07.30
Just saw this video by the Augmented Environment Lab at Georgia Tech. Cool stuff.
Augmented + Reality = Augmentality
Just saw this video by the Augmented Environment Lab at Georgia Tech. Cool stuff.
This was ablaze on twitter today so I thought I might pass it to the rest of you. Yes, augmented reality capabilities will be introduced to the iPhone crowds in September when Apple releases its OS update 3.1.
via Gizmodo
I just ran across this cool video about a company that is embedding facial recognition into a augmented reality browser. Check it out for yourself, good show!

Registration Error Checking
Augmented Reality is far from perfect. Although the Doritos concert-in-a-bag gimmick running rampant on Twitter the last few days is cool, many people do not understand that augmented reality has a major hinderence. This hinderence is known as a registration error.
According to the University of North Carolina’s augmented reality lab a registration error comes about when “the real and virtual objects [are not] properly aligned with respect to each other, or the illusion that the two coexist [is] compromised.”
Institutions from around the world are currently tackling this problem. I recently ran across one such project at Georgia Tech’s Augmented Environment Laboratory called Adaptive Intent-Based Augmentation System (AIBAS).
“The goal of AIBAS (a Adaptive Intent-Based Augmentation System) is to understand how knowledge of the communicative intent of an augmentation can be leveraged to simplify the creation of AR applications that work well in real-world situations with “good enough” tracking and registration. In this project, we hope to demonstrate how such knowledge can be used to reduce the impact of registration errors by supporting the programmer in creating augmentations that contain sufficient visual context for a user to understand the intent of the augmentation.”
In time registration errors will be a thing of the past; however, todays developers are still struggling with this aspect of the technology. Now, go tell your friends what you learned!