Software architect working in Symbian/S60 area since 2000 and still being enthusiastic about mobility. Please visit my introduction page on Forum Nokia Champions web page.
tote_b5 | 06 May, 2008 16:55
I've stumbled upon this article recently and thought might be worth sharing with you.
If
we put the name of this software aside a bit (it obviously tries to
ride the waves of iPhone), the idea is great. Take a smartphone being
able to
- take good quality photos
- use GPS
- communicate over Internet
and
you have your on-line tourist guide always at hand. It doesn't require
too much from the handset, no? I bet even a good feature phone would do.
Of course, the client software shall not be too
thick,
most of the business logic is on server-side, right? An average (phone)
camera quality should be enough, a Bluetooth-attached GPS is sufficient
and basically every mobile phone can transmit data over the net lately.
Okay, if an
angle sensor is also part of the phone, then the client can gather more data that eventually makes recognition more accurate.
As
opposed to the client-side, the server must be very intelligent. Image
recognition can be very complex, since poor image resolution, distant
objects, pictures taken from different angles, etc. can make it
very-very tricky if not
impossible.
Yeah, I know that the article mentions that the concept was proved, but
I believe it only when I see it, you know. Obviously, the solution must
be community-driven - you cannot expect any service providers to
maintain such a big database alone. And I'm sure that from business
point of view it's the server-side software that one can license,
whilst the client software would be available free of charge. At least,
that would make sense.
Finally, it's very interesting that others are also making experiments in this area.
- Android Scan is an application written for Android Developer Challenge
that uses camera and mobile processing power for barcode recognition
and scanning for metadata of CDs, DVDs, books on the internet.
- Nokia also develops navigating system based on image recognition, where you can just "take
a picture of a nearby landmark, like the Golden Gate Bridge, with the
camera in your mobile phone. Then, Nokia will match your photo with
other landmark photos in its mapping database, and tell you where you
are."
- J-MAGIC is a Japanese company that "sees market for picture-based search", too.
And
the list is by far not complete. I wonder who will come up with the
most innovative idea bundled with a sustainable revenue on the service
so that both sides (i.e. consumers and providers) get what they want.
Any thoughts?
Originally from mobile-thoughts.blogspot.com.
Tote
You must login to post comments.
Login
Impressive
bogdan.galiceanu | 06/05/2008, 17:39
That's very interesting stuff. Having your phone display information about anything you take pictures of sounds great.
I wonder how long it will be before they iron out all the bugs (like objects being mistaken for other similar ones or some objects not showing up in the database from time to time).
Still, well-worth thinking about this.