Slashdot Mirror


Hitachi's Wearable Internet Appliance

Ned Flanders writes "JapanToday is reporting that Hitachi has produced a Wearable Internet Appliance with head mount display (800 x 600) and a pointing device (all at @500 grams total). Smurf the Weib (c) via PHS or wireless LAN on your shinny new wearable SH-4 32Bit RISC processor running Windows®CE3.0. Available February 28, 2002. Launch in US and Japan was Planned for end of 2001." Someday.

20 of 186 comments (clear)

  1. Look Out! by RumGunner · · Score: 3, Funny

    We'd better get a head start rolling out the laws banning using these while driving.

    You know some people...

  2. Let's hope the CPU doesn't go in your pocket... by UsonianAutomatic · · Score: 5, Funny

    Are you downloading pr0n on your wearable internet appliance, or are you just happy to see me?

  3. Why? by iacyclone · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why does anyone need this other than the simple reason "because we can have it"?

  4. Information about the gizmo... by Adrian+Voinea · · Score: 3, Informative
    And now for a little bit of karma whoring...

    What is Hitachi WIA?

    Portable Internet Appliance Powered By

    SVGA Full Color Wearable Display

    Small but Powerful Control Unit

    Wearable display

    View Angle: 30 deg (Equivalent to 13"monitor at 2 feet)

    SVGA(800 x 600), 18bits Color

    Weight Less than 80g (2.8 Oz)

    Hands-free viewing of screen

    Forehead-support achieves safety and image stability

    Wearable with eye glasses

    Control unit

    Fit into pockets

    Light Weight

    Instant Power ON

    Without HDD - reliable

    Type II CompactFlash(TM) Slot

    USB Port

    Additional external battery achieves longer

    Battery life: About 5.5" x 3.5" x 1.0"(preliminary)

    Weight: This prototype weighs about 10.9 Oz (310g).

    Devices insideCPU,Memory,etc.): Hitachi SH-4 32bit RISC processor, 128MHz, 230MIPS.ROM:32MB, RAM:32MB, VRAM:2MB.

    Interfaces: Direct I/F to Wearable Display x 1, CompactFlash Type II x 1, USB x 1, Stereo Audio Headphones jack x 1, Cellular phone data port I/F x 1

  5. Wasn't this... by geek00 · · Score: 3, Informative

    ... already reported here?

    Lets just copy and paste the comments from there, ok?

  6. Best. FAQ. EVER. by jgaynor · · Score: 5, Funny

    The English FAQ, located here, contains some wonderful translations. Here are some examples:

    "Therefore, you can get your desk-top PC level of images from PDA size and weight of control unit."

    WIA will come with you and present all the images while you are relaxing in couch, sofa, or even in bed.

    This device is specially designed for WIA.You will touch the window shining blue on the device, and move the finger to the direction you would like to move the pointer in the screen

    You can use it upside down, which is preferable when you read books in bed

    Dont get me wrong - this looks like a great product - it just brought back memories of "someone set up us the bomb."

    1. Re:Best. FAQ. EVER. by Ledge · · Score: 3, Funny

      All your iris are belong to us. Run forward happy tulip. You will find your own walk path in our prefecture.

      --
      If it ain't a Model M, it's a piece of crap.
    2. Re:Best. FAQ. EVER. by llamalicious · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well, if I can sip a refreshing Pocari Sweat while reading the manual full of engrish, then happy man makes me the device which puts the Internet to my body.

  7. Japanese English 1, Slashdot Editors 0 by kvigor · · Score: 5, Funny

    Amazing! The Japanese promo literature is all correctly spelled, while the Slashdot story has at least three egregious errors. Unless "smurf", "shinny", and "Weib" are meant as some kind of sophisticated humor.

    1. Re:Japanese English 1, Slashdot Editors 0 by NOT-2-QUICK · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Perhaps you missed it, but the individual whom submitted the story and was being quoted intended the "smurf the weib" comment to be funny...this is quite obvious as it was followed by a half-assed © symbol - (c)...

      While I agree that it wasn't funny, at last I checked it is not the Slashdot Editors' responsibility or duty to protect us from lame attempts at humor!!!

      --
      Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy. -- Benjamin Franklin
  8. MIGHT work... if you can't see it. by ratajik · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Every wearable computer to date that I've seen won't fly... because it's waaay to visible (See: All the Dork comments). Saying that, from the specs and (small) number of pictures of this one, it might actually be useable. If you can really put that thing in your pocket, and just have the pointer and HUD when you need it... well, maybe. It'd sure be a lot better then lugging around a lap top (at 11 oz and 5x3x1).

    I'd like to see people actually wearing it. Is it fairly invisible? Does it look like you should have a helicopter hat on? Something in-between?

    -Greg

  9. Re:This is dumb by s20451 · · Score: 3, Funny

    It makes you as dorky as that freak whose parents bought him the calculator watch for his birthday in third grade.

    That was you, wasn't it?

    --
    Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
  10. This is the Xybernaut Poma by Vito · · Score: 3, Informative

    Or at least, I believe it is. It's been mentioned here before.

    The Xybernaut Poma is their OEM version of the direct-from-Hitachi model. Fifteen hundred bucks US gets you delivery before the end of Q1 2002.

    It runs Windows CE, has no audio inputs, and I don't think anyone on the wearables mailing list has actually gotten one yet to see what development will be like, but it's very interesting, at least.

  11. Japanese press release by BJH · · Score: 3, Informative

    Here's a quick translation of the Japanese news release:

    ------

    Industrial-use wearable Internet appliance launched in Japanese market
    Hitachi, Ltd.'s venture company, Net-PDA, (CEO: Matsuoka Shigeru) will begin shipping the WIA-100NB wearable Internet appliance, with head-mounted display, from February 28.
    Mobile computing needs are increasing with the spread of wireless communication infrastructure and Internet access from mobile phones.
    The company completed an OEM licensing contract for wearable Internet appliances with the U.S. Xybernaut Corp. in June of 2001, and has conducted marketing in Japan. As a result, it judged that wearable Internet appliances are an effective solution for work environments such as clean rooms and machine rooms where printed materials cannot be used, as well as for hands-free viewing of blueprints and Internet/intranet access via PHS [a Japanese form of mobile phone] and wireless LAN.
    The WIA-100NB, in order to meet these needs, weighs 310 grams for the main body, with the head-mounted display weighing a mere 80 grams, and the total package weighing less than 500 grams even with the addition of a pointing device. By rubbing the pointing device's optical sensor with a thumb, it is possible to move the cursor on the head-mounted display, allowing the operation of the unit in any position.
    Used as terminals for improving work efficiency, wearable Internet applicances are predicted to form a major part of the market for portable information devices. The company aims to develop this valuable market further.

    -------

    Then it lists the specs, and where to buy it (here, but you'd better know Japanese).

  12. Not to mention... by AndroidCat · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Please turn it off while attending movies. And I imagine libraries or court rooms wouldn't be good places to be fragging people in Quake.

    Gak! It's bad enough trying to hold a conversation with someone who just has to answer their phone when it rings. Now it's going to be "You've got mail!"

    And all those people who get useless calls on the bus. Now it's going to be like being on a bloody Borg ship!

    Gotta get me one of those! :^)

    --
    One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
  13. Played with this at Comdex by Anemophilous+Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    First off, for those who mentioned this looks like the Xybernaut Poma, you are correct.

    From the main english Hitachi page: FAIRFAX, VIRGINIA, July 18, 2001 - Hitachi, Ltd. (NYSE: HIT) and Xybernaut Corporation (NASDAQ: XYBR), today announced that Hitachi has entered into a license agreement under Xybernaut's broad patents for wearable computing and communications to develop a Wearable Internet Appliance (WIA) for the consumer market.

    That said, I played around with one of those for a little bit when I visited the Xybernaut booth at Comdex. My thoughts? They are ok items. The screen projection is not too bad. Until you can focus one eye on the screen and simultaneously focus the other eye on faraway objects, you'll still only either chew gum or walk...if you know what I mean. The screen does flip up so both eyes can be used to focus on the task at hand when needed.

    Someone asked about the input device. The one I played with (and you can see in the photos) has a hand-held input device. It has a touch screen which you move your finger (or rather thumb) around on to move the mouse pointer. I don't remember a keyboard, but I think another model might have had small keyboard you strap to your forearm. Otherwise, I think the model I played with had an on-screen keyboard you can bring up and tap out virtual keystrokes with the mouse pointer. This of course was some what a pain in the arse for me...but I guess YMMV.

    This will be fairly useful in warehouse situations. Maybe on an assembly line: you can work on your task, and if computer assistance is needed, just flip the screen down and look up a part number or whatever. These still aren't the best for long-term computing sessions.

    -A non-productive mind is with absolutely zero balance.
    - AC

  14. Obligatory Beowulf Joke by Skirwan · · Score: 5, Funny

    Q: Wow, can you imagine a beowulf cluster of these?!

    A: Yes I can, it's called a Borg Collective.

    --
    Damn the Emperor!

  15. Re:This is dumb by PhotoGuy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hey, it was only a few years ago that I looked geeky with one of the early Palm pilots. People used to stare and point and comment all the time. Now whipping out a Palm doesn't draw any attention at all.

    But before wearables become commonplace enough not to be freaky, they really have to become more useful, less obtrusive, better UI's, longer battery life, and far lower cost. We're a little ways away from conquering all of those, but it will happen in the next decade, I would imagine.

    -me

    --
    Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
  16. You can buy this now. by autopr0n · · Score: 3, Insightful
    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  17. Why not use the stylus? by autopr0n · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I always have to carry around an extra toothpick to reset my WindowsCE device. It only locks up about 1 time every 6 months.

    Why not just use the stylus?

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.