Instant Alert: Apple is getting serious about competing with Microsoft Hololens and Facebook Oculus

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Apple is getting serious about competing with Microsoft Hololens and Facebook Oculus

by Kif Leswing on Jan 29, 2016, 1:02 PM

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Apple has bought Flyby Media, the Financial Times reports, making it the fourth virtual reality or augmented reality startup the tech giant has purchased in the past few years. 

The company will join a "secret research unit" hundreds strong, which has been building headset prototypes for several months, according to the report. 

Flyby Media's website has been taken down, but its LinkedIn page still has a description the startup: 

At the core of our company is a spatial perception platform (V-Fusion) that provides mobile devices with a human-scale understanding of real world environments, enabling them to see, understand, and navigate the physical world.

But the most interesting part of its profile is this line:

Along our journey, we... developed a proprietary iPhone-based product to create scalable floor plans for integration into Apple’s MapsConnect program (to enable indoor “blue dot” navigation)

Flyby's technology is related to computer vision, an increasingly important technology that allows systems to see and map the world around them, which is essential for products from self-driving cars to augmented reality. 

Previously, Flyby's image recognition technology was used in Google's Project Tango, an Android-based tablet equipped with sensors and cameras which allow it to map indoor environments. 

Apple clearly has big plans in the space. In the past few years, it has purchased augmented reality startups Metatio, FaceShift and PrimeSense. It has also hired high-profile experts in the technology, including Microsoft Hololens engineer N, and Doug Bowman, a researcher from Virginia Tech who specializes in virtual reality. 

Apple issued its customary non-denial to the Financial Times:

"Apple buys smaller technology companies from time to time, and we generally do not discuss our purpose or plans."

SEE ALSO: 5 clues that Apple is working on something big


 
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