When Pokémon Go debuted in 2016, it became an overnight sensation. From London to New York, it felt as though everyone had ...
Niantic’s spatial AI, built partly from optional scans submitted through its AR games, is now helping delivery robots ...
In other words, all that time users spent wandering around playing Pokémon Go will now help determine how well a courier ...
US video game developer Niantic has revealed that its Pokemon Go players have helped create a huge dataset of more than 30 ...
Pokémon Go players unknowingly trained delivery robots for years after generating over 30 billion scans that Niantic has now repurposed to power Coco Robotics’ autonomous bots ...
While Pokémon Go (plus Pikmin Bloom and Monster Hunter Now) are now owned and operated by Monopoly Go maker Scopely, Niantic ...
Each robot employs multiple cameras to perceive its surrounding environment, matching those visual inputs against Niantic ...
Niantic Spatial has announced a partnership with Coco Robotics to use a Visual Positioning System trained on 30 billion Pokémon GO player images. However, it has sparked outrage due to privacy ...
Niantic says images and AR scans gathered through Pokémon Go have produced a dataset exceeding 30 billion photographs now used to train visual navigation for delivery robots, reports Cape {town} Etc.
Pokémon Go players may have unknowingly helped build a massive AI training dataset through years of scanning real-world locations.
Nearly ten years after the launch of Pokémon Go turned everyday streets and parks into digital playgrounds, the massive trove ...