Andrew Cunningham
Lenovo and Google will launch the first Project Tango smartphone in the summer of 2016.
Andrew Cunningham
Lenovo and Google will launch the first Project Tango smartphone in the summer of 2016.
These are the four renders that Lenovo is showing off. The camera layout is more or less consistent across all the phones.
Andrew Cunningham
Project Tango lead Johnny Lee gets onstage to walk us through some demos.
Andrew Cunningham
Here, Lee uses a Tango developer tablet to map out the stage.
Andrew Cunningham
A virtual pet displayed in a 3D space.
Andrew Cunningham
A virtual game of Jenga.
Andrew Cunningham
Tango uses three kinds of lenses to get the data it needs.
Andrew Cunningham
The camera setup is, well, complicated.
Andrew Cunningham
One of Lenovo's device mockups. The phone is supposed to be a consumer device, not a developer or concept device.
Andrew Cunningham
This concept image looks the best to us—understated but distinctive.
Andrew Cunningham
Google is accepting app ideas now, and the best apps will be preinstalled on the Tango phone.
If you're not familiar, Google's "Project Tango" is a depth-sensing camera setup that the company has been prototyping in special developer hardware for a while now. Tonight at CES, Google and Lenovo announced the next step of the Tango journey: a consumer-targeted smartphone that will launch in the US and other countries this summer for "less than $500."
While Lenovo and Google executives had a few Tango demos to show off, they didn't actually have any hardware to talk about—odd for a gadget that's launching in the next six-to-eight months. The concept renders shown all demonstrated how Lenovo and Google had tweaked the cameras to fit in a smartphone-sized design. Three vertically stacked lenses provide color and depth information, and a wide-angle fisheye lens gives the cameras a sort of "peripheral vision" for the phone. Data from these cameras will be crunched by the built-in Snapdragon processor (possibly a new Snapdragon 820, though Lenovo gave us no information either way) and used to build a 3D representation of whatever space you're in.
The Tango demoes primarily focused on its utility as an augmented reality device. Once you've scanned your room, you can drop 3D furniture into the space to see how it fits, play a virtual game of Jenga, or create a virtual pet that can follow you around while avoiding obstacles and jumping up on raised surfaces. The phone can also help with mapping on the inside of buildings—something that could be handy, speaking as someone who has gotten lost in more than one cavernous Las Vegas hotel this week.
The Tango phone will run Android, and its screen size will be "six-point-something" inches according to Lenovo—greater than 6.0 inches and smaller than 6.5 inches. Interested developers have until February 15 to submit app ideas to Google, and those that impress the company the most will apparently ship pre-installed on Lenovo's phone. We'll continue to track this phone as Lenovo reveals more about it; hopefully it will be ready to actually show us something soon.
Listing image by Andrew Cunningham
Source: Lenovo will launch first Project Tango phone this summer, but won't show it yet
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