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Category: VirtualRealityTrends

VirtualRealityTrends

  • Layar Lends Augmented Reality Technology to Any iPhone App

    Layar Lends Augmented Reality Technology to Any iPhone App

    Augmented reality app provider Layar made a very interesting announcement today – it’s making its AR technology available for all iPhone apps. In other words, expect to see a lot more innovative AR-related features in a lot of apps. 

    This extension of AR tech comes in the form of Layar’s Layar Player (now out of beta). It’s available to all agencies, brands, and developers to use to include AR (for free, no less) in their iPhone apps. 

    Layar already has a million active users on its platform, which can be reached as a result of this, and I would have to assume this will help spur growth in that number. As interesting use-cases for the platform increase, user interest is likely to follow. 

    "This year is about the democratization of augmented reality as we work to find ways to make it easier for everyone to create and publish AR content," said Claire Boonstra, co-founder and VP of platform and community. "The Player availability is the first of many activities Layar will be announcing this year to make this democratization happen."

    Layar names a few integrations in its announcement, which include the Bing-sponsored "Snowboard Hero", VerbeterdeBuurt, and Layar Trade. The first lets players earn more points; Layar Trade is an app that helps people view recent projects and work from local builders, and VerbeterdeBuurt is an app for letting neighbors post their issues and ideas for the public space on a map.

    As discussed in another recent article pertaining to a new eBay fashion app, augmented reality is likely to play an increasingly significant role in e-commerce, and much of that will be dependent on how businesses and other app developers integrate the technology. 

    Announcements like Layar’s should help stimulate this. Last year, Layar revealed the Layar stream, which opens up some doors for local brick and mortar businesses as well. 

    While today’s announcement doesn’t mention any details about the Layar Player becoming available for Android or other platforms, we imagine it’s only a matter of time. Layar itself is already available on Android. 

  • Is Augmented Reality the Future of E-Commerce?

    Is Augmented Reality the Future of E-Commerce?

    eBay has launched a new version of its eBay Fashion iPhone app. This one lets users virtually try on sunglasses by using their phone’s front-facing camera to capture an image of themselves and fit the sunglasses to their faces. 

    This comes in the form of a "see it on" feature. As eBay’s Richard Brewer-Hay explains, simply access this feature from the app’s front page, isolate an image of yourself using the camera, choose different styles of sunglasses, fit the glasses to your face using a pinch and zoom measurement, and purchase the pair you like best – right from your mobile phone.

    The video illustrates:

    We can expect to see a lot more of this kind of thing in e-commerce as more people get smartphones, smartphones (and other devices) get better, and more retailers realize the tremendous opportunities this presents. 

    Augmented reality could potentially be the biggest thing in e-commerce since the search engine. It’s a great concept from the desktop, but mobile takes it to a whole different level. This could both disrupt brick and mortar retail stores and complement them.

    Perhaps a customer is having a hard time finding a shirt they like at the store they’re browsing in. A retailer may be able to point them to one which is currently out of stock, but is available to order online. The customer could then see what it looks like on them from their phone, similar to how eBay’s new app works. 

    On the flipside, if this technology becomes more widely used and continues to improve, it may significantly reduce customers’ needs and desires to actually go to the physical stores. Why fight the mall traffic if I can try on the same merchandise from my couch, my friend’s house, or even from the waiting room at the Dentist? 

    "One of the greatest barriers in e-commerce is that the customer never gets to try out the product before buying it, as opposed to shopping in a physical store," says Christian Holst at Baymard Institute. "This is why research, experiments and best practices often recommend large product images, product videos and 3D product tours to improve e-commerce conversions. All to simulate the experience of holding the physical product." 

    "This will of course never come close to the experience of holding the product in your own hands, trying it out – or in the case of apparel, trying it on," adds Holst. "But with the rise of cameras in nearly every electronic device some smart retailers have found ways to use augmented reality to place the virtual products in the customer’s own life and environment." 

    Holst points to an iPhone app from watchmaker Neuvo, which lets users virtually try on watches, as another example. Kevin Tofel at GigaOm mentions a Converse iPhone app, which lets you virtually try on shoes.

    So, is augmented reality the future of e-commerce or is it simply the present. Well, while there are clearly examples out there, it has yet to go mainstream. Tofel doesn’t think it will for go mainstream for another 5 to 10 years, but I’m not sure it will take that long. 

    For one, ebay is a huge force in online retail, and I don’t imagine it will take that long for them to expand this to much more than the current functionality of this app. Also, given eBay’s size and influence, competitors are going to want to match or better the functionality. 

    More smartphones that support the technology will flood the market, and people will buy them. The first thing people tend to do when getting their first smartphone or one with new functionalities,  is look for all the coolest apps that take advantage of them. A new experience like virtually trying on clothing or accessories is bound to appeal to many. Combine that with more people simply using mobile for more of their web use in general, and I see no reason not to believe that e-commerce is going to be greatly impacted by augmented reality in the near future. 

    Agree? Disagree? Comment here.

  • Augmented Reality App to Provide Greater Value to Local Businesses

    Augmented Reality App to Provide Greater Value to Local Businesses

    It’s a very interesting time for local businesses. Mobile apps are opening many different opportunities for them to be discovered and new and creative ways. Likewise opportunities for engaging with customers and providing them with offers are becoming increasingly apparent.

    Layar
    , which makes a pretty useful augmented reality app, announced Layar Stream today, which will fuel the discovery of augmented reality content that is available around you.

    First, a little about Layar’s app itself.  It already has more than 1.6 million users, and serves 1.2 million augmented objects a day. Over 600 layers are published on the Layar Platform with over 2000 in development. Layers within the app let smartphone users point their phone in any given direction to find items as diverse as nearby restaurants and bars, Twitterers, crime spots, sports and events, apartments for rent…you name it. Some layers are free and some are paid.

    What the Layar Stream will do is generate a stream out of the augmented objects that are available around you. With so many layers in development, this will likely become an increasingly important element of tapping into the ones that you will find useful.

    "Layar Stream is the necessary building block to make Augmented Reality part of every day life," says CEO Raimo van der Klein "There is a whole augmented world out there that is waiting to be discovered. You just need to tap into Layar Stream"

    The Layar Stream will be available in the next version of the Layar app to be launched later this month. It will go to Android first, and then iPhone.

    With iPhone (not to mention the iPad) maintaining a great deal of popularity, and Android usage rapidly growing, you can see where this app might provide great value to local businesses.