We hear so much of 3D today that we are no longer surprised with 3D printing, 3D movies, 3D gaming consoles, 3D TV sets etc. Therefore, 3D tablets ought not to come as a surprise. When we live in a 3D environment, it is no wonder that we try to capture it in 3D. Therefore, very soon we will have 3D mobile devices that will not only display 3D movies and games, but also record videos and pictures in full 3D.
In the past three weeks, Google set the whole news world abuzz by announcing their Project Tango and you can see them working with NASA here. The goal of the Project Tango is to let a mobile device sense space and movement in a way similar to what humans do. Google released their first prototype in February 2014 – an Android smartphone with a five-inch screen. The smartphone uses special software for tracking the movements of the device entirely in 3D motion. Measuring over 250-thousand 3D movements every second, it creates a virtual space model of the user’s environment.
Wall Street Journal reports that Google is on its way to building a first-generation 3D tablet as a part of the Project Tango. According to the report, apart from the usual sensors that are present on current tablets, the 3D tablet will have additional and advanced vision sensors such as sophisticated 3D cameras and infrared depth sensors including dedicated software.
The report suggests that Google may well be producing about 4,000 such units of seven-inch tablets for presenting at their annual developer’s conference. Possibilities are the tablet could have the ability to create accurate virtual worlds from real-world environments. This would be similar to mockup sets, and would be of great assistance to movie producers and game developers, as it could cut down on digitizing time.
The report also conjectures that the Movidius Vision Processor, also known as Myriad 1, would power the new tablet – this can map space and motion in real time and with detailed accuracy and precision. Myriad 1 is specifically designed to handle these tasks, and Movidius has a set of tools for developers planning to implement 3D solutions quickly.
Very soon, users will be able to experience the new way of how a mobile device can be used to experience the world and Google is paving the future direction that smart mobile vision systems are expected to take.
Although 3D technology is nothing new, the potential of commercialization by a company such as Google, at an affordable price, is the transforming point in its adoption. As such, phones and consumer tablets running on the Android Operating System are already highly popular. Google, by developing this really compelling technology, is helping fields such as medicine, real estate, engineering and automotive, which make heavy use of video and imaging.
As many of these fields already make extensive use of imaging technology, the next stage will open up huge vistas for them. Imagine doctors and researchers able to see and understand human health in an entirely new way. Other uses can be very diverse such as a property inspection by a prospective buyer or examination of a road project.