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When Augmented Reality Goes Social


Now
that augmented reality has established itself as the technology buzzword of the
year, what impact will it have on social media?

Google Trends shows
the growth curve
for augmented reality, first appearing in the United
States in November 2008, and then picking up more steam in March and June of
this year. Putting it in perspective though, over the past 12 months, there
were 16
times as many searches for "widgets"
and nearly 26 times as many
searches for "Second Life." It has some catching up to do with the
emerging trends of yesteryear.

So what is augmented reality (often abbreviated as AR)? Here&;s the
simplest definition I can muster: augmented reality provides a layer of digital
content over real-world experiences. Vague? Perhaps. But it covers the main
ways augmented reality is used today.

The first, the best known, and the most gimmicky is when you print out
an image, hold it up to a webcam, and a 3D effect appears on the screen. GE was
one of the first brands to do this, using augmented
reality to create digital holograms
to promote its Smart Grid technology; Popular Science then printed the image on its July
magazine cover. Topps
uses augmented reality
to offer 3D games with its baseball cards,
eliminating the need to print out anything else. Doritos turned
bags for its Late Night chips
into an augmented reality campaign, giving
consumers access to online concerts from Blink-182 and Big Boi; fans who made a
lot of noise after could get the band to do an encore performance faster. All
of this is first-generation, so expect a marketing arms race to fuel more buzz.

Far more interesting potential for augmented reality comes from
mobile applications. Instead of webcams, the mobile version relies on camera
phones.&; Consumers can view their surroundings through the camera lens and
find location-based information appearing on the handset screen.

Several such applications have been made available for Google
Android, and last week word leaked that Yelp was the first to offer augmented
reality on the iPhone via an Easter egg (or hidden feature) in its app; you can
view
my screen shots on Flickr
. The feature, dubbed "Monocle,"
activates your camera so, as you pan around your environment, business listings
pop up in the direction you&39;re looking, all with links to iPhone-optimized Yelp
profiles. This is the first of its kind for the iPhone, and it&39;s still buggy;
most places that came up for me in Manhattan and Brooklyn were close by, but
not in the direction I was looking. Still, I was able to get useful input from
Monocle. Thanks to reviews appearing on Monocle, I even bought a chocolate chip
cookie at Ashby&39;s, a lunch spot near the office (and yes, the reviews were
spot-on).

The reviews also hint at the potential for where social media
fits. I&39;d expect that most of the real-world information used for mobile
augmented reality applications will be user-generated in some way, but curated.
This could be through a system like Yelp, where it hosts and organizes the
reviews that its users submit. Another version of this is Wikitude&39;s
augmented reality browser
, now on Android and soon on the iPhone, where the
initial concept is to overlay Wikipedia information on the screen.

The possibilities are infinite, but they all center on content
anchored to a specific location. Some of this doesn&39;t need to be user-generated
at all, like addresses or public transportation locations. But many other
categories will be especially applicable:

·&0160;
Tweets, especially as Twitter rolls out location information for all
posts.

·&0160;
Facebook updates; as more come from mobile apps, location-based
information will be more central to their meaning.

·&0160;
Games, like new versions of geocaching, where it&39;s possible to compete
with other players based on digital markers uncovered through AR applications.

·&0160;
Art, as in new forms of graffiti that can enhance environments and
provide everything from social commentary to territory marking, all without
defacing physical property.

·&0160;
Citizen journalism, as you&39;ll someday see every tree that once had a cat
stuck in it and every block that had a crime committed on it based on people&39;s
reports.

This is just a sampling, and the marketing opportunities are
coming. If this catches on, consider paid AR listings in Yelp that are a bolder
color or otherwise more prominent. Marketers will also have more to monitor,
especially those brands with a physical presence or brands that are tied to
real-world locations (such as a soda brand that&39;s likely to be consumed at
quick-service restaurants and movie theaters). Marketers will soon have to make
choices on whether to pay attention to, encourage and potentially build these
new applications, or hide from and fight them. My bias should be obvious, but
new technologies always bring new fears.

The hype is building, but the practical applications are coming. If you
were turned off by augmented reality after spending an hour trying to get some
black-and-white printout to trigger some action on a webcam, give it another
look. Some of these applications will literally let you see the world in a new
way.

People reacted to this story.
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Comments to: When Augmented Reality Goes Social
  • Avatar
    September 1, 2009

    Forgive me for the aside, but while we’re on the subject of tech hype why is it that social media sites like tech crunch and mashable talk so little about second life? I hear see almost nothing about it when I read news, and pretty much all I read is tech news, yet second life was used in a communications experiment through one of my classes at SOM (Binghamton University) and my brother worked with it as an admin at Purchase College. Seems like it gets little love from the net.
    On the subject of AR, my feeling is that the difficulty will come as layers become more numerous than iphone apps and there is an information overload. I look forward to seeing emerging innovations in filtering for this untested medium.

    Reply
  • Avatar
    September 3, 2009

    Soon enough we’ll have to choose if we want to take the red pill lol. Seriously, I see more business and more income opportunity with this AR. Imagine new products and services that people won’t simply be able to live without!

    Reply
  • Avatar
    September 4, 2009

    Michaela, there are lots of great ideas here – thanks so much for sharing.
    Yeah, it can be useful, though most of those examples have yet to be seen.
    If you come across any great AR concepts in Sweden or elsewhere, whether
    from your agency or not, I welcome hearing about them.

    Reply
  • Avatar
    September 4, 2009

    Hm, posted my comment in a page outside your blog, i think maybe it’s in better use here.. 😉
    I´d like to add just a thought about AR as you described it the “gimmicky”-way:
    I think the use of AR as advertising or a marketing tool are too truly interesting. (When it gets integrated in our everyday interaction with “advertising” i.e. or products featured with AR.) AR with a function, rather than just a visual effect.
    Exampel: The Nike AR advert where a shoe is shown in “real size”… imagine that on shoes in a internet shoe-shop? Much easier to buy a shoe after being able to view its proportions, how it looks on you… Rayban AR-glasses is another example of that.
    Somewhere I came across the term ‘Lifestyle AR’ and think thats an interesting arena aswell, when AR gets integrated with the way we live. Example: a bar promoting their profile with AR in the actual bar.
    AR as instruction manual for assembling stuff or processes would also be interesting.
    Thanks also for the thoughts on social media possibilities. Great article.

    Reply

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