Qualcomm has released an Augmented Reality SDK for iOS about a year after releasing the SDK for Android, reports TechCrunch.
This first release of the SDK supports the iPhone 4, iPad 2, and fourth generation iPod Touch - none of which have Snapdragon CPUs in them. Furthermore, this release supports Unity (a WYSIWYG-style rapid game development tool) right off the bat, whereas the Android release didn't get Unity support until a few months. Developers can also work in straight in Xcode if they so choose.
Check out the video below for a demo of what the SDK can do. You can get the SDK from here.
Read More
This first release of the SDK supports the iPhone 4, iPad 2, and fourth generation iPod Touch - none of which have Snapdragon CPUs in them. Furthermore, this release supports Unity (a WYSIWYG-style rapid game development tool) right off the bat, whereas the Android release didn't get Unity support until a few months. Developers can also work in straight in Xcode if they so choose.
Check out the video below for a demo of what the SDK can do. You can get the SDK from here.
Read More


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