Niantic aims to build a richer 3D map of the world with a new version of Scaniverse app

Image Credits: Niantic

Niantic is releasing a new version of its Scaniverse app to let users capture objects around them with more details. Scaniverse 4 will allow users to capture places and objects in 3D through a Gaussian splatting technique, which captures more data points about an object for accurate and rich representation with faster rendering.

The company acquired Scaniverse in 2021, and this is one of the major updates for the app. Until now, Scaniverse allowed you to scan places and objects and store them on your device or share them with friends. With these new scanning methods, users can place these splats — which are object scans tied with the location data — on a map, and others can discover them to experience new places with better accuracy and details.

For the past several years, Niantic has tried to build a rich 3D map of the world by asking players of its games Wayfarer, Ingress, and Pokémon GO, to scan different places and earn some in-game rewards. The company has used some of those scans to build splats across the world.

The new scanning process, available only for iOS at launch, is very simple. You can select the splats on option through the new capture menu and start the scan. You have to move around the object, capturing it from different angles as if you are capturing a video. Once you are done, the app processes the scan and allows you to place the splat on the map, share the model, or share the video with others. Niantic says that scanning an object for one to three minutes gives you a good-quality scan.

Video Credits: Niantic

Niantic said it automatically blurs faces and license plates that appear in the scan for privacy reasons for all scans that the company processes. Plus, if there is a moving object in frame during the scan, it gets averaged out of the final render.

Brian McClendon, Niantic’s VP of Engineering and co-inventor of Google Earth, told TechCrunch that the company used a rendering technique called “triangle meshes” in the previous version of Scaniverse. With the new Gaussian splatting approach, with similar data, you get a detailed render with improved lighting and reflections.

“Gaussian splats have two major advantages over triangle meshes: They process faster and are dramatically more realistic, including capturing details like window transparency, water reflections, and tree leaves. It’s like comparing a LEGO model to a clay sculpture. LEGOs can be blocky and rigid, whereas clay allows for smooth curves and finer details,” McClendon said.

The company already offers real-world location data through its visual positioning system (VPS). With the new scanning technique, it plans to offer richer data to developers. It believes that Scaniverse users, primarily XR content creators, and 3D photography enthusiasts, will help the company build a new visual map.

Niantic already has Gaussian splats-powered scans in a magnitude of 100,000s and plans to expand this to millions in the near future. The company will make them available for developers for use cases like gameplay or virtual reality experiences.

The company also plans to integrate this data to power experiences in its own games where virtual characters can better interact with real-life objects.

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Instagram is working on a 'Friend Map' feature that would let you track friends' locations

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Image Credits: Bryce Durbin/TechCrunch

Instagram is developing a “Friend Map” feature, a Meta spokesperson confirmed to TechCrunch on Monday. The opt-in feature, which is similar to Snapchat’s Snap Map, would allow users to see their friends’ locations in real time. The company says the feature is an internal prototype and is not being tested externally. The feature was first spotted by reverse engineer Alessandro Paluzzi, who often discovers social media features in development ahead of their official launch.

If Instagram plans to officially launch the Friend Map, it would be copying yet another popular feature from Snapchat, after cloning the app’s core Stories functionality back in 2016. Instagram would also be coming for Apple and its “Find My” feature that lets users see where their friends and family are currently located. With this new feature, Instagram would be giving its users another reason to spend more time on its app, and less on other companies’ services.

Instagram also has an opportunity to appeal to people who were fans of Zenly, a social map app that Snap acquired and then shut down last year.

According to screenshots posted on Threads by Paluzzi, Instagram’s Friend Map would allow users to choose who can see their location. The screenshots also indicate that location data would be end-to-end encrypted. You could choose to share your location with followers who follow you back, your “Close Friends” list or no one at all. The map would also feature a “Ghost Mode” setting that would hide your last active location.

 

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The Friend Map would allow users to leave short messages, or “Notes,” on the map for others to see. Instagram Notes are currently the short messages that appear at the top of your direct messaging feed, but if the Friend Map rolls out, users would have the option to post these short updates on the map. The Notes functionality on the map could be used to do things like notify your friends about a fun pop-up shop you came across or a new restaurant that you’re currently eating at.

The news comes as Instagram has been working to enhance its in-app map offering. In late 2022, the company introduced a searchable map experience that allowed users to explore popular tagged locations around them and filter location results by specific categories, including restaurants, cafes and beauty salons. The launch of the searchable map came a week after Google’s senior vice president Prabhakar Raghavan stated that young users were turning to apps like Instagram and TikTok instead of Google Search or Maps when looking to discover new places.

After cutting into one of Google’s core businesses, Instagram may now be looking to take on Snapchat and Apple with its Friend Map.