Augmented Reality Development Application Raising Eyebrows
An application development company out of Southern California has been reported to be seeing some strange features with their latest app.

Mr. Fantana, who has been developing smartphone applications for the past three years says, "We originally created this application so that you could use your phone's camera to see in real time which restaurants are near your location. But what we soon saw the first time we used it absolutely blew us away."
Walter Stevenson, a lead mobile developer for PogoLoco Games, goes into further detail regarding this strange incident that occurred. "Brian and I headed out to Venice Beach to test out the application and see if there were any bugs that needed to be worked out with the code. When we held it up to test it, we were aiming the phone straight towards the boardwalk. Soon enough, we saw someone through the phone rollerblading and then trip and fall along the boardwalk. They appeared to scrape their knee badly. But when we looked up from the phone, no one was there."
While Walter isn't saying this is some sort of ghost sighting, he continues explaining how the situation became even weirder. "While no one was there when we looked up, not even ten seconds later, someone came by on their rollerblades and tripped while scraping their knee. It was like our application can see events into the future moments before they will happen!"
Quin Douglas, a chief physics professor and author, claims that this is an impossible situation. Mr. Douglas goes on by saying, "This situation simply cannot happen. It defies everything we have ever been taught in science books regarding string theory and time travel."
Although Mr. Douglas may have a strong point, there are other signs of evidence that may lead to believe that the workers of PogoLoco don't have a magical application. For instance, it appears that the exact spot where Brian and Walter saw the person trip, there is actually a large hole in the boardwalk where many people fall on a daily basis. It may have been that they actually just saw two separate incidents of people falling down.
Although both Brian and Walter have been told of this evidence, they still believe that their latest augmented reality development application has some unique qualities. "I know what I saw," Brian said. "If people don't want to believe that our application can help to predict future events, I don't care. We will see what everyone thinks when it is released to the public next year."
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Categories: Technology