Tobias
-
Rokid and Amap Launch First Smart Glasses Navigation App: View Directions Directly in Your Line of Sight
Rokid and AutoNavi partner to launch the first full-context navigation app for smart glasses, enabling multimodal interactions via voice commands to switch between walking, cycling, and driving modes during active use. A minimalist holographic display projects navigation data at a 4-meter virtual distance, reducing cognitive load while supporting preemptive traffic light alerts and real-time vehicle monitoring for cyclist safety. The AI engine adapts to spontaneous needs, like adding waypoints for coffee stops with instant ETA recalculations, and provides hyperlocal terrain analytics for runners. Dynamic pedestrian navigation personalizes recommendations using biometric data and preferences, maintaining visual clarity in complex environments. This partnership is expected to set a benchmark for AR-integrated mobility solutions, with automotive spatial navigation features planned for Q3 that could disrupt the $21B HUD market through affordable wearable adoption.
-
Dean of Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts Slams Chinese Typeface Designs for Widespread “Bushido Calligraphy” Trend, Decries Aesthetic Decline
Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts President Qi Zhijie has ignited a cultural debate by condemning China’s viral “Samurai Typography”—aggressive, jagged fonts in commercial spaces—as emblematic of aesthetic degradation and cultural militarism. His critique, extending previous attacks on distorted modern typefaces, underscores tensions within the nation’s $120 billion creative industry between heritage preservation and commercial innovation. Amid AI font technologies and NFTs reshaping a ¥2 billion market, Qi’s team explores machine learning to measure typographic beauty via classical standards, challenging Shanghai’s neuromarketing growth. Analysts highlight millennial consumer shifts toward sophisticated scripts, raising existential questions about balancing tradition and digital modernity in art education and design’s cultural role.