iPad 4.0? I’m ready now! Gary Hayes sent me the link to his video on YouTube illustrating the augmented reality (AR) experience would be on an iPad-sized screen. It is a great video; it really captures a sense of the potential of AR across a gamut of applications. After you check out the video, go to Gary’s website and read the blog entry “Where Industry and Academia Fear to Tread – StoryLabs Launch” on the need for storytelling in effective message construction and delivery–and the conundrum of finding someone who knows how to speak “transmedia.” As someone who teaches digital storytelling and emerging technologies, it was exciting to see his take on it. The world is no longer linear. Well, it never was, but before it moved slow enough so our inability to see it wasn’t such a problem. Now, it is. And we have to learn to be nonlinear, multidimensional storytellers. To do this, we need to become nonlinear thinkers. This isn’t just about storytelling. Storytelling is creating a narrative which functions as a cognitive map or model that organizes information so that it has meaning–whether it’s emotional, functional or inspirational. The ability to construct narrative across media means we have to let go of the need to have a story arc start and finish all in the same place. This takes cognitive flexibility and it is especially critical if we want to nurture innovation and creativity. The world is changing too rapidly and is too complex to keep up without being able to think and communicate in new and exciting ways. There are few better exercises to limber up your synapses than learning to create transmedia narratives.
Who Wants More Reality?
Previously published on Psychology Today.com “Positively Media”
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Sometimes when new technology is introduced, you get a glimpse of the future. The iPad was like that for me. Now Samsung is introducing the Galaxy Tab (tablet) on September 2. This time, the glimpse of the future comes from their marketing pitch not their product. The top item the Galaxy Tab offers those who want “more”? Augmented reality.
Samsung’s Galaxy is an interesting and slick entrant in the tablet field. Size-wise, it’s halfway between the size of a cell phone and an iPad with a screen big enough to see things without squinting. (I’ve heard the iPad called an iPhone for old people.) Personally, I really didn’t expect to like the iPad as much as I do, but I carry it everywhere. It’s pretty hard to be an Apple-killer these days, but Samsung got a couple of things right that Apple missed in the first generation: the camera/video function.
It is those added features that drive the sales pitch of the Galaxy Tab teaser promo video. However, the promo is more revealing about the changing media technology landscape than the attributes of the tablet. When the video asks the consumer “Need More?” It offers up augmented reality ahead of video calls and full web browsing.
Augmented reality bridges the Internet with the real world as a functional reality. It takes the information you can find on the Internet—from directions and prices to history—and superimposes it onto reality.

Terminator vision is augmented reality
If you’ve seen the digital down lines on a football field, or Terminator vision, then you’ve seen applications of augmented reality. Augmented reality not only merges the information from the Internet with the real world, but it allows you to access information when and where you need it. And it does this for you while you are out in the real world. All this magic comes from easy to use, free software and a camera-equipped mobile phone with Internet access. Get restaurant reviews or comparison shop just by pointing your phone. Identify a plant, see what a London street corner looked like in 1890, find out when a building was built of if there is an office for rent. This is a tiny tip of the iceberg of how we will be able to think about communications in the not-so-distant future.

Augmented reality is better than a local director service
Augmented reality will be as disruptive a technology as Web 2.0 because it takes user-control of information and personal experience with technology to a whole new level. It makes information geographically and time relevant while access is totally geographically and time irrelevant.
By layering text, audio, video and images over reality, augmented reality enhances our understanding of how things work. It’s like getting to be a perpetual 2 year old, asking ‘what’s that?’ For some cool examples of using augmented reality like a time machine: see London’s Street Museum and History Pin.
Unlike other types of technology, augmented reality transforms the environment into an immersive learning ecology (even if you aren’t trying to learn something.) Creating an immersive environment has many advantages. In embodied cognition terms, we have many ways of manipulating the environment to help us think. Augmented reality allows us to off-load cognitive work onto the environment in all new ways. That leaves all kinds of brain ergs available for something more useful: synthesizing information, problem solving, reasoning, and planning. At a time when people are worrying about information overload, augmented reality is the ultimate filter. It will not show you the price of a latte in Tallahassee if you are in NYC. You are in charge. Your information is targeted, self-selected and self-relevant. Augmented reality is working through what
I think of as the “shiny penny” stage, full of exciting new-kid-on-the-block bells and whistles. Unless finding the closest Starbucks is a critical issue for you, it hasn’t been used much in prosocial or substantive ways, but that will come soon. (See, for example, Imagined Communities. ) The potential for environmental exploration and learning is extraordinary. Physical objects are often used in education: they convey meaning, relationships, provide opportunities for collaboration, and focus attention.

Vito Technology’s Star Walk
Augmented reality is powerful because it extends our ability to use the power of technology in our own environment. We can use it in a way that is not separate from the interpersonal communication space unlike many other technologies.Augmented reality is not separate from place. It is place. Place matters because it turns out that that most real-world thinking actually occurs in the real world. Not only that, but it happens in specific and complex environments with practical goals that relies on the interaction with, feedback from, and manipulation of real stuff.
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Photos of of kids and StarWalk iPhone app from Gizmodo
Sneaking in a Little Culture Amidst the Marketing in Las Vegas using Augmented Realty Apps
AR has lots of benefits, such as portability, interactivity, and personalization. But an under appreciated feature is that it can be a stealth contributor to cultural literacy while it pushes a marketing agenda. By including the arts and other cultural offerings and previews in the line-up of “attractions,” AR has the potential to increase awareness about the fine arts. By including accessible information about artists, musicians, and performances, AR can demystify, humanize, and normalize appreciation for the fine arts into a Main Street rather than Park Avenue experience.
In the world of “money is no object” and “larger than life,” who better to engage the use of augmented reality to show people around town than Las Vegas? The MGM Mirage properties has launched Vegas’ first AR iPhone apps available through, you guessed it, iTunes. This is just a taste of things to come for the hospitality industry sectors willing to make the investment in creativity and innovation. Well-designed AR is the most effective way to bridge the gap between information gathering for specific goals (like vacation planning) and information gathering for entertainment and education that has value independent of goal-specific behavior. The line-up includes “Resort Apps:’ resort-specific apps for Mandalay Bay, MGM Grand and New York-New York, “Entertainment of Las Vegas:” an entertainment app with access to video previews and pertinent information like times and ticket sales at 10 resorts, and “Vegas Reality:” that links the iPhone and GPS services to allow you to interact with attractions on the strip, monitor late-breaking hot spots and trends via Twitter, and higher-brow offerings such as the CityCenter’s public Art Collection including artist bios and information about their work. Vegas Reality encapsulates the real value of AR; it exposes the user to different types of information, including things that might not have been something they’d would know about or consider finding. (Like the art collection. Who knew that Swedish sculptor Claes Oldenburg was on display in Vegas?)





