GPS

Pokemon Go Augmented Reality
Seven Things You Didn’t Know About Augmented Reality

Augmented reality, while often bandied about in the same sentence as virtual reality, is a different (but related) technology. While VR creates an entire virtual world, AR augments what we can already see. AR adds digital information to our existing environment. You have likely experienced AR in your daily life without realizing it. Here are a few already common uses for AR technology and some surprising history and statistics.

AR Technology was Developed in 1968

Ivan Sutherland, “father of computer graphics,” created an AR head-mounted display system at Harvard in 1968. Early AR systems based on this first one were used to project geological information onto terrain for aviation, military and industrial use. The first advertising campaign to use AR came about in 2008 for the BMW Mini. (Harvard Business Review, 2016)

Football and Augmented Reality

On September 27, 1998, television football fans everywhere saw what seemed like magic: a yellow line. It appeared across the field at the first down marker, not covering the players but as if it were painted on the field itself. Only it moved, seamlessly, as the first down line did. A company called Sportsvision developed this augmented reality tech that debuted during a Ravens/Bengals game. At the time, it took six people in a 48-foot semi-truck parked outside the stadium to keep the yellow line up and running. (Vox, 2019)

Disney Has Embraced AR.

In 2001, Disney used augmented reality to show their characters interacting with real people in Times Square. That same year, National Geographic employed AR to make it seem as if extinct species were walking through a shopping mall. A couple of years later, Coca-Cola displayed ice melting in, again, a high-traffic shopping mall to bring awareness to climate change. (Harvard Business Review, 2016)

Pokémon Go Broke Download Records with AR.

In 2016, Pokémon Go became the most downloaded and highest-grossing app of all time. Following digital maps in the real world and capturing characters that randomly pop up obviously has an allure. For once, a video game — with the AR combination of real-world environs and digital overlay — has people going on walks instead of cooped up in their houses. (New York Times, 2016)

“I really got into this idea of using digital tech to reinvigorate the idea of a public square, to bring people off the couch and out into an environment they can enjoy. We’re biologically evolved to be present in our bodies and to be out in the world.”

John Hanke, CEO Niantic Labs, Pokémon Go creator
Augmented Reality Can Make Right to Repair an Actual Reality.

Right to Repair refers to proposed legislation that would make it realistic for anyone to fix an electronic device. Right now, it is technically legal to fix your own phone or laptop, but as Thorin Klosowski in The New York Times Wirecutter points out, something being legal doesn’t necessarily mean it’s possible. Most of us would be intimidated by the idea of opening up a laptop to replace a battery, but AR can overlay digital information onto your device, giving you step-by-step instructions.

Your Brain Processes AR More Efficiently than 2-D Instructions.

Most of our information processing (up to 90%) is visual. How quickly and accurately we process that information depends on mental capacity, and the demand on that capacity is called “cognitive load.” Cognitive load is greater when there is a gap between where we receive information and where we apply it. Harvard Business Review (2019) Think of typical GPS directions in which you shift your attention between your phone and the road. All that shifting increases cognitive load and the likelihood you’ll make a mistake. Through an AR heads-up display, your directions are superimposed onto the road.

Both Apple and Microsoft are Developing AR Hardware.

In March of 2021, the U.S. Army announced an almost $22 billion deal with Microsoft for a specialized version of their Hololens along with software and services. Apple has plans to roll out an AR headset in 2023 and the sleeker AR glasses in 2024 or 2025. Both products pave the way for a proliferation of AR apps and a more seamless way to use them. Clearly, both Microsoft and Apple see augmented reality as playing a significant role in our future. 

augmented reality mapping
How Augmented Reality Takes GPS Maps to the Next Level

Maps have come a long way. Where we used to consult unwieldy paper maps, we now receive step-by-step directions on our smartphones, complete with traffic information. All of these iterations, however, tend to take our attention from what’s in front of us. When walking, it’s an inconvenience; when driving, it’s dangerous. There is a cognitive gap, where information is lost, between looking at directions and turning our attention back to the real-time path. Augmented reality, with directions overlaid onto the road in front of us, can remove this gap and increase efficiency and safety. (more on how our brains process GPS directions)

Augmented Reality Enhances Directions Inside

AR can make finding your way in a large warehouse, shopping mall, or train station easier. In 2021, Google Maps introduced its Live View feature for select areas and buildings. Imagine you’re in the airport and need to find your gate, the nearest coffee or an ATM. The Live View AR feature will overlay step-by-step directions onto your real-time surroundings through your phone’s screen. This same technology can be used to direct warehouse workers to find specific products in vast spaces, saving time and reducing errors. (more on AR uses in warehouse settings)

AR and Outside Walking Directions

Google actually pioneered their Live View AR feature outdoors, in 2019, before taking it to public inside spaces. It overlays large arrows onto your environment through your phone screen making it very difficult to get lost. One journalist tested it, purposely choosing the wrong direction, and found the AR function redirected him just as seamlessly, if not more so, than traditional GPS. Another crowd-sourced project, AED4EU by Lucien Engelen, puts AR walking direction to emergency use. The app can quickly direct you to the nearest AED (automatic external defibrillator) in case of emergency. Users upload AED locations and volunteers physically verify them. (more on AR applications for healthcare)

AR Driving Directions and the Heads-Up Display (HUD)

A heads-up display is just that — a display of information that allows you to keep your eyes on the road ahead as you drive. Several vehicles, such as the Audi Q4 e-tron EV, already offer versions of this AR-driven technology.  This kind of AR-driven head-sup display can “overlay the driver’s view of the real world through the windshield with helpful navigation directions, warning signs, and vehicle data.” (Dan Carney, Design News, 2021) Panasonic has also developed an AR HUD predicted to be in cars by 2024. It displays lane edges, objects in the road and other driver information. The Mercedes Benz MBUX aviation system also uses AR to project floating arrows as driving directions. (Roberto Baldwin, Car & Driver 2021)

Augmented reality, as applied to GPS directions, whether walking, biking or driving will reduce error and increase safety and efficiency. Whether you’re looking for bagels at the airport, searching for a sofa in a warehouse or driving to someone’s house in a rainstorm, AR will get you there faster and easier.