If you purchase this, you have to pay (at least) $500 a year, for hosting, and $20 per scan, if you scan more than (say) 6 times in a month?
I highly doubt IKEA or any other furniture store is going to bring their camera out to me just so I can then digitally place a few sofas and I'm not going to pay $500 just to... what... save me a trip to the returns department? If I bought it what happens when I'm done decorating? Does my camera become a useless $500 paperweight?
It's cool that they allow you to have an OBJ (UV maps and textures too?) - I assume that doesn't include whatever proprietary meta-data gets attached to denote walls, floors, et al. If I could get the mesh with just the camera I would buy one of these in a heartbeat but otherwise I don't see this being used by any consumer apart from the absurdly obsessive renovator.
Depending on how effective Project Tango is, this technology might be short lived. Maybe there's some manual labor that has to happen on their end before your files are ready? Otherwise I just don't understand the cost. Storage and bandwidth couldn't possibly cost $50/mo.
Sometimes I really do lament the fact that everyone decided that an ongoing subscription model is the way to go for everything.
Or it could just be poor data from the scanner -- that would be unfortunate. Some of the artifacts are so bad that it would seem to suggest that this is the case (the corner of the countertop in the kitchen is quite bad, or the protrusion in the wall above the entry-way into the kitchen, for some examples). It's hard to tell from looking at the processed result. I wonder what the raw scans look like.
Very cool product though, even if it's rough right now. I can see this looking nice in the future.