LEGO just got even better. The Life of George is an interactive game combining real LEGO bricks with apps for your iPhone/iPad. With building challenges and AR capabilities all rolled in, we’re hanging out for playtime. http://bit.ly/w9q0dw
Save the world from the zombie apocalypse and get a workout at the same time with this new augmented reality game http://bit.ly/uFr3bY
It’s not beer goggles, it’s augmented reality. Beck’s Green Box Project is bringing you art, design, music and fashion through the world’s first global networked AR gallery, all via your smartphone.
http://bit.ly/qQJweb
Would you wear an augmented reality mask or “digital skin”? http://bit.ly/o1zf4i
The Public Ad Campaign, an underground organization, created virtual ad takeovers that use augmented reality to turn ads into public art. http://bit.ly/mWOKoJ
Beck’s has created The Green Box Project, a 3-year initiative celebrating art and technology. Beck’s will sponsor 1,000 pieces of art and feature them in 6’ tall virtual green boxes around the world. The pieces can only be located and viewed using augmented reality via the app. http://popsop.com/47361
Angels falling to earth, a cool augmented reality execution from Lynx.
VW uses augmented reality to turn a print ad into a test drive.
Augmented Reality / Augmented City
Keiichi Matsuda produced this film in his final year while studying for his Masters of Architecture. “The architecture of the contemporary city is no longer simply about the physical space of buildings and landscape, more and more it is about the synthetic spaces created by the digital information that we collect, consume and organise; an immersive interface may become as much part of the world we inhabit as the buildings around us.” Cool stuff. Read more on Keiichi Matsuda’s website here.