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Check out this video that Lars Hyland posted of Augmented Reality in action at BMW: http://larsislearning.blogspot.com/2009/09/learning-augmented.html

Just discovered this blog and absolutely love it!

Here's another amazing product demoed at a TED conference that I think will bring about a more "augmented reality" as you call it. The product is called the "Sixth Sense".

http://www.ted.com/talks/lang/eng/pattie_maes_demos_the_sixth_sense.html

Cammy and Andrew--thanks for the links--amazing! And thanks for the compliment, too, Andrew. :-)

I'd actually seen the Sixth Sense video but had forgotten about it when I was writing this post. What possibilities, though!

One thing I have mixed feelings about is how this is going to change the nature of work and who does it. We pay for expertise and as more and more expertise can be provided by computers with a human merely performing the actions, what is this going to mean for us as a society, particularly in terms of wages? Not sure where this is headed, but think it could also have negative repercussions for a lot of people.

Yes, robots.

Yeah, that's what I'm thinking . . . The next thing you know, we find out we're really living in The Matrix.

One problem I see is the same problem I have when I go online to search for a book. In a book store, I can walk the stacks pull out what might catch my fancy, etc... It often takes me to areas I never thought I would go.

However, augmented reality will provide the user with information in a way the program feels is important which shapes what is available what isn't.

For example, when my husband and I were looking for a house, we went through a broker. The broker would send us to houses HE thought might be best for us. But we found our house through a friend who happened to mention the house we eventually bought was up for sale. She had no information on it except it was up for sale and where it was located. We would never have seen the house because our broker would have thought it under our price range.

The same happens when I search on google. I'll know that there are certain resources out there, but I can't just journey through, I need to make sure I have the correct key words and the correct order to find what I want. I sometimes prefer just going to library and walking through the stacks, leafing through books, and finding gems and pieces of information I never knew were out there. Augmented reality might force users to miss some of those small gems because the program parameters don't allow the stroll.

Good point, Virginia--augmented reality could definitely get in the way of serendipity. It will probably also support homophily, as we've discussed before. It will be interesting to see how we balance these things--or maybe we won't.

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