Chinese tech giant Baidu is making use of its artificial intelligence research – through augmented reality.
Today, the top search engine firm unveiled its AR Lab, a spin-off from its Institute for Deep Learning. Baidu plans to use its new Beijing lab, as well as technology from its AI research – image recognition, object detection, and more – to build smartphone-based AR applications.
“Our cell phone-based approach has enabled us to ship augmented reality experiences to a significant number of users in a very short amount of time,” says Andrew Ng, chief scientist at Baidu, in a press release. “There is an appetite for this technology; we are seeing rapid adoption by our partners in a range of industries.”
It signals a future in which your phone’s camera and AR – popularized by Pokemon Go – could become one method of navigating the internet.
Last August, Baidu launched DuSee, an AR platform that integrates with the company’s smartphone apps. It’s primarily used as a marketing and sales tool for Baidu’s brand partners, such as KFC and L’Oreal. Over Christmas it was used to create an AR marketing campaign for Lancôme in which customers could win gifts by tapping on virtual reindeer running around an in-store Christmas tree.
“It’s not only a research lab – [the AR Lab] can also help Baidu explore new businesses,” Wu Zhongqin, head of Baidu’s new AR Lab, tells Tech in Asia.
AR-enabled search
One of the main goals of Baidu’s AR Lab is to help it find new commercial opportunities. Baidu just saw its quarterly revenue drop for the first time ever, a consequence of the government’s crackdown on Baidu’s lucrative healthcare advertising business after multiple medical scandals last year, including the death of a 21-year-old after undergoing experimental cancer treatment he found advertised on Baidu.
AR products, especially AR marketing, could be a new channel of revenue for the Chinese tech firm. That’s why Baidu is focusing on smartphones, which are not only more accessible than hardware like Microsoft’s HoloLens, but can connect to Baidu’s existing online services. Several Baidu apps already have AR functionality, including Mobile Baidu, its Siri-esque app.
“We don’t just use the camera to [display] objects from a specific image,” says Zhongqin. “When users are searching online, we […] encourage them to use AR.”
Baidu today showed off an AR tour of the Chinese capital’s nine ancient city gates, which have been demolished or renovated beyond recognition. People passing by a city gate can aim their phones at certain photos to trigger the 3D simulations – or they can do so from home. By searching for the city gate’s name, people can view a virtual model of the city oriented and sized according to their palm, says Zhongqin.
“[The object] integrates into your environment and is tracked [in real-time], so you can experience the city gate from different angles,” he says. The AR Lab is exploring the use of rendering 3D objects wherever users point their smartphone, not only on certain images or surfaces.
Zhongqin’s team, now about 50 people, is also working on tech – based on simultaneous localization and mapping, something crucial to robotics and self-driving cars – so that a single-camera phone, which lacks information about depth, can generate 3D maps of its environment.
This post Riding on its AI research, Baidu opens AR lab appeared first on Tech in Asia.