Showing posts with label Nokia Point Find. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nokia Point Find. Show all posts

Friday, October 12, 2007

Nokia's Point & Find the Perfect Physical World Connection Solution?

Could Nokia be developing the ideal solution for mobile barcode recognition?
Will this finally solve the question Pick A 2d Code, Any Code
image recognition
MoVa Media, a mobile barcode recognition company, suggests that Nokia's acquisition of Pixto could offer the ideal solution for Physical World Connection.

Nokia's Point & Find lets people point a camera phone at an object or picture and find out more about it or buy it just by clicking once when its name comes up on the screen.

It works by linking a set of image properties with a URL for information about what's in the image. When a user points the phone's camera at something, the system compares what the viewfinder sees with sets of image properties in a database. Also taking into consideration the user's location, it then delivers useful information about what the user is looking at.

For example, pointing the phone at a movie poster and pressing a key could make a page pop up that offers an ad for the movie and a way to buy a ticket at the theater nearest the user.

Pointing the phone at the street might bring up a contact page for a local cab company. The system could give retailers, transit agencies, manufacturers, and others the chance to reach consumers while making it easier and more intuitive for consumers to find things, Nokia said

MoVa Media says this:
Here’s what I think. This technology would definitely be more useful and intuitive than barcode recognition, simply because it wouldn’t rely solely on barcodes for data recognition. Also, consumers could immediately start using this, instead of waiting for retailers, and manufacturers to develop mainstream barcoding techniques.

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Nokia Wants To Connect Physical Objects With Camera Phone Using "Point Find"



There is no doubt, Physical World Connection is heating up in a big way.

The ability to scan or click on any type of physical world hyperlink (barcode, image, sound) will have a profound impact on the mobile space.

Nokia has already started offering the ability to create and scan 2d codes (mobile codes). Now they want to introduce image recognition using a camera phone.

Look at what has happened with the image recognition players recently.

Last year Google acquired image and facial recognition player NevenVision.

Microsoft's Lincoln is their own image recognition application that lets people search the Internet on their cell phones using a camera instead of a keypadMicrosoft image recognition.

A year ago image recognition player Mobot was acquired by a mobile marketing company for approximately $10m. Visionary Innovations was instrumental in what was called, "The Marketing Wedding of the Year".Mobot

From Red Herring Nokia To Offer Physical World Connection

"What if people could click on objects in the real world in much the same way they click on text, pictures, and icons on the Web? That seemingly sci-fi scenario could soon come to pass if Nokia has its way.

The cell phone giant plans to launch an advertising service next year that will use pattern-recognition technology to let people point camera phones at cars, movie posters, and other objects and click to get various information. A person might, for example, use what Nokia is calling its Point&Find service to take a picture of a CD cover and then, once the image has been matched in a database, buy and download tracks via a site on the mobile Internet.

The company is currently looking for partners in advertising, media, and retailing to take part in trials it hopes to start in various parts of the world in August, Philipp Schloter, senior business development manager at Nokia’s Palo Alto, California, research center, told Red Herring. The aim is to launch a commercial service in 2008, Mr. Schloter said. Initially Point&Find will work only with Nokia phones, but the company says it intends to make the service available for use on any phone using the Symbian operating system.

The Nokia system is not without precedents. In Europe, posters and print ads carry codes people can type in to phones as text messages to get more product information.

Point&Find works using the same sorts of pattern recognition techniques developed for security applications such as retinal scanning. Nokia acquired its technology when it bought Silicon Valley startup Pixto in April."

Interesting quote:

Niek van Veen, associate analyst at Forrester Research, said Point&Find has potential. Anything that makes it easier for consumers to use mobile Internet services is good, he said. But the technology’s success or failure will ultimately depend on the end user’s experience. When he’s tried camera phone and barcode based systems, he’s quite often encountered problems. “Usually it’s [just] the light level,” he said, but this kind of uncertainty is unsettling for consumers. “If it is going to be really successful, it has to work straight out of the box.”

And here's a quote last week from HookCode on why they chose Nextcode's ConnexTo's platform for their mobile code scanning solution.

"mCode and the ConnexTo decoder were engineered for mobile phone optics.
With other codes, you have to hold the camera just right, in the right light, because they were made to be scanned by that laser thing at the grocery store - not your mobile phone"

The ability to use your camera phone to connect physical objects to the Internet (Physical World Connection) is coming fast and in many forms.