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Friday, March 15, 2019

Experimental Google Maps feature puts arrows over images of the real world so you can't get lost

Google Maps has an experimental new feature on iPhone and Android that shows you exactly where to walk when trying to get to a destination.

While it's fine on a phone, it's more interesting as a vision of the future. It shows one way augmented reality glasses -- which superimpose computer images over the real world -- could actually be useful.

Google was early to the idea with Google Glass, which launched in 2013. It received a lot of negative attention because of its odd style and video cameras and never took off as a consumer product, but is still being used in some businesses.

But a lot of other companies are working on the problem, imagining that augmented reality glasses could someday replace smartphones.

Microsoft just released the second version of its Hololens, and start-up Magic Leap released a version of its glasses for software developers last year. Apple is betting big on augmented reality on its iPhones, and is reportedly building AR glasses that could enter mass production this year.

I used the new Google Maps feature, which isn't yet available for everyone, to walk to a coffee shop downtown. Instead of having to figure out the exact roads I was supposed to walk on, and in what direction, the AR feature pointed the way and even showed me exactly where I needed to go. It's only for walking directions, since the maps in your car and other places can already tell you if you're heading the right way.

It's amazing. Here's what using Google Maps AR is like.

That's the gist of it. Google can point you along the way if you get lost but, in general, you're supposed to keep your head up while you walk, and only check the app if you get lost. Google just points the way.

One day, when we have smart glasses on our heads, Google and other companies will be able to tell us exactly where we're going right inside the lenses. And since we're already looking up, we won't need to worry about walking into anything.

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