Module 1 ARVR
Module 1 ARVR
By Nilima Patil
What is Augmented Reality
Augmented reality (AR) is an experience where designers
enhance parts of users’ physical world with computer-
generated input. Designers create inputs—ranging from
sound to video, to graphics to GPS overlays and more—in
digital content, which responds in real-time to changes in
the user’s environment, typically movement.
Augmented reality (AR)
• Augmented reality (AR) is an interactive experience that
combines the real world and computer-generated content.
• Here are some actual applications you can engage with today.
• Ikea Place is a mobile app that allows you to envision Ikea furniture in
your own home, by overlaying a 3D representation of the piece atop a
live video stream of your room.
• YouCam Makeup lets users virtually try on real-life cosmetics via a living
selfie.
• Repair technicians can don a headset that walks them through the steps
of fixing or maintaining a broken piece of equipment, diagramming
exactly where each part goes and the order in which to do things.
• Various sports are relying on augmented reality to provide real-time
statistics and improve physical training for athletes.
• Beyond gaming and other entertainment cases, some
business examples of virtual reality include:
• Architects are using VR to design homes — and let clients
“walk through” before the foundation has ever been laid.
• Automobiles and other vehicles are increasingly being
designed in VR.
• Firefighters, soldiers and other workers in hazardous
environments are using VR to train without putting
themselves at risk.
• Target app. The Target retail app feature called
See it in Your Space enables users to take a photo
of a space in their home and digitally view an
object, like a picture on the wall or a chair, to see
how it will look there.
• Apple Measure app. The Measure app on Apple
iOS acts like a tape measure by enabling users to
select two or more points in their environment
and measure the distance between them.
• Snapchat. Snapchat filters use AR to overlay a
filter or mask over the user's Snap or picture.
• Pokemon Go. Pokemon Go is a popular mobile AR game that uses
the player's GPS to detect where Pokemon creatures appear in
the user's surrounding environment for them to catch.
• Users may explore and interact with virtual items and characters, the
environment can react to their activities in real-time, giving them the
impression that they are physically present there.
• Virtual reality applications are applications that make use of
virtual reality (VR), an immersive sensory experience that
digitally simulates a virtual environment.
• It enabling real-time user interaction with both virtual and actual worlds.
• In addition to interacting with the user and the actual environment, this
enables the technology to construct virtual things that seem to be present
in the real world.
Key Features of Mixed Reality
• With the use of MR technology, users may interact and modify virtual items
in real-time
Pokemon Go: Pokemon Go is a well-known mobile game that employs augmented reality (AR)
technology to superimpose digital Pokemon figures over the surrounding environment. Real-
time Pokemon catching and global exploration are also possible for gamers.
Volvo Cars: To give its consumers a virtual showroom experience, Volvo Cars integrated MR
technology. They may see and alter several automobile models in a virtual setting using the MR
headset.
Surgery Stimulation: Medical students and surgeons may train and hone their abilities in a safe
and controlled environment, thanks to the use of MR in the creation of realistic surgical
simulators.
Education: Immersive learning experiences are created in the education sector using MR.
Students may explore and learn in a more engaging and participatory way by using it to make a
learning experience, for example, virtual field trips to historical locations or natural settings.
Mixed Reality Applications
• Google ARCore App: Google ARCore application has taken the idea of 3D
object overlay to the next level through their Depth API which has unlocked
capabilities like occlusion, realistic physics, and particle effects for its users.
• Pokémon GO: Pokémon GO is one of the apps that broke the internet when it
first came out in 2016, Pokémon GO is an AR-based app that lets users catch
Pokémon from their immediate surroundings, creating an exciting social
experience.
• Google Glass: Google Glass technology lets its users experience all
smartphone features without having to hold them in their hands. Through
voice commands and simple gestures, you can access your phone virtually.
• Interior Design Apps : Myty AR is one of the top AR-powered interior design
applications, which lets you have a realistic perspective of how a furniture
item will look in your house. Such an experience increases user satisfaction
and increases customers
Methods of AR
1. Marker-based AR
• This type of AR, also known as recognition-based AR or image
recognition, as it requires a special visual object and a camera to
scan it.
• Marker-based AR requires a marker to activate an augmentation.
Markers are distinct patterns that cameras can easily recognize
and process, and are visually independent of the environment
around them; they can be paper-based or physical objects that
exist in the real world.
• It may be anything, from a printed QR code to special signs.
• The AR device also calculates the position and orientation of a
marker to position the content, in some cases. Thus, a marker
initiates digital animations for users to view, and so images in a
magazine may turn into 3D models.
2. Markerless AR
• Marker-less AR offers the most control to the user as it allows
the user to choose where they would like to place the content.
It also allows real-life scale placement of the virtual augmented
objects. These AR experiences are highly reliant on smart
phone features such as sensors, camera, and processors.
• Marker-less AR can be split into:
• 3. Projection-based AR
• Projection-based AR relies on projectors to display 3D imagery or
digital content onto a flat two-dimensional surface, like a wall, floor,
or object. It doesn’t create fully immersive environments, mainly
holograms for events and movies.
1. IMPLEMENTATION COST:
The most common concern was the perceived cost of implementing the new
technology, Of course, there are multiple ways of implementing AR, all with
different price points.
But if a company needs a custom app built from the ground up with unique
components, the price tag could run well into the six-figure range.
Ex- furniture retailer IKEA App