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Apple acquired mind-blowing 3D mapping company.

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rezuth

Member
http://9to5mac.com/2011/10/29/apple-acquired-mind-blowing-3d-mapping-company-c3-technologies-looking-to-take-ios-maps-to-the-next-level/#more-103523 said:
jbquFMVOMyKQMw.png



Since the original iPhone’s debut in 2007, Apple’s iOS devices have made use of an Apple-built Google Maps application to provide users with a quick glance at driving directions, traffic, route guidance, current location information, and details about destinations. Like with most sections of Apple’s business, the company is continually innovating, looking to take products to the next level.

A few years ago, Apple set out to seemingly reinvent this iOS mapping experience. As 9to5Mac reported in 2009, Apple scooped up their own mapping software development company called Placebase. In the summer of last year, Apple went one step further in their obvious pursuit of a completely in-house mapping solution and acquired a 3D mapping firm called Poly9.

A third mapping company for Apple…


Apple’s Poly9 purchase obviously means Apple is at least interested in (or considering) the field of three-dimensional mapping solutions. We’ve now confirmed that Apple has purchased a second 3D mapping company. In August of this year it was discovered that 3D mapping company C3 Technologies had been purchased and shut down by its buyer. While there was no true evidence for this, there was speculation that Apple could be one of a handful of companies that could be the buyers of C3 Technologies.

Sure enough, we have now learned Apple is now the owner of C3 Technologies. Sources say that C3 Technologies CEO Mattias Astrom , C3 Technologies CFO Kjell Cederstrand, and lead C3 Technologies Product Manager Ludvig Emgard are now working within Apple’s iOS division. The leading trio, along with most of the former C3 Technologies team, is still working as a team in Sweden (interestingly, the division is now called “Sputnik”), where the C3 Technologies company was located prior to the Apple acquisition.

jbe95jY7DZjGuY.jpeg


What does C3 Technologies do?



C3 Technologies creates incredibly high-quality and detailed 3D maps with virtually no input from humans. The 3D mapping is camera based and the technology picks up buildings, homes, and even smaller objects like trees. C3′s solution comes from declassified missile targeting methods. C3 Technologies’ official company description:

C3 Technologies is the leading provider of 3D mapping solutions, offering photo-realistic models of the world for search, navigation and geographic information systems. Since 2007 when it was spun out of the aerospace and defense company Saab AB, venture-backed C3 has redefined mapping by applying previously classified image processing technology to the development of 3D maps as a platform for new social and commercial applications. The Sweden-based company’s automated software and advanced algorithms enable C3 to rapidly assemble extremely precise 3D models, and seamlessly integrate them with traditional 2D maps, satellite images, street level photography and user generated images, that together are forever changing how people use maps and explore the world.
iOS Maps in the third dimension.

Typically, when Apple purchases a company – which they do not do as nearly as often as competitors like Google – they have a clear goal in mind, and tend to take the best elements of their purchase and make it into their own creation. The latest example of this would be Apple’s purchase of Siri: Apple scooped up the company behind the popular iPhone application and pushed out the iPhone 4S with Siri voice technology a little over a year later. With this in mind, what will the future of Apple’s mapping services look like?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mlelVaxctI0

We already know that Apple has its eyes set on reinventing their maps solution, and with Placebase being a part of the corporation, moving completely away from Google seems inevitable. Apple – with the speedy custom made chips (A4, A5) in the latest round of iOS devices – could make their mobile mapping solution the best in the world with C3 Technology’s 3D mapping technology. C3′s solutions are so powerful and remarkble, and would truly transform Apple’s basic Google Maps application into something entirely new, fun, and powerful.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gSmunh6NIQI


Based on Apple’s past moves in the maps arena, we have a fairly good idea of what to expect from Apple in the near future of iOS:

Rebranding: Although Apple and Google signed a deal to extend the use of Google Maps in iOS, Apple’s purchase of Placebase is a clear indicator that Apple is looking to split from Google’s backend control at some point in the neat future. Placebase could potentially replace the entire Google backend, Allowing Apple to completely market iOS Maps as an end-to-end solution from the Cupertino-based company.

3D: With Apple’s aquisitions of both C3 Technologies and Poly9, we think it is very likely that the future of iOS Maps will include a third-dimension.



Traffic: Apple has gone on the record to say that they are working on an improved traffic service for end-users.

Apple is now collecting anonymous traffic data to build a crowd-sourced traffic database with the goal of providing iPhone users an improved traffic service in the next couple of years.
The service is crowd-sourced and is another indicator of Apple moving away from Google in their iOS mapping services as Google currently supplies iOS Map’s traffic data.

We’re not expecting anything big in the immediate future but we’d be surprised to see the same old Maps program in iOS 6. Expect something much much bigger.

Would love to see some advancements in Maps, its kinda shitty in the current state on iOS. The videos are kinda mindblowing to be honest.
 
From video link:

3D map of Oslo in Sweden, based on incredible mapping tech from Swedish startup C3 Technologies. Based on declassified missile targeting technology from Swedish aerospace giant Saab, C3 maps can be rotated around because each individual pixel has depth information attached to it.

We know what Apple's REALLY buying here...
 
TheWiicast said:
From video link:

3D map of Oslo in Sweden, based on incredible mapping tech from Swedish startup C3 Technologies. Based on declassified missile targeting technology from Swedish aerospace giant Saab, C3 maps can be rotated around because each individual pixel has depth information attached to it.

We know what Apple's REALLY buying here...

5durw.jpg
 

Nobility

Banned
This could be a game changer. I wonder how close to street level they can get?

Also, I have a feeling governments would not like this for security purposes.
 
D

Deleted member 17706

Unconfirmed Member
Jamesfrom818 said:
Yeah because this + GPS won't kill a small battery at the end of a 30 minute drive.

Get charging dock?
 

RubxQub

φίλω ἐξεχέγλουτον καί ψευδολόγον οὖκ εἰπόν
Color me curious...that's about my only reaction at this point.
 
iPhone 4GS "Now is twice as fast, and support a revolutionize mapping system while keeping the same 3.5 inch display. It's the best iPhone yet!"
 

Burger

Member
Raitosaito said:
iPhone 4GS "Now is twice as fast, and support a revolutionize mapping system while keeping the same 3.5 inch display. It's the best iPhone yet!"

What's wrong with the iPhone display?
 

RubxQub

φίλω ἐξεχέγλουτον καί ψευδολόγον οὖκ εἰπόν
Burger said:
What's wrong with the iPhone display?
Small screen size = for women. It's pretty much a fact that the iPhone isn't for people that enjoy good products.
 
cooljeanius said:
Yeah, it'd be cool if you could generate video game stages directly from real-life map data.
A lot of flight sims do this already, and most racing games use real data as reference. But yeah, it would be awesome to see this applied to other genres.

The technology isn't quite there yet -- a lot of this data would look like N64 quality if you viewed it at eye level.
 
rohlfinator said:
A lot of flight sims do this already, and most racing games use real data as reference. But yeah, it would be awesome to see this applied to other genres.

The technology isn't quite there yet -- a lot of this data would look like N64 quality if you viewed it at eye level.
Yeah, those aren't genres I really play, though. I'd like to be able to load my .kml files from Google Earth into Garry's Mod and be able to shoot stuff in real-life locations.
 

The Lamp

Member
cooljeanius said:
Yeah, it'd be cool if you could generate video game stages directly from real-life map data.

I dunno, real life doesn't translate well to fun level design. But I guess it could be used for reference.
 

demon

I don't mean to alarm you but you have dogs on your face
The Lamp said:
I dunno, real life doesn't translate well to fun level design. But I guess it could be used for reference.
It would be awesome for multiplay FPS.
 
Zefah said:
Get charging dock?
Believe it or not but I have a friend that refuses to get a smartphone and he usually drives while someone else navigates with our phones if he need it. We aren't going to bring along a car charger whenever we hang out.
 

Sobriquet

Member
badcrumble said:
if your phone isn't so big that it only fits into cargo pants pockets and/or 40-inch-waist jeans pockets then it's for women and queers

This is misleading because cargo pants were banned several years ago.


Jamesfrom818 said:
Believe it or not but I have a friend that refuses to get a smartphone and he usually drives while someone else navigates with our phones if he need it. We aren't going to bring along a car charger whenever we hang out.

Maybe one of you could get an iPhone?
 

Satyamdas

Banned
Fucking misleading thread title. My mind is nowhere near being blown by this 3D mapping. I can only surmise OP is a heavy kool-aid drinker.
 

Zaptruder

Banned
This is cool as shit technology... but there are other ways of stitching together a mirror world.

The ideal would be object recognition identifying and isolating each element of a photograph and generating a model that is representative of the object in the photo, but isn't strictly mapped to it (in the sense of basic geometry + texture projected on).

But that technology is still a little ways off; that would require a method of capturing heirichical relationships of objects and their components - both conceptual and visual-spatial. Tasks that remain firmly rooted in the realm of research at this point in time.

The most valuable function of this tech that's been shown would be the point of view walkthroughs as you find in gmaps.

I just hope Apple are relaxed in licensing this tech; rather than using it as a competitive hammer to clobber their enemies with and restrict its access from the wider public at hand.
 

Satyamdas

Banned
Zaptruder said:
This is cool as shit technology... but there are other ways of stitching together a mirror world.

The ideal would be object recognition identifying and isolating each element of a photograph and generating a model that is representative of the object in the photo, but isn't strictly mapped to it (in the sense of basic geometry + texture projected on).

But that technology is still a little ways off; that would require a method of capturing heirichical relationships of objects and their components - both conceptual and visual-spatial. Tasks that remain firmly rooted in the realm of research at this point in time.

The most valuable function of this tech that's been shown would be the point of view walkthroughs as you find in gmaps.

I just hope Apple are relaxed in licensing this tech; rather than using it as a competitive hammer to clobber their enemies with and restrict its access from the wider public at hand.
I lol'd heartily at this. You do realize we are talking about the same company that forces its own customers to upgrade to their newest phone to enjoy things like battery percentage indicators, or software which worked perfectly on the previous phone? You really think there is any chance they will be licensing this tech to anyone? And really, in this case I wouldn't blame them for keeping it proprietary. But when it debuts on the iPhone 6, I will still laugh when it gets yanked away as soon as the iPhone 6S rolls around.
 

rezuth

Member
Satyamdas said:
I lol'd heartily at this. You do realize we are talking about the same company that forces its own customers to upgrade to their newest phone to enjoy things like battery percentage indicators, or software which worked perfectly on the previous phone? You really think there is any chance they will be licensing this tech to anyone? And really, in this case I wouldn't blame them for keeping it proprietary. But when it debuts on the iPhone 6, I will still laugh when it gets yanked away as soon as the iPhone 6S rolls around.
What are you talking about?
 

Burger

Member
Satyamdas said:
I lol'd heartily at this. You do realize we are talking about the same company that forces its own customers to upgrade to their newest phone to enjoy things like battery percentage indicators, or software which worked perfectly on the previous phone? You really think there is any chance they will be licensing this tech to anyone? And really, in this case I wouldn't blame them for keeping it proprietary. But when it debuts on the iPhone 6, I will still laugh when it gets yanked away as soon as the iPhone 6S rolls around.

Apple is pretty good with updating older phones with new features. Android? Not so much.

http://theunderstatement.com/post/11982112928/android-orphans-visualizing-a-sad-history-of-support
 
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