Focused AR Research Directive
The lack of augmented reality interoperability and standards is a common denominator of detours and delays to AR deployment in large enterprises. Fortunately progress is being made in this area. By focusing on establishing AR interoperability and standards, many large enterprises have demonstrated the potential to help reduce risks, delays, and errors, and to improve safety, compliance, ROI, and other measures of operational efficiency in the workplace.
Through our Augmented Reality Interoperability & Standards research initiative, the AREA seeks to increase knowledge about the benefits and approaches to achieving interoperability, and to advance the development of standards. Full detail about program Goals, Approaches, and Actions are here.
Marilyn Pineda
Lockheed Martin
Sashank Ganti
Hexagon
Blake A. Schreurs
Johns Hopkins University
In the context of AREA activities, interoperability is the ability for different information technology components, systems and software applications to communicate and exchange data and, as a result, for users to be able to visualize in context the information that has been exchanged between systems of different providers without translation, conversion or delays.
Enterprise AR technologies, components or services can be considered interoperable when they:
Today, when companies begin to evaluate enterprise AR use cases they do so with isolated projects (products are not integrated with enterprise systems) and using products of one or a few technology providers. In companies that are advanced in their study of AR, there can be partial or full testbeds of multiple AR technology providers, but each usually remains isolated from other AR projects and are not integrated with enterprise systems. A company seeking to maintain and expand its testing within a specific technology segment (e.g., comparing multiple providers or models of hardware) confronts significant obstacles.
It has been demonstrated in other industries that when standards or open source interfaces and guidelines have been widely accepted and implemented across an ecosystem, higher technology interoperability can:
Unfortunately, interoperability of AR technology, components and services for deployment in enterprises is currently low. Nevertheless, interoperability is a key requirement for many enterprise IT departments to grow AR deployments to scale.
Through the augmented reality interoperability and standards program, the AREA seeks to increase knowledge about the benefits and approaches to achieving interoperability and to advance the development of standards or other approaches to interoperability.
Specifically, the AREA’s Interoperability and Standards program:
If you would like to know more about the AREA Interoperability and Standards Program or contribute to the achievement of these goals, please contact Christine Perey [email protected]
If you are an AREA member, send an email to [email protected] and request to be added to the Interoperability and Standards mailing list.
We also publish in the AREA monthly newsletter and on our social media channels, regular announcements about new resources and planned events that support this program.