3d pokemon porn Niantic’s 2016 hit game Pokémon Go let players see digital things carefully placed within the real world as seen through their smartphone camera. The game introduced many people to the concept of augmented reality. Now Niantic is buying 6D.ai, a small company with a vaunted technology for mapping the digital world to the real world for AR developers.
The companies aren’t talking about the dollar value of the deal.
6D.ai has been working on 3D-mapping tech since its origins as a research project at Oxford University in the U.K. It became a private company in 2017. Niantic spun out of Google shortly after the search giant reorganized itself as a set of companies under the Alphabet parent in 2015.
Niantic CEO and cofounder John Hanke says the next generation of AR games and other apps may depend on solid 3D mapping to create funner, cooler, and more convincing AR experiences. “Now, we’ll be able to leverage 6D.ai’s deep expertise and significant breakthroughs in AR research and engineering to further our ongoing work in support of our mission,” Hanke said in a blog post today.
“Imagine everyone, at the same time, being able to experience Pokémon habitats in the real world or watch dragons fly through the sky and land on buildings in real-time,” Hanke writes. “Imagine our favorite characters taking us on a walking tour of hidden city gems, or friends leaving personal notes for others to find later.”
One reason this transaction is important is that we won’t be experiencing AR on smartphones forever. Niantic’s map will likely underpin new kinds of AR apps that we’ll experience through the lenses of tomorrow’s AR glasses, which Apple, Facebook, and (likely) other big-name tech companies are developing as we speak. Both Niantic and 6D.ai have partnership arrangements with Qualcomm, the company most likely to provide the chipsets used in future lightweight head-mounted displays.
Tomorrow’s AR glasses may popularize “spatial computing” and eventually send it mainstream. We may see a layer of digital content overlayed upon our view of the real world all day long. Some people, including myself, believe that an AR overlay we see in our glasses will eventually become the next user interface for our personal computing.