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Structure Sensor is a clip on accessory for iPad that's designed to let you 3D scan objects, play augmented reality games and build a digital manipulable model of a room, complete with measurements.
At the Las Vegas Consumer Electronics Show, Occipital showed off its Structure mobile depth sensor that attaches to the back of an iPad to capture a 3D model of whatever is in front of it ...
We try out Occipital’s new Structure Sensor, a device that you mount to your iPad so it can 3D scan ... You can use it to measure the depth of a room or create a 3D model of an object or person.
On the hardware side is Structure, a mobile depth sensor that fits onto the back of an iPad that can be used to capture a 3D model of whatever is in front of it, including small and large objects ...
The app does this by performing tens of thousands of measurements on your iPad, and it leans on the Structure Sensor’s sub-millimeter accuracy to create this scale 3D model.
The Structure Sensor starts at $350 a set, with some early bird backing specials still available at $330. If the project is meets its goal of $100,000 by November 1st, the device will ship in ...
Back in 2013, Occipital made waves with a 3D mapping sensor for the iPad. Flash forward five years and Occipital is back with a new 3D sensor — this one a standalone product. The Structure Core ...
Hands on: Structure Sensor turns your iPad into a 3D scanning machine Nifty clip-on device is more platform than product—and it needs apps to survive.
3D Object Scanning. While we quickly proved the merits of Structure Sensor’s object scanning, Reddy did point out that there are generally better options for scanning really small objects.
Back in 2013, Occipital (a company then best known for making the RedLaser barcode scanning app) released the Structure Sensor, a device that turned any iPad you strapped it to into a portable 3D ...
It also has some key improvements over the original 2013-era Structure sensor. A version of that model connected to the iPad , and offered an early look at where AR technology would head next.