Hands-On: Nreal Light Augmented Reality Glasses!

Hands-On: Nreal Light Augmented Reality Glasses!

We try on the Nreal Light, the first augmented reality wearable that actually looks like a pair of glasses. We’re impressed by the weight of the Light at under 90 grams, the resolution and color of the AR images, and its compatibility with smartphones. Plus, Jeremy gives his impressions of the upcoming Asgard’s Wrath after a two-hour demo! Shot by Gunther Kirsch and edited by Norman Chan Subscribe for more videos! http://www.youtube.com/subscription_c… Follow us on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/testedcom Get updates on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/testedcom Tested is: Adam Savage http://www.twitter.com/donttrythis Norman Chan http://www.twitter.com/nchan Simone Giertz http://www.twitter.com/simonegiertz Joey Fameli http://www.joeyfameli.com Gunther Kirsch https://guntherkirsch.com Ryan Kiser https://www.instagram.com/ryan.kiser Kishore Hari http://www.twitter.com/sciencequiche Sean Charlesworth http://www.twitter.com/cworthdynamics Jeremy Williams http://www.twitter.com/jerware Kayte Sabicer https://www.instagram.com/kaytesabicer Bill Doran https://twitter.com/chinbeard Ariel Waldman http://www.twitter.com/arielwaldman Darrell Maloney http://www.twitter.com/thebrokennerd83 Kristen Lomasney https://twitter.com/krystynlo Intro bumper by Abe Dieckman Set design by Danica Johnson http://www.twitter.com/saysdanica Set build by Asa Hillis http://www.asahillis.com Thanks for watching!

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DE Video News: AR gear at Augmented World Expo 2019

DE Video News: AR gear at Augmented World Expo 2019

Lenovo ThinkReality At the recent Augmented World Expo (AWE), Lenovo introduces its first enterprise-targeted AR headgear. Dubbed ThinkReality A6, the device is powered by a smartphone-size compute box that you can carry, small enough to fit in your pocket. Lenovo also offers ThinkReality software kit, which contains sample applications. The company expects developers will take the sample applications and customize them for their own verticals, such as manufacturing, healthcare, and architecture. Fashionable nreal Also at the show is nreal, offering its AR glasses that look more like casual, fashion items than a tech gadget. It lets you project digital objects and scenes onto real-world surfaces (for example, tabletops). Both Lenovo ThinkReality and nreal power their devices with small portable compute boxes, allowing users to roam and interact with digital objects with much more freedom. Varjo showcases XR-1 Varjo is at the show to let attendees try out its XR-1 AR system. Varjo’s device uses eye tracking, which allows users to use thier eyesight — where they choose to focus on — as the selection system. Without the need to hold and operate joysticks for object selection and commands, Varjo’s handsfree approach gives developers more options to incorporate complex manual tasks in training apps. Holograms you can touch You can’t physically touch the holograms inside the Looking Glass Factory’s holographic displays, but you can virtually. Objects respond to gesture commands in the same way they do in touch screen devices. Moreover, if the digital object itself has built-in physics, it responds to pokes and pushes with virtual hands. This opens doors to simulation software makers who may want a more natural way to apply forces and pressures on digital design for design exploration. Looking Glass now offers a desktop display system with built-in compute power and a touch-panel display for file navigation, allowing the device to operate independently (that is, the need to borrow power from a workstation via a cord to run). Scope AR wants you to publish With the rise of AR-VR hardware comes the need to publish AR-VR content, like apps for design review, training, remote technical help, or maintenance instruction. For this market, Scope AR offers its WorkLink publishing software, which lets you use CAD data to produce instruction manuals, compatible with mobile devices and AR headsets. Scope AR offers its software by subscription, as SaaS.

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“CBS This Morning” Hurricane Florence Augmented Reality

“CBS This Morning” Hurricane Florence Augmented Reality

An augmented reality segment featuring WCBS forecaster Lonnie Quinn explaining storm surge during “CBS This Morning” coverage on Hurricane Florence.

This video may contain content copyrighted by third parties but is used as part of news coverage and commentary and therefore subject to the fair use exception under Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 107 of United States law. NewscastStudio makes no claims to third party content contained in this video and no infringement is intended.

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How augmented reality will add hours to our day | Aya Sadder | TEDxRoma

How augmented reality will add hours to our day | Aya Sadder | TEDxRoma

Every day our time is divided into physical reality, digital reality and augmented reality. Those three worlds are going to blend in future society to create 72 hour day that we will have to learn how to manage if we want to live every aspect of our reality to our fullest potential. Ogni giorno il nostro tempo è suddiviso tra realtà fisica, realtà digitale e realtà aumentata. Tre mondi che nella società del futuro si uniranno per creare giornate di 72 ore che dovremo imparare a gestire, se vogliamo vivere al massimo del nostro potenziale ogni aspetto della nostra realtà. Aya Sadder is an Incubator Manager at Intelak dealing with aviation, travels and tourism in the United Arab Emirates and forms partnerships between different bodies of the region. Aya graduated at the Babson College of Boston and is part of the Bobson Middle Eastern Alumni club in Dubai. She worked for over five years under the aegis of Techstars and Google as a worldwide certified facilitator for Startup Weekend. Today she is also an active mentor and relator in different programs linked to the future of technology and of women in STEMs. Aya Sadder è Incubator Manager presso Intelak, che si occupa di aviazione, viaggi e turismo negli Emirati Arabi Uniti e crea collaborazioni tra enti diversi della regione. Aya si è laureata al Babson College di Boston e fa parte del club Babson Middle Eastern Alumni di Dubai. Ha anche lavorato per oltre 5 anni sotto l’egidia di Techstars e Google come facilitatore certificato a livello mondiale per Startup Weekend. Ad oggi, è anche mentore attivo e relatrice in diversi programmi legati al futuro della tecnologia e delle donne nelle STEM. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx

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Augmented Reality Zoo

Augmented Reality Zoo

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Virtual Zoo is an interactive, Augmented Reality entertainment. While a camera records the images of the surroundings and displays them on the screen, a computer connected to a motion sensor generates animated animals in real-time and adds them to the displayed image. As a result, users can interact with a giraffe, an elephant, a panda bear, a family of penguins and many other animals. Like in a real ZOO, users can hear the sounds made by the animals and watch how they behave. One-click is enough to capture your interaction with animals on camera and the photograph will be sent to a chosen e-mail address with a link allowing to share it on social media.

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How Augmented Reality Can Give Us Superpowers | John Werner | TEDxMidAtlantic

How Augmented Reality Can Give Us Superpowers | John Werner | TEDxMidAtlantic

Augmented Reality and emerging tech expert John Werner demonstrates some of the most interesting potential uses of Augmented Reality, and explains why this emerging field has the power to give all of us Superpowers. John has created a career out of bringing ideas, networks and people together to generate powerful results. Currently, John serves as Managing Director and Partner at Link Ventures, and as Chief Network Officer, SVP Corporate Development of Cogo Labs. Before joining Link Ventures and Cogo Labs, John’s deep curiosity and penchant for problem-solving led him to a diverse set of roles spanning many fields and interests. Previously, John was a VP at Meta, a Y-Combinator augmented reality startup based in Silicon Valley. John’s also served as the Head of Innovation and New Ventures at the MIT Media Lab’s Camera Culture Group, and the Managing Director of Emerging Worlds SIG, where he led the launch of collaborative innovation centers in Mumbai, Nashik, and Hyderabad. John also channels his passion and curiosity into cultivating platforms for thought and exchange. John is the Founder & CEO of ARIA, a community focused on the potential of augmented reality and the Blockchain+AI+Human, now known as Imaginationinaction.xyz which takes place at MIT and the World Economic Forum in Davos with MIT Professor Sandy Pentland. John also founded Ideas in Action Inc., a non-profit that creates and produces TEDxBeaconStreet, and TEDxMIT.org. John was also a co-founder of Citizen Schools, an advisor for PhotoButler, Vestigo Ventures and Founders Forum (Boston), an MIT Connection Science Fellow, a Loeb Fellow at the Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design and a graduate of Hamilton College. John is on the board of Fort Ticonderoga and the Concussion Institute. John was recognized by Harvard Business Review for his leadership; by BostonInno in 2014 as a top 50 on Fire in Boston; Boston Chamber with a TOYL (Ten Outstanding Young Leaders) Award in 2006. In his free time, John is a passionate photographer and an accomplished triathlete (qualified for the worlds and 4x nationals). John and his family live in Brookline, MA. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at https://www.ted.com/tedx

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