Next iPhone to look like Google Glass

Published Jun 24, 2017

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Washington - Augmented reality is one of Apple's big new areas of focus,

which it highlighted earlier this month at its Worldwide Developers Conference.

But how will Apple use AR, which involves using a screen to overlay digital

objects onto the real world? A new report from UBS Securities analyst Steven

Milunovich raises some interesting possibilities.

Apple has already shown at what AR can do by demonstrating

how to use an iPhone to overlay an interactive game board on a real table, for

example. But Milunovich suggested 10 additional applications for Apple's AR

play, including some we've already seen come to life, such as games and retail.

He also sees applications for job training, facial

recognition, medical diagnoses and the ability to direct people to safety in

case of emergency situations, similar to what Google Glass did to help

firefighters find the fastest exits from a building.Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment

on the report.

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Combining various applications could also be useful,

Milunovich wrote. "Emergency first aid, a combination of remote healthcare

and instantaneous education, could save lives. There are legal issues that

would need to be overcome but seem solvable," he said.

Further down the road, Milunovich said, there could be room

for iGlass that is, Apple's take on a Google Glass-type headset. Could Apple

succeed where Google failed? Advances in headset technology, plus some classic

Apple design chops, could make the devices more appealing to the non-geek,

Milunovich indicated.

The market for augmented-reality glasses is expected to grow

over the next several years. International Data Corp. predicted this week that

the market for AR and virtual reality will grow from 10 million headsets in

2016 to 100 million in 2021.

AR will be slightly behind VR, the firm said, but analysts

added that most consumers will probably get introduced to the concept through

their smartphones.

The tools for augmented reality that Apple introduced

earlier this month open up a range of possibilities to developers and highlight

the tech giant's interest in the area, which Apple chief executive Tim Cook

once said was "a big idea like the smartphone."

Apple will need to impress with its 10th-anniversary iPhone,

Milunovich said, and in a best-case scenario, a truly innovative iPhone would

help the company reclaim its mantle for innovation.

But it could face some fierce competition. OnePlus announced

its much-hyped OnePlus 5, which sports premium power and Android simplicity at

$479.

If rumours are true, that's about half the price of what we

could see from the next iPhone. It's also far cheaper than the iPhone 7 Plus,

which sports the same size 5.5.-inch screen and starts at $769.

Playing up the AR features for the iPhone using Apple's

innovative design techniques could be one way to further push Apple to the

front of the pack, Miunovich said. The smartphone screen could become a tool

for making users more aware of the wider world rather than distracting them

from it.

"[We] can picture the phone looking like a clear piece

of glass when looking through the camera," he said in the note.

"Rather than staring down at a screen while we walk across the street or

stand in line, we would be far more engaged with the world around us."

WASHINGTON POST 

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