If you can pull out your phone, point it at any asset, and immediately see equipment specs, SOPs, and guided procedures, there certainly is value in that. If you're trying to find pump a32 in a massive facility, and can type it in your phone and be directly guided there, surely there is value in that as well. These use cases go on and on.
Willing to chat about this more? =]
Few other objects are that big, that complex, and have a sufficiently detailed model available. For a building, updating the model is a lot of work and requires discipline to keep the model in sync. Nuclear plants, spacecraft, and unusually complex chemical plants might have a model at that level of detail.
The big assumption is that the 3D model of equipment used by an AR app matches what's actually installed on site. This is rare in my experience - particularly over time as maintenance is performed in bits and pieces without documentation being updated. It's exceedingly rare to find an old building with accurate documentation of where everything is. I'd love an app that could compare a laser scan of installed plant with the 3D design model and automatically align them into an "as-built".
As DeNiro said in the terrible Movie “Ronin” — “But the map…the map is not the territory.”
The 3D model will differ from the actual construction. From the very beginning and more and more over time. Documentation is hard enough for software projects. Why would we expect documentation quality of construction to be better?
I can see this being used for retrofit designing. Use a LiDAR point cloud to create a model of an existing open facility, all the exposed machinery and piping. Then suggest changes for future installation and have current staff walk through the plant checking the virtual future piping/etc.
We already do that without the 3D glasses though. Just 3D rendered to computer screen.
It's hard for me to imagine getting from where most businesses are now (unable to share data internally among teams, limited investment in web dashboards that show live data) to a fancier "live data overlaid with physical systems." Is there that much value differentiation? I get the tech appeal, and it looks cool. I'm not clear the cost/benefit is there in general.
I do suspect AR will be adopted in two scenarios. In niche domains where cost/benefit is acceptable (where?). And the other scenario is "shiny buttons and blinky lights" pet projects.
The biggest benefit I can imagine where the cost is outweighed, is when AR is used to reduce downtime of huge output facilities. If using AR could save an organization even just 10 minutes of downtime in a year, depending on their output, it could likely be worth the investment.
Time will tell how it greatly it gets adopted. We sure as hell are betting on the fact that it does. And now seems like a good time in the adoption curve to place that bet.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/34/Robot_as...
The real metaverse is what lives inside our heads - that we communicate with each other to (hopefully) build a shared mental model with enough concordance with real reality to be useful to us. All media (including AR) is no more, and no less, than this communication.