Episode 218 – Virtually Married

Robot & astronaut
Photo credit: Pexels

Michael and Michael are thankful for the chance to bring you your weekly dose of Games At Work, and start off this episode re-exploring a topic covered back in episode 159, this time with a wedding-themed twist.  The Esquire article presents an intriguing dilemma — can/should a human marry an artificial intelligence?  Vinclu’s Gatebox product with the AI attracted Michael & Michael’s attention a while ago, and in the case of Akihiko Kondo-san’s case, he was so attracted that he married the Gatebox AI version of a computer-generated Hatsune Miku.  Apparently Kondo-san is not alone — Gatebox has issued over 3,700 marriage certificates for what they are calling ‘cross-dimensional’ nuptials.  While many are accustomed to asking their personal assistant AIs to control their lights, set alarms and play music, the personification of the AI in human form, although projected in a MacPro-esque canister, lends a further aura of reality to this assistant.  Gatebox does not limit the communication of their AI only to the holographic character, the AI also interacts with the owner via text, and more.  Intriguingly, one can easily imagine the AI having a VR/AR/MR presence in the near future, yielding even more realistic engagement with the owner.  

Michael and Michael talk about other ways that the experiences from virtual worlds could be applied to such corporally-personified AIs, such as a subscription model, where one purchases a time-based contract with the AI company, virtual gifts that could be given to the AI, or to friend’s AIs, as well as legal questions around property rights and more.  Certainly a space to watch for the near future!

Speaking of the future, the co-hosts discuss a couple of companies that have specialized in creating chatbots to converse with the dearly departed, and how the AI powering those chatbots can be trained before you pass away.  The article brings up a number of challenges that this capability introduces, from what you entrust to the database, and what might be shared with whom after you pass away, to what age you want to be immortalized.

There’s more to this Thanksgiving episode — have a look at the links below to get a taste & have a listen!  

Selected Links

Esquire article: Single? Consider a Cross-Dimensional (Human-Hologram) Marriage — https://www.esquire.com/lifestyle/a25018920/japan-married-hologram-gatebox/ 

Business Insider article: Japan’s $2,700 answer to the Amazon Echo could make the country’s sex crisis even worse — https://www.businessinsider.com/gatebox-ai-the-japanese-amazon-echo-photos-2016-12 

Gatebox with Hatsune Miku — https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V3mJcclRoOo 

Gatebox by Vinclu — https://gatebox.ai/home/ 

Games at Work episode 159 — Virtually Secure — example of Gatebox — https://gamesatwork.biz/2017/01/22/episode-159-virtually-secure/ 

Apple’s MacPro — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mac_Pro 

Business Insider article: These 2 tech founders lost their friends in tragic accidents. Now they’ve built AI chatbots to give people life after death — https://www.businessinsider.com/eternime-and-replika-giving-life-to-the-dead-with-new-technology-2018-11 

Black Mirror — https://www.netflix.com/title/70264888 

The Verge article: Speak, Memory — https://www.theverge.com/a/luka-artificial-intelligence-memorial-roman-mazurenko-bot 

Games at Work episode 26 — Business Process Management and Immortality — https://gamesatwork.biz/2012/11/04/episode26/ 

TechCrunch article: Here’s the teaser trailer for Niantic’s Pokemon Go-style Harry Potter Game — https://techcrunch.com/2018/11/14/heres-the-teaser-trailer-for-niantics-harry-potter-game/

Harry Potter Wizards Unite — https://www.harrypotterwizardsunite.com/ 

Comicbook article: ‘Red Dead Redemption 2’ Player Gets Struck By Lightning, Dies — https://comicbook.com/gaming/2018/11/11/red-dead-redemption-2-ps4-xbox-lightning-dies/ 

Feeding Edge LTD blog post: Made it at last (in VR too) – Thanks Streetview — http://www.feedingedge.co.uk/blog/2018/11/22/made-it-at-last-in-vr-too-thanks-streetview/ 

SlashFilm article: ‘Detective Pikachu’ Trailer: Ryan Reynolds is a Lonely, Mystery-Solving Pokemon — https://www.slashfilm.com/detective-pikachu-trailer/ 

Garfield voiced by Lorenzo Music — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lorenzo_Music 

Garfield Minus Garfield — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garfield_Minus_Garfield 

TechCrunch article: With no moving parts, this plane flies on the ionic wind — https://techcrunch.com/2018/11/21/with-no-moving-parts-this-plane-flies-on-the-ionic-wind/ 

Episode 217 – Real Magic

Photo by Mervyn Chan on Unsplash

Arthur C. Clark’s Third Law, Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.” holds true for the AR magical examples from this week, starting off Uchida-san’s (@shinyamagician) fantastic use of augmented reality in his video, that requires slowing down and scrubbing through the video to really see the nature of the tricks.

The new, magical iPad Pro requires some discussion and focus, including the fact that it is now sporting an USB-C, leading to the Hyper solution for HDMI and a wide range of other interfaces.   

The Mashable article about the Slice Planner likens it to the magical Tom Riddle’s diary, and spurs a conversation about the Moleskine Smart Writing Set, the CrossPad, and the Apple Pencil.

Continuing on this week’s AR focus, the co-hosts discuss a pair of clothing and shoe fitting solutions:  MTailor’s Custom Clothing iOS app, and the in-store Fit ID solution for shoes from Fleet Feet.  

Wrapping things up this election week in the United States, Michael & Michael discuss the findings from Samatha Bee’s This is Not A Game, The Game app.

We had great fun with the topics for this week — hope you will as well! 

Selected Links

TechCrunch article: This magician brings some serious tricks to the iPad Pro — https://techcrunch.com/2018/11/09/this-magician-brings-some-serious-tricks-to-the-ipad-pro/ 

9 to 5 Mac article: Hyper unveils the first iPad Pro USB-C hub with HDMI, USB-A, headphone jack, SD slot, more — https://9to5mac.com/2018/11/05/ipad-pro-usb-c-hub-hyper/ 

Mashable article: This $23 AR-powered planner is *almost* as magical as Tom Riddle’s diary — https://mashable.com/shopping/nov-6-slice-planner-sale/ 

Moleskine Smart Writing Set — https://us.moleskine.com/smart-writing-set/p0202 

CrossPad — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CrossPad 

TechCrunch article: Niantic overhauls Ingress to make it more welcoming for new players — https://techcrunch.com/2018/11/05/what-is-ingress-prime/ 

MTailor Custom Clothing —  https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/mtailor-custom-clothing/id816042916?mt=8 

Fleet Feet Fit ID — https://www.fleetfeet.com/catalogs/fit-id 

The Verge article: Players of Samatha Bee’s mobile game have reported over 800 instances of voter suppression — https://www.theverge.com/2018/11/6/18069830/samantha-bee-mobile-game-voter-suppression 

Episode 216 – Red Reef Redemption

Photo by Milos Prelevic on Unsplash
Photo by Milos Prelevic on Unsplash

Michael and Michael are back after a short break, and with many stories to talk about.  Starting things off with a provocative statement that “Free is still not cheap enough” with regard to current virtual reality technology, the co-hosts have a wide ranging discussion on where the VR/AR/Mixed Reality tipping point really is, and that the killer app still has not quite emerged on the scene, despite all the advances made in the last couple of years.  The conversation turns to implanted memories, reminding Michael M of the Arnold Schwartzenegger movie Total Recall.

The new North Focals AR glasses frames make a splash with the pair, looking much like regular glasses (although with slightly larger arms to account for the battery, microprocessor and projector), yet still have challenges to overcome.  The idea of using glasses for both vision correction, and visual augmentation has been brought up on the podcast before, and an intriguing article about FocusAR on this subject is listed in the notes below.

Lightform is billed as AR in the real world, or in the terminology from their website, “projected AR” — an exciting way to take existing surfaces, map them, and project information on them.  Their examples, such as the outdoor retail display and the projected AR bar are compelling and caused Michael to recall the display on the facade of St. Stephen’s Basilica in Budapest from December 2013:


Segueing to more traditional forms of AR, the co-hosts turn to a story about how Walmart is using AR capabilities in their iOS app to facilitate price comparison and detail information lookup on products on their shelves, and an example of how AR is being used by Meridiun to quickly identify counterfeit products by looking at them, so to speak, using “intelligent augmented reality”.  

Rounding out the show with robotics and games, Michael R shares a story about how bots are being used to re-seed & repopulate coral reefs and a strange bug in Red Dead Redemption 2 causes horses to spontaneously combust.  Quite a great deal packed into a short show this week — much more in the hopper.  Hope you enjoy, and come on back next week for more!  

Selected Links

Ars Technica article:  Oculus co-founder: “Free is still not cheap enough” for current VR tech — https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2018/11/oculus-co-founder-free-is-still-not-cheap-enough-for-current-vr-tech/  

Total Recall — https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0100802/?ref_=nm_flmg_act_50 

BGR article:  Focals AR eyewear looks just like regular glasses — https://bgr.com/2018/10/23/north-focals-ar-glasses-release-date-price-and-features/ 

North Focals AR glasses — https://www.bynorth.com 

FocusAR: Auto-focus Augmented Reality Eyeglasses for both Real and Virtual — https://research.nvidia.com/sites/default/files/pubs/2018-09_FocusAR%3A-Auto-focus-Augmented//10.1109%40TVCG.2018.2868532.pdf 

Forbes article:  No Headset Required: Lightform Is AR In The Real World — https://www.forbes.com/sites/charliefink/2018/11/01/no-headset-required-lightform-is-ar-in-the-real-world/#7847e6ce213d 

Lightform — https://lightform.com 

TechCrunch article: Walmart adds an AR scanner to its iOS app for product comparisons — https://techcrunch.com/2018/11/01/walmart-adds-an-ar-scanner-to-its-ios-app-for-product-comparisons/ 

Meridiun Virtual Product Verification & Counterfeit Detection — https://www.meridiun.com/counterfeit-products 

TechCrunch article:  Reff-rejuvenating LarvalBot spreads coral babies by the millions — https://techcrunch.com/2018/11/01/reef-rejuvenating-larvalbot-spreads-coral-babies-by-the-millions/ 

The Verge article: Red Dead Redemption 2 players find cursed road that always sets horses on fire — https://www.theverge.com/2018/11/1/18051994/red-dead-redemption-2-glitch-rhodes-road-fire-horse 

Episode 215 – Great Jumpin Robots

From parking tickets to parkour, robots are excelling at anything they put their artificial intelligence to.  This episode jumps right into action with the story of a robotic attorney accessed through Joshua Browder’s DoNotPay app and how he has continued to extend the capabilities of this agent beyond parking tickets, now including filing suit against companies who have had data breaches.  Will be interesting to see how robotic attorney processes may wind up meeting their judicial counterparts, as one bot can talk to the other to arrive at a fair settlement in mere fractions of the time it would take to go to court.

The co-hosts then take a (quantum) leap to the Boston Dynamics Atlas humanoid robot leap up stairs alone, or presumably in pairs, with all the skill and ease of an accomplished parkour athlete.  The graceful side-to-side jumps involve the Atlas robot moving in the X, Y and Z axes. And all this without any tethers.  Simply amazing.  

Speaking of amazing, the Salto-1P is a one legged robot that uses precision jumping and balance to get where it needs to go — something that an audio podcast just can’t do justice to.  See the link below and check out the video of this bot.  A humanoid structure is not necessarily the only means for successful locomotion.

Michael and Michael conclude this episode with a mixed reality discussion about Varjo’s detailed resolution and how AI might be able to handle the in-classroom differentiation so that each child is operating in their optimal performance zone.  This reminds the team very much of Neal Stephenson’s cyberpunk novel The Diamond Age: Or, A Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer.

We hope you enjoy this week’s show! 

Selected Links

Business Insider Australia article: The 21-year-old who built a robot lawyer to fight parking tickets has a new tool to help you automatically sue companies who get hacked — https://www.businessinsider.com.au/donotpay-lock-security-down-sue-after-hacks-2018-10 

DoNotPay app — https://itunes.apple.com/app/id1427999657 

TechCrunch article: Watch Boston Dynamics’ humanoid robot leap up massive stairs like it’s nothing — https://techcrunch.com/2018/10/11/watch-boston-dynamics-humanoid-robot-leap-up-massive-steps-like-its-nothing/ 

TechCrunch article: The Salto-1P now does amazing targeted jumps — https://techcrunch.com/2018/10/09/the-salto-1p-now-does-amazing-targeted-jumps/ 

TechCrunch article: Atomico leads $31M Series B in Varjo, the Finnish startup developing ‘human-eye resolution’ VR and XR — https://techcrunch.com/2018/10/07/varjo/ 

Forbes article: 100% Literacy: Or What if AI Could Fix Our Broken Educational System? — https://www.forbes.com/sites/cognitiveworld/2018/10/08/100-literacy-or-what-if-ai-could-fix-our-broken-educational-system/#3246b2a777b4 

Neal Stephenson’s The Diamond Age — https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Diamond_Age 

Games the co-hosts are playing 
nothing new this week!