The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Next iPhone more likely to echo tech of Google Glass

- By Hayley Tsukayama

AUGMENTED reality (AR) is one of Apple’s big new areas of focus, which it highlighte­d earlier this month at its Worldwide Developers Conference.

But how will Apple use AR, which involves using a screen to overlay digital objects onto the real world? A new report from UBS Securities analyst Steven Milunovich raises some interestin­g possibilit­ies.

Apple has already shown at what AR can do — by demonstrat­ing how to use an iPhone to overlay an interactiv­e game board on a real table, for example. But Milunovich suggested 10 additional applicatio­ns for Apple’s AR play, including some we’ve already seen come to life, such as games and retail. He also sees applicatio­ns for job training, facial recognitio­n, medical diagnoses and the ability to direct people to safety in case of emergency situations, similar to what Google Glass did to help firefighte­rs find the fastest exits from a building.

Further down the road, Milunovich said, there could be room for iGlass - that is, Apple’s take on a Google Glasstype headset.

The tools for augmented reality that Apple introduced earlier this month open up a range of possibilit­ies to developers and highlight the tech giant’s interest in the area, which Apple chief executive Tim Cook once said was “a big idea like the smartphone.” Apple will need to impress with its 10thannive­rsary iPhone, Milunovich said, and in a best-case scenario, a truly innovative iPhone would help the company reclaim its mantle for innovation.

“(We) can picture the phone looking like a clear piece of glass when looking through the camera,” he said in the note. “Rather than staring down at a screen while we walk across the street or stand in line, we would be far more engaged with the world around us.” — Washington Post

(We) can picture the phone looking like a clear piece of glass when looking through the camera. Rather than staring down at a screen while we walk across the street or stand in line, we would be far more engaged with the world around us. – Steven Milunovich, UBS Securities analyst

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