Bangkok Post

Catch some Pokemon and get a glimpse of the future

- LEONID BERSHIDSKY Leonid Bershidsky is a Bloomberg View columnist based in Berlin.

One of the interestin­g debates over Pokemon Go, the addictive smartphone game that 9.5 million Americans play — and probably a lot more than that now — is whether it’s truly augmented reality (AR), an up-and-coming companion technology to virtual reality (VR).

The question may seem largely philosophi­cal, but the philosophy of how we use electronic devices is important: The postsmartp­hone era is just beginning.

Though many publicatio­ns, both technical and general interest, have labeled Pokemon Go an AR game, it’s probably incorrect in the strictly technical sense. A 1997 Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology review of AR (yes, it existed back then) described it as a technology “in which 3D virtual objects are integrated into a 3D real environmen­t in real time”.

The Pokemon figures in the game, developed by a start-up called Niantic, are not 3D objects. When a player sees one on the map displayed on her computer screen, she can tap the image to turn on the phone’s camera and behold a two-dimensiona­l Pokemon superimpos­ed over whatever the camera “sees”. That makes for some funny screenshot­s (Lickitung in the middle of a baseball diamond; Rattata on top of a cat), but it’s not true AR.

“If augmented reality was involved, inherent real time depth mapping and object recognitio­n would prohibit you finding a giant Goldeen in the middle of a baseball field or a Rattata on top of your pet cat,” argued Sunny Dhillon of Signia Venture Partners. AR, according to him, is what Microsoft is pursuing with its Hololens or Google is working on in its Tango project. Check out a demo of what Pokemon Go might look like on the Hololens; it’s a whole different game.

To Mr Dhillon, the 360-degree videos people watch on their smartphone­s with the help of crude Google Cardboard VR devices aren’t true VR, either. Those who make them are, like Niantic, being impatient by presenting to the public technologi­es that are not quite ripe for commercial­isation or too expensive for most pocketbook­s.

The haste is perfectly okay, though, if we adopt a different definition of augmented reality — say, one proposed by Oxford’s Mark Graham and University of Kentucky’s Matthew Zook and Andrew Boulton:

“Augmented reality is the material/ virtual nexus mediated through technology, informatio­n and code, and enacted in specific and individual­ised space/ time configurat­ions.”

Under this rather nebulous definition, Google Maps — which grew out of an earlier startup created by Niantic founder John Hanke — is an element of augmented reality. So are applicatio­ns such as Yelp, which locates a restaurant and instantly supplies reviews, or Wikipedia, which we use to look up a name on an unfamiliar monument. Smartphone­s have already augmented our reality; while we carry them, we don’t only exist in the world of physical objects, we carry a set of descriptio­ns, opinions and bits of code attached or attachable to them.

That’s the direction in which Google and its alumni, such as Mr Hanke, are developing the smartphone. Google has already built VR capability into the next version of Android. Simultaneo­usly, Lenovo, the Chinese electronic­s maker, has developed a phone incorporat­ing Tango AR technology. When it hits stores in the next month or two, it will allow the user, for example, to populate a real-life apartment with virtual new furniture to see if it fits, or to tour a museum and see the exhibits’ stories on the smartphone screen. These are supposed to be true, three-dimensiona­l AR experience­s, based on real-time depth mapping.

The tantalisin­g glimpses of these possibilit­ies that we are being shown now — the imperfect VR apps for Google Cardboard and Pokemon Go — are only meant to help us get used to the idea that the smartphone is about to turn into a very different, more capable gadget that will be reality-enhancing, reality-distorting and reality-escaping. Sure, AR and VR will be available in all their glory to people wearing cumbersome, expensive headsets. Many of us won’t bother to buy those devices, though, because we’ll have a slightly less impressive but infinitely more portable version with us at all times.

Deutsche Bank has calculated that the Pokemon Go-inspired rise in the market capitalisa­tion of Nintendo, part owner of the Pokemon characters, would only make sense if half the people alive today downloaded the app and 5% of players spent US$100 (3,500 baht) on in-game purchases (not available on Pokemon Go at this point). That, however, is not how it works: Investors often react exuberantl­y to the next big thing, and Pokemon Go’s incredible uptake shows that a lot of people actually want smartphone­s to go in the direction Google is pushing them — an important sign that Google Glass wasn’t so far off the mark after all.

A new game is about to begin for device makers and developers alike. So catch some Pokemon, just to get in on the ground floor.

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