virtualreality
By Mike Elgan The “Augmented Connected Workforce” is one of Gartner's Top 10 Strategic Technology Trends for 2024. Which raises the question: “Wait, what?” The Augmented Connected Workforce (ACWF) is a concept or a paradigm where advanced technologies are used to give employees what essentially amount to super powers. Specifically, the idea envisions integrating workers with Augmented Reality (AR) glasses, AI tools of every description, wearable sensors, wearable communication tools, IoT, robots, exoskeletons, machine vision and cloud computing. In short, the Augmented Connected Workforce conc...
Computer World
By Jonny Evans From its Darwin AI acquisition to recent reports claiming Apple might work with Google and others to support a wider array of generative AI (genAI) tools than it plans to introduce, it’s pretty clear the company has chosen to be focused in where it creates its own AI technologies. At least one of these focus areas reflects work the company has been doing since before AI became a buzzword — and that’s vision intelligence. Intimations of lifeBy this, I specially mean AI that can understand what it sees, contextualize that information, make decisions based on it, change or alter th...
Computer World
By Mike Elgan You hear that sound? That’s the sound of augmented reality (AR) fading away as a driving concept in technology. You could blame Apple, which handed down an edict to Apple Vision Pro developers: “Refer to your app as a spatial computing app. Don’t describe your app experience as augmented reality (AR), virtual reality (VR), extended reality (XR), or mixed reality (MR).” But blaming Apple would be wrong. Instead, blame artificial intelligence (AI) — specifically the generative AI (genAI) trend of the past year and a half; it’s completely upended and re-directed the purpose and func...
Computer World
By Ryan Faas “I haven’t upgraded the Mac (or PC) I use for work in a years. I was going to replace it this year, and I’m wondering if I could or should get an Apple Vision Pro instead. What do you think?” I’ve heard more variations of that question in the past two weeks than I expected. It’s not a bad idea in some respects. I can see the wheels turning in people’s heads when they consider that this is a device with clear potential well beyond playing with dinosaurs, reliving moments with spatial photos or watching immersive movies or other content. It draws you into a slightly different but in...
Computer World
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