Lake Mary Healthy Living magazine, and for the first time they’ll be using augmented reality to enhance ads and editorial content.

“I’m talking to ad agencies and they don’t know what it is. I’m having to explain it to them and they love it. They’re blown away by it,” said Topper.

It works like this: Using an app called Layar, simply hold your phone or tablet over the page. Tap the screen and it opens up a world of content taking readers beyond the printed page.

“I think it kind of sparks a little curiosity in the reader, to find out what’s there that I’m not seeing. It’s kind of like treasure hunting,” said Topper.

In the upcoming issue they take readers behind the scenes of a fashion shoot, offer tutorials on how to get fitted for a bike and help readers buy directly from select advertisers.

And that last example is key. Layar wants to reduce the so-called friction between companies and consumers.

“If they want to purchase something, and they are interested in the product they can do it right then and there,” said Topper.

“Augmented reality is really a sexy term for what we call web 3.0 and other people might call the Internet of things,” said Ted Gournelos, professor of communications at Rollins College.

Gournelos said magazines are just the first step in the augmented reality revolution.

“We are moving toward a completely immersed technological world. When you’re driving in a car past a billboard, it might completely reflect who you are as a human being, what you purchased the past two years, your life history,” said Gournelos.

Sound familiar? It was a plot point in the 2002 futuristic movie “Minority Report,” but Gournelos said that’s the direction we’re headed.

“This is the tip of the iceberg,” said Gournelos. “Really, what we’re seeing is a complete transformation in how we interrelate with the world through technology, where we don’t even see the technology. It’s just who we are.”

Augmented reality is also being used in tourism and real estate. It’s also a feature on Google Glass.

Lake Mary Healthy Living magazine is the first local magazine to use this technology. This issue has 11 pages with hidden content. – Click Orlando 

Google Invest $500 Million in AR Company

High quality augmented reality called “cinematic reality” is being developed by a startup named Magic Leap. Apparently Google caught on and is investing heavily: $500 Million.

According to Recode’s sources, Google and a few others, including Marc Andreessen (who also invested in Oculus Rift in the early days), plan to invest $500 million into a start-up called “Magic Leap”, which is working on high-quality augmented reality.

According to Magic Leap, its technology isn’t well-described by the term “augmented reality”, because its technology offers much more realistic images than anything done before in the augmented reality space. This is why the company is calling it “cinematic reality”.

“Those are old terms — virtual reality, augmented reality. They have legacy behind them. They are associated with things that didn’t necessarily deliver on a promise or live up to expectations”, Rony Abovitz, Magic Leap’s CEO, told the South Florida Business Journal earlier this year. “We have the term ‘cinematic reality’ because we are disassociated with those things. … When you see this, you will see that this is computing for the next 30 or 40 years. To go farther and deeper than we’re going, you would be changing what it means to be human.”

The technology is also supposedly better than what Oculus Rift is using in some ways, because unlike the Oculus Rift where your eyes focus on infinity, Magic Leap uses “digital light field” technology (similar to the Lytro camera) to help the eye focus on close objects, too, much more like how the eye normally works. This should eliminate feelings of sickness that you may get using an Oculus Rift.

Head mounted displays (HMDs) using light field technology have had one major issue in the past – they need much higher resolutions to make the image just as clear as when using other technologies. Magic Leap seems to have solved this by projecting the image into your eyes, which is similar to how Avegant’s technology works.

Projecting the image into your eye means the device can show you an image at a much higher pixel density, which, according to Magic Leap, gets close to the resolution in which the human eye sees the world.

Magic Leap’s CEO envisions the technology to be more useful in everyday situations, rather than just for playing games. He seems to believe such technology could even make mobile phones obsolete in the future.

“Playing games is the dessert”, Mr. Abovitz told the NY Times earlier this year. “Our real market is people doing everyday things. Rather than pulling your mobile phone in and out of your pocket, we want to create an all-day flow; whether you’re going to the doctor or a meeting or hanging out, you will all of a sudden be amplified by the collective knowledge that is on the web.”

Google may not have had a huge success with Google Glass, but if the company is investing in Magic Leap’s technology, it hasn’t given up on making eyewear computing a reality. The “cinematic reality” technology from Magic Leap is probably not yet ready for primetime, but the CEO said it can eventually be “downsized into a pair of glasses”, making it ideal for Google’s eyewear project. – Tom’s hardware