Pocket Avatars: Intel's messaging app using cartoons to mimic sender's face

Pocket Avatars: Intel's messaging app using cartoons to mimic sender's face

Intel is getting into voice instant messaging with a smartphone app that uses facial tracking technology to caricature a sender’s expressions. Its new app dubbed Pocket Avatars was launched on Thursday by Mike Bell, an Intel senior executive whose job is to make sure the world’s largest semiconductor maker is at the front of future technology trends after arriving disastrously late to smartphones and tablets. Advertisement Pocket Avatars is now available to download for both iOS and Android from Apple App store and Google Play store , respectively.

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Pocket Avatars: Intel's messaging app using cartoons to mimic sender's face

Intel is getting into voice instant messaging with a smartphone app that uses facial tracking technology to caricature a sender’s expressions. Its new app dubbed Pocket Avatars was launched on Thursday by Mike Bell, an Intel senior executive whose job is to make sure the world’s largest semiconductor maker is at the front of future technology trends after arriving disastrously late to smartphones and tablets.

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Pocket Avatars is now available to download for both iOS and Android from Apple App store and Google Play store , respectively.

The app description on Play store reads, “It utilizes sophisticated face & head tracking algorithms and voice capture technology to render your expressions & voice onto an array of fun-loving avatars. Send Pocket Avatar messages app to app, via text or email or post them on your favorite social media site.”

The app uses a smartphone’s camera and microphone to record a short message while mapping the speaker’s facial expressions onto one of several cartoon characters. The message is then sent to the recipient, who can play it, complete with the avatar’s head movements, smiles and blinks.

In an interview, Bell described the app, which is free on Android smartphones and iPhones, as a way to demonstrate facial tracking technology that could appear on future Intel platforms such as laptops or tablets.

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“Rather than let it sit in a lab and languish, we thought ‘wouldn’t it be cool to show people,’” Bell said of the technology. “It’s fun and easy to explain what it does, but it’s actually pretty complex behind the scenes.”

Intel’s core market, the PC industry, is languishing and the chipmaker is far behind rivals such as Samsung Electronics and Qualcomm in mobile chips.

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With input from Reuters

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