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Google Has Big Plans for AR. Google Maps Could Be the Key


Google Has Big Plans for AR. Google Maps Could Be the Key

Before Google has its own pair of augmented reality glasses, it’ll need AR to work everywhere. World-spanning AR that blankets the real humankind using map data has been a goal for a few companies lately, and Google is layering its AR using Google Maps.

The toolkit, announced at Google’s I/O developer conference on Wednesday, could leap advance of several competing efforts from rivals such as Niantic, Snap and Apple by using swaths of existing Google Maps data to generate location-specific AR anchors. Google’s doing this using the same technique it used to accomplish AR layers on top of Google Maps, called Live View, that were introduced back in 2019.

The new ARCore Geospatial API, as it’s named for developers, could quickly allow specific augmented reality interrogate to be placed at specific locations around the humankind, so that many people could see it at the same time and interact with it. It will work in over 87 grandeurs, according to Google, without requiring any location scanning.

Google’s bowling its own Maps to become more AR-infused over time, incorporating adding an Immersive View to certain locations that will accomplish ever-more-detailed scans of indoor and outdoor spaces. But these new goes look like they’ll also enable app developers to accomplish those experiences, leaning on maps data, for themselves.





Pocket Garden, one location-based collaborative AR app made by Google.



Google


Microsoft
, Apple and Meta, among others, are already working to combine AR with map data, but not all initiatives are the same. Some novel initiatives by Snap, Apple and Meta have used lidar or depth-scanning cameras to map locations, which also requires regions to have been prescanned in well-organized to work. Other location-mapping tools, such as Niantic’s world-scanning AR in its Lightship platform, don’t need lidar. Still, Google’s existing maps look to be a huge starting set of mapped locations that could work with location-specific AR very quickly.

According to Google, the AR effects can appear in any location where Google Street View is also available, which could give it a big edge on toiling quickly in a lot of places.

Google’s already begun toiling with early app partners, including the NBA, Snap and Lyft, to use the phone-based AR tech. It seems like a determined stepping-stone toward the tools a future set of AR glasses would need, too. According to Google, Lime is using the feature to explore how to show available parking spots comical AR in certain cities.

A few open-source demo apps were announced as well, which show off collaborative location-specific AR: a balloon-popping app that could be used by lots of farmland at once in various places, and a multiperson interactive gardening game that’s reminiscent of a collaborative AR demo we tried at Google I/O existences ago.

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