5. Google Opens Up VR180 Standard for Virtual Reality Photos and Videos:-
Virtual reality can be a fun experience, and more phones than ever support VR capabilities. That makes mobile VR easy for people to start using. While VR is cool, the main issue is a lack of content. Google hopes to change that with its VR180 video format. It introduced VR180 last year Now, Google has published additional details so developers and hardware makers can gear up to make new VR180 products. Google’s VR180 video is based on the Spherical Video Metadata V2 standard, but there are a few additions to make it suitable for mobile VR. VR180 includes a so-called Camera Motion Metadata Track.
6. GPS maker Trimble’s AR foray for the construction industry:-
Speaking to ET, Rajan Aiyer, Managing Director, Trimble, SAARC region said that engineers and supervisors at one of the largest construction companies in India used mixed reality tools to better interpret and interact with physical and digital information and their spatial relationships in near real-time.
7. Machine Learning:-
Machine learning is the science of getting computers to act without being explicitly programmed. In the past decade, machine learning has given us self-driving cars, practical speech recognition, effective web search, and a vastly improved understanding of the human genome. Machine learning is so pervasive today that you probably use it dozens of times a day without knowing it.
The primary aim is to allow the computers to learn automatically without human intervention or assistance and adjust actions accordingly.
8.Cloud Computing:-
If you’re unsure about what Cloud Computing is, you are probably among the 95% of people that are already using cloud services, like online banking and social networks, but don’t realize it. The “cloud” is a set of different types of hardware and software that work collectively to deliver many aspects of computing to the end-user as an online service.
Cloud Computing is the use of hardware and software to deliver a service over a network (typically the Internet). With cloud computing, users can access files and use applications from any device that can access the Internet. An example of a Cloud Computing provider is Google’s Gmail. Gmail users can access files and applications hosted by Google via the internet from any device.
Unlike traditional computing where data is stored on your PC’s local hard drive, the data in the cloud is stored on many physical and/or virtual servers that are hosted by a third-party service provider. An example of a cloud computing file storage provider is Dropbox. Dropbox files can be accessed from any device via the Internet.
9. Cyber Security:-
Cybersecurity or information technology security is the technique of protecting computers, networks, programs, and data from unauthorized access or attacks that are aimed for exploitation.
10. Analytics:-
Analytics is a category tool for visualizing and navigating data and statistics. Most analytics tools resemble a series of reports that can be customized and explored in a fluid user interface.