I realized a few days ago that AR is more for robots and automation than for humans.
Imagine a company supporting ar in there product for maintenance.
They need to describe there Maschine to a point that AR can create an overlay and a step by step guide.
If you do this so that your technician can do it so can a robot.
If we ever make the effort to export 3d models from things and make them available, I believe we will see ML extracting repair steps and robots executing them before humans walking around with AR gogles.
Why would a robot need AR at all? And the challenge with building a repair robot is not to provide it with information about the item, it's in understanding the information and physically manipulating the item.
I'm saying that this is not correct at all. There is no lack of data, but it's very very difficult to make a robot that can autonomously manipulate things well enough to repair things. It's not lacking data, it's about physical control.
Imagine a company supporting ar in there product for maintenance.
They need to describe there Maschine to a point that AR can create an overlay and a step by step guide.
If you do this so that your technician can do it so can a robot.
If we ever make the effort to export 3d models from things and make them available, I believe we will see ML extracting repair steps and robots executing them before humans walking around with AR gogles.