Notices



Better Choices Through Technology

Random Community Topics

Post New ThreadReply
 
Thread Tools
  #1  
Old 07-01-2009, 04:07 AM
scott8813's Avatar
scott8813 scott8813 is offline   Thread Starter  
InsomniAddict
Mobile Model: MogulTouchProTouchHD
Mobile Carrier: Sprint
Mobile OS: 6.5

 
Join Date: February 7th, 2008
Location: DFW Texas
Posts: 1,473
Thanks: 0
Thanked 5,507 Times in 1,397 Posts
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0


View scott8813's Profile   Edit Options Edit Profile Picture View scott8813's Photo Album Add scott8813's to Your Contacts Show Groups Edit Avatar Subscribed Threads Private Messages
Better Choices Through Technology

Better Choices Through Technology

  • Posted by: Cliff Kuang
  • on June 25, 2009 at 2:42 pm


Can augmented reality technology finally make it easy to do the right thing?

Last week was huge for a young technology called “augmented reality”—and that’s important even if you’re not a nerd, because it should revolutionize the way we approach social causes. Sure, many current examples of augmented reality are trivial, but hear me out.
Augmented reality allows you to see, in real time, data about your surroundings. It’s different from having the internet on your phone—you don’t actually have to look anything up, and you don’t actually have to know exactly what you’re looking for. Augmented reality is more like a having a sixth sense—and a seventh and eighth sense—that makes data a natural, passive part of how you see the world.
So how does this work? Last week, a Dutch company, SPRXmobile, introduced the first-ever augmented-reality browser platform for a smartphone. It’s fairly simple to explain. The software uses two basic features found on smartphones—a compass, and a GPS system. From there, it knows exactly where you are—and, just as important, which direction your phone is pointing. And this is where things get interesting. Armed with that knowledge, SPRXmobile unveiled a rack of applications—including apps to find a nearby ATM, bar, or shoe store; figure out if a company nearby is hiring; identify houses around you that might be for sale; and even research the on-court action at Wimbledon. (Take a second to watch SPRXmobile’s amazing demo video.) So far, the app is only for phones running the Android operating system but it’s coming to the iPhone soon as well. (That’s why it was so important that the newest model, the 3G S, included a compass.)
This makes deep information about your surroundings available whenever you have your cell phone without you having to look anything up. When you let that possibility sink in, augmented reality’s massive promise becomes clear. If you were to boil a number of social causes—from depleted fisheries to carbon reduction—the central problem is that getting the right information to consumers takes so much money and effort. And consumers themselves have to spend too much time translating that new information into action.
With augmented reality you can download a program, and be presented with all of its stored wisdom just when that wisdom is relevant to what you’re doing. It then becomes vastly easier to imagine social causes translating into individual action on a large scale—the effort to learn about those causes and about discern what you should drops enormously when you have a cellphone that does the sifting for you, at the exact time that you need it.
Imagine the following scenarios. You’re in a new city. You’d like to skip on a rental car, and save the cash and the carbon. So you use an app on your phone to find the low-carbon alternatives. It guides you from your current location to the nearest public transit option, letting you know exactly what the schedules are—and, if you’re in a city with “smart” bus stops like Portland, even telling you, in real time, how far away the next bus is. You don’t have to be tethered to the bus station, hoping that things are running on time.
Or lets take another example: depleted fisheries. You walk into a fish restaurant. You point your phone at the door; it knows where you are, and it provides you with a list of fish that are the most environmentally friendly.
That’s just the beginning. Imagine you’re commuting to work, but you don’t have a car, and public transit isn’t an option out where you live. You boot up an app that alerts others in your car-sharing network where you are, matches you with a ride, and leads you—and your potential ride—to a meet-up point. It may sound unreal, but this technology is already being developed by Avego, among others.
Things really start to get nutty when you factor in another technology, QR codes. These function like barcodes that your cellphone can scan. You’ve already seen the codes popping up on shipping labels and such. Phones with QR-reading functionality will follow soon—in fact they’re already common in Japan (of course). When you snap a picture of a QR code, the image directs your phone to download information set by the code’s designer.
What if all the food in your grocery store was marked with a QR code—you could compare the carbon footprints of two batches of produce. Builders could use specialized apps inside a Home Depot to figure out how materials choices might translate to energy savings.
As I’ve written before, convenience is king when we’re talking about making better transportation choices. But that also applies to any worthy cause, if it’s ever to become truly mainstream.
Personally, I’ve long been a pessimist about our ability to meet challenges like climate change. Augmented reality has me more optimistic than I’ve ever been. Granted, it still takes a baseline level of interest for someone to take the time to download an app for a social cause. But compare that effort with what you’d otherwise have to put in to get involved with an issue like fisheries. There’s no contest. Augmented reality is the best chance we have to speed crucial information about our world to the people living in it.




Original location that I found this page is



Code

http://www.good.is/post/better-choices-through-technology/

Reply With Quote
The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to scott8813 For This Useful Post:
  #2  
Old 07-01-2009, 11:46 AM
iamdasht19's Avatar
iamdasht19 iamdasht19 is offline    
Member
Mobile Model: TP, TP2, soon Hero
Mobile Carrier: SPJ
Mobile OS: 6.5

 
Join Date: February 7th, 2007
Location: Grand Rapids, MI
Posts: 40,537
Thanks: 0
Thanked 42,425 Times in 15,688 Posts
Downloads: 0
Uploads: 0


View iamdasht19's Profile   Edit Options Edit Profile Picture View iamdasht19's Photo Album Add iamdasht19's to Your Contacts Show Groups Edit Avatar Subscribed Threads Private Messages
Re: Better Choices Through Technology

wow thats very interesting and a great idea in my opinion.... will def have to keep an eye out for this technology and thanks for the share.
Reply With Quote
The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to iamdasht19 For This Useful Post:
Post New ThreadReply

Tags
choices, technology


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
OnePlus Nord N20 5G Hands On: Pretty phone with some questionable choices phillynewsnow AVN News Feed 1 01-27-2024 02:59 PM
20/20 Hindsight Ability to the Different Choices wckediden SPJ Community News 0 05-07-2022 04:23 PM
[NEWS] Wireless Standards: Too Many Choices phillynewsnow Random Community Topics 0 12-11-2009 08:50 AM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:29 PM.

Layout Options | Width: Fixed
Contact Us - SPJ Bulletin - Archive - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service - Top