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batye
batye
11/6/2016 7:28:33 PM
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Platinum
Re: Projecting onto a physical device
@dcawrey interesting point, I would say you are right as AR do get boost from VR implementation....

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JohnBarnes
JohnBarnes
11/7/2016 9:53:20 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Training effects with AR probably mean a gigantic market
Any skill where the user can see exactly what to do until it is firmly implanted in memory (either in the mind or in muscle memory) could potentially be taught by AR. This might actually include analyzing how the masters do it and then having AR show you how you'd hold the bow if you were Yo Yo Ma, or how you'd shoot three pointers if you were Steph Curry. Everything from dancers learning choreography to drivers learning better control of the car, from kids learning handwriting to surgeons learning new procedures, is a potential market.

And if AR is as good at transferring expertise as I think it eventually will be, we've just found a whole new way to monetize expertise.

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dlr5288
dlr5288
11/30/2016 7:31:27 PM
User Rank
Platinum
Re: Projecting onto a physical device
Yes, I was going to say! Pokemon Go has definitely shown the market that there is a place for it.

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Joe Stanganelli
Joe Stanganelli
11/30/2016 8:21:03 PM
User Rank
Author
Re: Projecting onto a physical device
@dlr: Interestingly, while Pokemon Go has made AR take off in the consumer market not because of adding information accessibility but more for actually augmenting reality, I suspect that a similar approach could do wonders for AR adoption in the enterprise (which is still lagging on AR adoption, despite the benefits proposed).

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