Google announces Project Tango, a smartphone that can map the world around it
February 21, 2014 – The Verge
Google has built a prototype Android smartphone that
can learn and map the world around it. The device comes from a new
initiative called Project Tango,
and it’s ready to get the phone into developers’ hands to see what the
technology is capable of. Google says that the phone will learn the
dimension of rooms and spaces just by being moved around inside of them —
walking around your bedroom, for example, would help the phone learn
the shape of your home. The hope is that by creating a robust map of the
world, Google’s phone could eventually give precise directions to any
given point that needs to be reached.
“A HUMAN-SCALE UNDERSTANDING OF SPACE AND MOTION”
It’s an ambitious project, but that should be no
surprise given who it’s coming from: Tango comes out of the Advanced
Technology and Projects group — one of the few pieces of Motorola that
Google has opted to hang on to rather
than sell. “The goal of Project Tango is to give mobile devices a
human-scale understanding of space and motion,” says Johnny Lee, leader
of Project Tango. Google has 200 devices that it’s preparing to give out
to developers who want to build mapping tools, games, and new
algorithms that take advantage of the phone’s sensors, and it expects to
send them all out by March 14th.
The Tango devices work by using a motion tracking
camera and a depth sensor built into their backsides. While being moved
around, the sensors will detect their orientation and what’s in front of
them, using that data to build out a 3D map of their surroundings.
While the basic goal is to create detailed indoor maps, Google’s
distribution of developer devices speaks to the other possibilities it
sees coming out of this type of data: it suggests that Tango could be
used to create more realistic augmented reality games or to assist the
visually impaired when they’re navigating an unfamiliar area.
Google stresses that the technology is still in early
stages, but it still sees it as on the way to reaching millions of
people down the road. And now, the Advanced Technology and Projects
group will have plenty of time and resources to make that happen.
Alongside the announcement of Tango, Android chief Sundar Pichai
extended a welcome to the team, suggesting that they’ve now fully fallen
underneath Google. The group is also responsible for Project Ara, which
hopes to build modular smartphones.
Project Tango appears to be a natural fit for Lee’s leadership. Lee’s name may be familiar from his work creating virtual reality tools out of a Wii remote while at Carnegie Mellon, and later for helping Microsoft develop the Kinect. He joined Google in 2011,
and clearly he’s still been working on equally ambitious
motion-tracking projects since then. Google says it did not create Tango
all on its own, however, but with assistance from various universities
and research institutions as well. The project has been in the works at
the Advanced Technologies group for the past year.
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