Advancing Technology Converts Physical Objects Into Vr With a Camera Phone
The team of IT experts from around the world have been working on improving and enhancing the current scenario and has developed a new method of converting the photos taken by the smartphone of the physical objects by using the flash light of the smartphone camera.
Now, you might think what does it get converted into?
The pictures of the physical objects that you take by using the flashlight ON on your smartphone can convert the objects into Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality (AR/VR as we know them generally!).
This is completely a new invention in the technological world and every mobile app creator is quite excited about this new invention. This can be integrated into the mobile apps to make the apps even more interesting and productive.
If we talk about the past for any iOS development company or any app developer, it was not possible to do the same conversion with this much ease as it was a lengthy process and of course consumed a lot of time to change directly the picture of the physical objects to AR/VR. Not to mention, it was quite inconvenient also. These researches have been made easier by the mobile app creator teams in Korea and Spain, as they have been working on this invention from quite some time.
How is this feature accomplished in the smartphone?
This feature is used to reproduce real-world objects in the AR/ VR environment, the user needs to copy the 3D geometry and appearance of the object. With the approach of this new invention, as contrary to the previous one, you can take only one image from a single camera, simple, inexpensive, and reproduce the picture to Virtual Reality. As this is a more powerful method and takes much more less time as compared and also this method is very helpful for any iOS development company as well as Android app development company that wants to create something really exciting for the users to use the app.
This can be made more effective and productive when hardware specialists include multiple light sources in the 3D laser including a scanner or multiple cameras, or alternatively a hundred illuminated dome now configured to require a geometric exterior modeling object. Instead, this new technology does not require just more than one camera to achieve high quality output.