If you played Pokémon Go, there's a chance you helped with the development of training robots and AI.
The data collected by the AR games now consists of more than 30 billion images captured from different angles, times of day, ...
Niantic’s spatial AI, built partly from optional scans submitted through its AR games, is now helping delivery robots ...
A 30-billion-image dataset built by players over the last decade is now being used to train an AI navigation system ...
Pokémon Go players may have unknowingly helped build a massive AI training dataset through years of scanning real-world locations.
How Niantic Spatial is turning a decade of 30 billion crowdsourced photos and data into the most precise urban navigation system delivery robots ever had.
What started as a simple mobile game in 2016 is now helping machines navigate cities with precision. The millions of Pokémon Go players roaming cities and other places unknowingly created ...
Each robot employs multiple cameras to perceive its surrounding environment, matching those visual inputs against Niantic ...
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 ...
Pokémon Go is helping train Niantic Spatial's GPS AI, which helps delivery robots.
US video game developer Niantic has revealed that its Pokemon Go players have helped create a huge dataset of more than 30 ...
While Pokémon Go (plus Pikmin Bloom and Monster Hunter Now) are now owned and operated by Monopoly Go maker Scopely, Niantic ...