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  <title><![CDATA[Argon, the Augmented Reality Web Browser, Available Now on iPhone]]></title>
  <body><![CDATA[<p>You’re in a bookstore checking out the bestsellers. You scan the
book with your iPhone camera and immediately see information floating in the
air, provided by the store’s information channel. You add your own book club
channel to the view, overlaying additional reviews from friends and other
relevant information from shopping sites on the Web.</p><p>While skimming the book reviews, you notice a note that looks as if it’s
floating in the air on your personal channel, reminding you about a nearby
restaurant you’ve been meaning to visit. You buy the book and head to lunch,
looking forward to reading a bit over lunch before heading back to work.</p><p>No, this isn't you in 20 years ---&nbsp;it's a scenario possible in the very
near future thanks to a new technology designed to bring the Web off your
hand-held device and into the real world. Developers hope to port Argon to other platforms, such as Android, in the near
future.&nbsp; </p><p>“Our goal is to provide a foundation for millions of Web developers to begin
writing applications so they can provide users with new experiences that are
unique to the world of AR,” said Blair MacIntyre, KHARMA project director and
associate professor in the School of Interactive Computing at Georgia Tech.
“Basically, we want to move the Web into the world.”</p>



<p>The Argon mobile augmented reality browser was developed with
funding support from Alcatel-Lucent through its University Innovations Program.</p><p>"Alcatel-Lucent is actively involved in supporting open standards across
mobile and fixed devices to enable consumers and business users to enjoy rich
communication anywhere, anytime and over any device. Our participation as a
project sponsor in Georgia Tech's development of the world’s first open
standards-based mobile augmented reality browser is an example of that,"
said Marc Goodman, director of Alcatel-Lucent's University Innovations Program.
</p><p>Augmented reality allows people to view the physical world with computer media
overlaid on top of it.&nbsp; The approach is often suggested as a way of adding
information to the world and improving the way that people can interact with
that information, but can also be used for games, art or any imaginable
application where the media content relates to nearby people, places or
things.&nbsp; </p><p>Argon marks the first significant step in marrying the power of the Internet to
the world of augmented reality.&nbsp; Until now, most AR applications had to be
developed and deployed on the user’s mobile device, limiting the reach of the
technology.&nbsp; Commercial attempts at creating more general AR browser
platforms have offered limited content and interaction options. </p><p>What makes Argon different from standard mobile Internet browsers is its
ability to put content out into the world. Argon takes video from the phone’s
camera and renders graphical content on top of it.&nbsp; With this initial
release, any content that can be displayed in the iPhone’s Mobile Safari Web
browser can be pushed out into the world on virtual billboards. Other content
can be created using forms and Javascript.&nbsp; Future releases will also
include support for a range of 3D content.</p><p>“Basically, there are lots of little programs that provide the ability to use
AR to put some information out in the world around you.&nbsp; Some, like these
early browsers, also allow users to contribute content, but none allow the full
range of dynamic content, control and interactivity of the Web, with everything
hosted on your own servers,” said MacIntyre.</p><p>By building on top of open Web technologies and standards, the KHARMA
development platform opens the door to AR applications with a full range of
possible interactivity, collaboration, Web mashups and connections to cloud
services that users and developers have come to rely on.&nbsp; </p><p>For example, rather than just displaying the locations of businesses or other
nearby places, you can customize the content delivery as you desire.&nbsp; When
you use the browser to view the channel for a theater, the channel might
display the movie times, allow you to view previews of the films, or create
in-browser games and interactive experiences tied to the movies you
choose.&nbsp; Those games might be collaborative with other nearby viewers, or
with people at another theater across town or across the country. The
possibilities are endless.</p><p>“If you look at the history of any media, such as film or the Web, initially
the content creators are the same people who created the technology,” said
MacIntyre. “But at some point that begins to change, and tools come along that
allow many people to begin to work with the technology. When that happens, we
begin to discover what the medium is truly about.&nbsp; With the KHARMA
specifications, and the Argon browser, we want to put AR into the hands of the
millions of people who know how to create websites, and hopefully take a step
toward understanding the potential of AR.”</p>

<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></body>
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    <item>
      <value>2011-02-22T00:00:00-05:00</value>
      <timezone><![CDATA[America/New_York]]></timezone>
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  <field_summary_sentence>
    <item>
      <value><![CDATA[Blair MacIntyre puts AR in the palm of your hand.]]></value>
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  <field_summary>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p> The Georgia Institute of Technology announces the release of Argon, the
first mobile augmented reality (AR) browser based on open Web
standards.&nbsp; Argon is available now for free download to the iPhone at
Apple’s App Store.</p>]]></value>
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            <title><![CDATA[Argon, the Augmented Reality Web Browser (Photo)]]></title>
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      <value><![CDATA[<p><strong>Georgia Tech Media Relations</strong><br />Laura Diamond<br /><a href="mailto:laura.diamond@comm.gatech.edu">laura.diamond@comm.gatech.edu</a><br />404-894-6016<br />Jason Maderer<br /><a href="mailto:maderer@gatech.edu">maderer@gatech.edu</a><br />404-660-2926</p>]]></value>
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