SAN FRANCISCO: Facebook on Tuesday launched a mission to make smartphone cameras windows to augmented reality, focusing on what people have in hand instead of waiting for high-tech eye wear.
While kicking off the leading social network’s annual developers conference in the heart of Silicon Valley, chief executive Mark Zuckerberg called smartphone cameras an initial and promising platform for augmented-reality features in applications tailored to sync with the social network.
“I am confident now we are going to push this augmented-reality platform forward,” Zuckerberg said, predicting the technology would eventually be incorporated into eyeglasses.
“We are going to make the camera the first mainstream augmented-reality platform.”
He noted an array of things that could easily fill their roles virtually, such as game boards or television screens, with users being able to easily play or view without need for physical versions.
“Augmented reality will help us mix the digital and the physical in new ways,” Zuckerberg said during a keynote presentation.
“We are all about extending the physical world online.”
Previously, Facebook had been focused strongly on virtual reality as the next big computing platform, particularly using Rift headgear made by its Oculus unit.
Augmented reality tools unveiled by Facebook are impressive, but unlikely to reach the hands of users soon, according to Jackdaw Research analyst Jan Dawson.
“This year’s keynote shows Facebook is serious about catching up in this area and competing with Snapchat and others.”
Vanishing message application Snapchat more than a year ago began letting users add digital decorations to real-world photos with a “Lenses” feature.
Since the feature launched, “we’ve become puppies, puked rainbows, face-swapped with our best friends – and begun to explore how Lenses can change the world around us,” parent company Snap said in a blog post.
On Tuesday Snapchat add the ability to add ability to “paint the world around you in 3-D” with taps of smartphone camera screens. Facebook has a habit of cloning successful Snapchat features in its applications.
Facebook Spaces lets Rift users “hang out” with friends in virtual worlds as if they were in the same room in the real world, according to a demonstration by Rachel Franklin, who heads the social VR team at the California-based firm.
“We have only just scratched the surface of social virtual reality technology,” she said.
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