Day 1438 Augmented Reality Hardware and Apps Ask Gramps

Published: July 24, 2020, 7 a.m.

Welcome to Day 1438 of our Wisdom-Trek, and thank you for joining me.This is Guthrie Chamberlain, Your Guide to WisdomAugmented Reality \u2013 Hardware and Apps \u2013 Ask GrampsWisdom - the final frontier to true knowledge.\xa0Welcome to Wisdom-Trek! Where our mission is to create a legacy of wisdom, to seek out discernment and insights, to boldly grow where few have chosen to grow before. Hello, my friend, I am Guthrie Chamberlain, your captain on our journey to increase Wisdom and Create a Living Legacy.\xa0Thank you for joining us today as we explore wisdom on our 2nd millennium of podcasts. Today is Day 1438 of our Trek, and our focus on Fridays is the future technological and societal advances, so we call it Futuristic Fridays.\xa0My personality is one that has always been very future-oriented.\xa0Since my childhood, I have yearned for the exploration and discovery of new technologies and advancements for the future.\xa0I grew up with the original Star Trek series, and even today, while I am on my 64th revolution around the sun, I still dream of traveling in space. Each week we will explore rapidly converging technologies and advancements, which will radically change our lives.\xa0At times, the topics may sound like something out of a science fiction novel, but each area that we explore is already well on its way of becoming a reality over the next couple of decades.


To keep with our theme of \u201cAsk Gramps,\u201d I will put our weekly topics in the form of a question to get us on track.\xa0So this week\u2019s question is:\xa0Hey Gramps, last week you shared how Augmented Reality will impact our world.\xa0What are some of the hardware and apps which will allow AR to become a reality in everyday life?


Augmented Reality \u2013 Hardware And Apps


Last week on Futuristic Friday, we explored how Augmented Reality (AR) will impact our world. Today we will drill down and look at the hardware and apps which may drive this impact. Our world is in a disruptive mode, which will speed up the exponential technology that is changing our world today. I am using some of the information mentioned in Peter Diamandis\u2019s blogs and book \u201cThe Future is Faster Than You Think.\u201d


Today, adults in the U.S. spend over\xa0nine hours\xa0a day looking at screens. That counts for more than a\xa0third\xa0of our livelihoods.\xa0We may be allocating even more screen time during the Covid-19 pandemic.


Yet even though they serve as a portal to 90 percent of our media consumption, screens continue to define and constrain how and\xa0where\xa0we consume content, and displays, as we think of them today, may very soon become obsolete.


Riding new advancements in hardware and connectivity, augmented reality (AR) is set to replace these 2D interfaces and allow us to see\xa0through\xa0a digital information layer. Ultimately, AR headsets will immerse us in compelling stories, learn-everywhere education, and even gamified work tasks. As an example,


If you want to play AR Star Wars, you could be battling the Empire on your way to work, in your cubicle, cafeteria, bathroom, and beyond.


We got our first taste of AR\u2019s real-world gamification in 2016 when Nintendo released Pokemon Go. Thus began the greatest cartoon character turkey shoot in history. With 5 million daily users,\xa065 million\xa0monthly users, and over $2 billion in revenue, the virtual-overlaid experience remains one for the books.


In the years since, similar AR apps have exploded. Once thick and bulky, AR glasses are becoming increasingly lightweight, stylish, and unobtrusive. And over the next 15 years, AR portals will become almost unnoticeable, as hardware rapidly dematerializes.


Companies like Mojo Vision are even rumored to be developing AR contact lenses, slated to offer us heads-up display capabilities \u2014 no glasses required.


In this second installation of our five-part AR episode series, we are doing a deep dive into the various apps,...