NGP Gets Augmented Reality, New "Near" Function
Augmented reality is coming to the Nintendo 3DS, the new handheld unit that launches on March 27. If you aren't familiar with AR:
It goes like this- you take a real-life card that is placed on a flat surface, and then you aim the portable device's camera at that card. The AR card will then start a game that appears to be happening right in front of your eyes, "altering the surface and requiring the player to physically move the 3DS to center on targets or various other aspects of gameplay." Nifty, no? Well, thanks to Sony's NGP presentation at this year's Game Developer's Conference, we now know AR is also coming to the NGP. Sony's Next Generation Portable was used to turn a T-Rex poster into a virtual monster on the NGP's screen, thus revealing the new feature for the highly advanced portable.
In addition, the NGP will also boast a feature called "Near," which will tell a player "where they went that day" and will find out which NGP games are most popular in that area. The 3G model will use GPS for this, while the non-3G version will utilize Skyhook, which takes advantage of wireless hotspots. The rest of the presentation sort of rehashed what we already know, but that's to be expected. The comparison to the PlayStation 3 might interest you...click the link above to learn more.
Tags: ngp, next generation portable, ar, augmented reality
3/3/2011 8:47:58 PM John Shepard
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Comments (29 posts)
Highlander
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 11:13:24 PM
JMO_INDY
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 11:19:33 PM
GuernicaReborn
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 10:16:37 PM
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WorldEndsWithMe
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 10:18:44 PM
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kraygen
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 11:37:30 PM
Snorge
Friday, March 04, 2011 @ 11:07:36 AM
BikerSaint
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 10:47:03 PM
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Highlander
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 11:12:32 PM
Reply
Highlander
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 11:12:47 PM
JMO_INDY
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 11:26:19 PM
Fane1024
Monday, March 07, 2011 @ 1:13:44 AM
kraygen
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 11:38:33 PM
Jawknee
Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 11:39:16 PM
___________
Friday, March 04, 2011 @ 2:00:07 AM
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dante_zero
Friday, March 04, 2011 @ 3:00:54 AM
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Lawless SXE
Friday, March 04, 2011 @ 3:45:27 AM
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AR doesn't really interest me unless it's the ARI of Heavy Rain. It'd be cool to be able to recreate a real life room in a game, and perhaps have your avatar as a miniature who has to get from one point to another. That'd be fun.
Peace.
Highlander
Friday, March 04, 2011 @ 11:20:20 AM
For example, Here's a hypothetical constructed from current technology and things Near may be able to do. Let's say you have your NDP/PSP2 and you're using Near, you have GPS enabled. Using the camera in the NGP, Near provids you with a 3D overlay based on google streetview, As you move the handheld around, the view changes with the NGP dynamically stitching and re-rendering the streetview overlay and adding tags to everything in sight, whether it be a restaurant or a gas station or whatever. Using optical character recognition, every street sign or commercial sign in view is automatically read and translated to the language of your choice, and that information is overlain on the view for you. As you walk around with your Near enabled NGP, someone approaches you ad speaks - in a language you don't speak. NGP's microphone captures their speech and in near real time translates it to the language of your choice wither on screen, or in the Bluetooth ear piece you're wearing. So that you can reply to the person, you punch up a translator app on the NGP and enter your reply in your language using the virtual keyboard. The NGP then translates that into the correct language and speaks it to the person for you.
All of the technology to do this exists. The existing PSP has translation applications. Optical character recognition, computer speech, and natural language recognition are all possible now. The dynamic recognition of a spoken language and translation in near real-time is a bit of a stretch, but possible with the right amount of computing power. Even without that, everything else is perfectly possible with a combination of current technology.
I could imagine visiting Japan and being able to use this kind of technology to navigate around the country and communicate with people. I'm reminded of Star Trek's universal translator combined with the ARI system from Heavy Rain and a bit of a tricorder for good measure.
Lawless SXE
Friday, March 04, 2011 @ 3:08:58 PM
Highlander
Friday, March 04, 2011 @ 4:04:18 PM
Spoken word translation in near real time is still very cutting edge and I'm not even sure it exists outside the lab. However, if you know the language being spoken, there are voice to text applications for most major languages, and once the words have been converted to text, they can be translated to whatever language you like. The resulting text can then be read back by the system over a headset or speaker. The translations would be crude, but as long as everyone speaks clearly and uses simple sentence constructs and good grammar, the technology would work well.
It's like a jigsaw puzzle of technology, really, you're taking components from navigation systems, motion control, optical sensing, optical character recognition, google earth/street view, machine translation from language to language, voice to text, text to voice, etc... No one product brings all of that together, but it all exists today.
Imagine though if the sensors, camera and display were integrated into a pair of glasses. The lenses could be printed with transparent OLED screens (again current technology, just not yet integrated). With a hand held computer of sufficient power and a network to access remote services like google earth, streetview and translation services, you could create a workable Augmented reality system similar to what I described above. If the translation technology could be improved significantly to enable near real time, and reasonably accurate translation of speech in an arbitrary language, you would have the ultimate tourist accessory, and also a device that has been considered science fiction for many yeas now.
While I remember, I believe that the US military uses some translation devices in the field in places like Afghanistan, so elements of the more exotic parts of this do currently exist.
I think that within a decade, we will see something like this occur, and perhaps the decade after that it will become common place. But, that might be my wishful thinking. I just know that all these things are technically possible, even if they do for the moment need more performance than a hand held unit can muster on it's own. Of course supplementing the power through remote servers is always a possibility.
Either way, you have to love technology.
Lawless SXE
Friday, March 04, 2011 @ 6:47:03 PM
The things that can be done with the future possibilities of technology are truly limitless. Imagine biotech/nanotech enhancements built into the human capable of doing just this. That's still very much science fiction, but steps are being made towards that end. What does the future hold for humanity through technology? Evolutionary control? Our very own attempts at Panspermia? Or will it lead to our ultimate self-destruction?
Peace.
Highlander
Friday, March 04, 2011 @ 11:19:58 PM
In a sense you could argue that by using tools we can effectively stall the development of humans as a species. Medicine means that we don't have to evolve disease resistance because we can treat disease. However in the absence of medicine, could that be seen as weakening the human species? Our technology and tools extend our physical and mental abilities. Without labor saving devices, would/could we be stronger and more dexterous? Without systems, books and technology to hone our mental faculties might we lose some of them? Might our brains configure differently if we no longer have to handle such quantities of data and thought processing?
Technology has positive and negative effects. Who can say where it all leads?
BikerSaint
Saturday, March 05, 2011 @ 10:26:45 PM
"Beam me down Scotty, it seems there's.... intelligent PSP2 life.... down there.... on Earth after all"
And Scotty, you.....transport....down,...and report....back to me if.... there's anything at all....usable on that....360.
Scotty wheels around to confront Captain Kirk and yells "Damn it Kirk, I'm a medical officer, not a f*cking miracle worker"
Last edited by BikerSaint on 3/5/2011 10:30:48 PM
Beamboom
Friday, March 04, 2011 @ 9:29:25 AM
Last edited by Beamboom on 3/4/2011 9:30:03 AM

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JMO_INDY
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Thursday, March 03, 2011 @ 10:15:39 PM
Last edited by JMO_INDY on 3/3/2011 10:15:50 PM