Google just unveiled a $1,000 tablet prototype equipped with 3D-sensors and a motion-tracking camera.
The tablet is the latest venture of Google's Project Tango initiative aimed at bringing 3D motion and depth sensors to mobile devices. The 7-inch tablet will have 4 GB of RAM and 128 GB of internal
storage and come equipped with multiple cameras, including one with
motion-tracking capabilities, and a depth sensor. It runs Android 4.4
KitKat and will be powered by NVIDIA's latest Tegra K1 processor. The team behind Project Tango hopes to show off the tablet at Google I/O later this month, Engadget reports. A "limited number" of prototypes will be made available to developers later this month for $1,024. Project Tango is the latest project out of Google's experimental
Advanced Technology and Projects (ATAP) group. ATAP announced its first
piece of Project Tango hardware, a 3D sensor-enabled smartphone, in February. Developers interested in the Project Tango tablet can sign up
to be notified when the software development kit is ready. "You can use
the Project Tango Tablet Development Kit to make applications that
track full 3-dimensional motion and capture surfaces in the
environment," Google's ATAP team said in a Google+ post. It's not clear how many software development kits ATAP plans to release but earlier reports
suggested 4,000 prototypes of a tablet with "advanced vision
capabilities" would be released to developers ahead of Google's I/O
conference, slated for the end of June.
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