Sergey Brin Shows Project Glass Glasses to Journalists (Video)
Not too many years ago, people who carried on conversations with folks the rest of us couldn't hear were considered demented (or drunk). Then came the cellular phone headset, which meant normal people could walk along, carrying on conversations with people we couldn't hear, although many researchers came to believe that a large percentage of so-called "normal" cell phone users were also demented (or drunk). Now Google's Project Glass means people can walk along, seeing things no one else can -- and carrying on conversations with them. Are Google's Project Glass users demented? Are they drunk? Or are they looking at heads-up displays mounted on glasses frames or attached to prescription glasses? Inquiring Slashdot editor Timothy Lord wanted to know, so he joined a Glass demonstration hosted by Google co-founder Sergey Brin (whose company is not related to Barney Google, as far as we know) to find out for himself -- and to share his findings with you.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3azbb3f69A0&list=UUiWJgml6SpZBgNY6n-TZQew&index=1&feature=plcp
Now people can drive while watching porn...
Ray Seyfarth, ray.seyfarth@gmail.com, http://rayseyfarth.blogspot.com
It's going to be like the Segway crowd. A bunch of demented, Aspergers, singularity freaks who think technology has all the answers and who have tunnel vision into their dream future while conveniently ignoring all the troubles of the world which their "cool tech" does nothing to help.
This will not become mainstream.
Just like how they have banned cellphones in many jurisdictions, now they'll have to ban glasses... or at least heads up displays... But isn't that proven technology, in use by the military?
Maybe the glasses will have to be legally coloured so they are distinguishable...
Or hopefully it is time to start mass producing that car they are developing.
Hmm, the humour and sarcasm seem to have been be lost on you.
...is not "demented (or drunk)", it's "psychotic (or high)".
I was really disapointed with the demonstration in Google IO keynote. The only thing,they've showed for half an hour, was as a digital camera replacement. A digital camera that "doesn't get in the way of life".
A guy at Google is not concerned about the privacy issues of ubiquitous video recordings.
Everyone complains about the centralized government having tracking everyone, but surely it's the same thing if that tracking becomes distributed by actions of the citizens themselves.
I have curtains on my windows not because I just want to stop the government seeing what I do in private, but because I want to stop everyone else seeing what I do in private.
I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
Any video of the glasses themselves, preferably a "through" view showing what the actual overlay looks like, and what sort of info will be displayed. I am really not all that interested in a video of a bunch of people wearing those things...
If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
I started the video and got a brainful of loud alarm beeping in the preliminary advert. Should be a goddamn warning about that...
I've had the theme tune to Quantum Leap going through my head all day... Now you have, too!
As bad as I want one of these, I can't help but think about how badly we need a low cost, community developed version of this to function as a totally open, arduino-esque option.
Everything about these things coming to market as a popular, locked-down device creeps me out. Maybe it's too many years of scifi, but if history tells us anything, it's that we need a technological escape route at all times.
So uh, where can we source the display technology for these things? Because the rest seems entirely doable.
http://dilbert.com/strips/comic/1994-10-12/
This sig has exceed its monthly bandwidth allotment.
Couldn't you have put any broadcasting camera on someone to get the same effect? The point of this tech is that it's supposed to be augmented reality. I don't see how this spectacle in anyway related to that.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
I've been following wearable computing since the days of Xybernaut, during the Dot-Com era. Google Glass looks like it has the display issue nearly solved--it's functional without being overly intrusive. If they can wear it all day long then the battery issue would be solved enough for most people conditioned to the iPhone's evanescent battery life.
An input mechanism remains a quandry. Voice recognition has improved a lot beyond the days of Dragon Naturally Speaking, but it's still aggravating when you're trying to do something technical or even unusual. Are projected keyboards the answer, or those two handed-deals that ride under velcro patches on your knees? An arm mounted keyboard? Has anyone from MIT's media lab or similar place tried those options? How do they compare?
If not us, who? If not now, when?
I can think of a whole host of problems this device will have, starting with it is see through device and therefore is competing with greatest power source in the solar system, the sun. Also, this device is interfacing with a set of genes that evolved millions of years ago on the plains of Africa. And it's a mono display, the brain does not handle mono well, just ask the Ah-64 pilots. These guys need to talk to some Army Aviation folks, at Mother Rucker. Been there done this, like about 15 years ago......
There are 2 options here. 1, it can artificially seem focused when your eyes are actually focused on something distant which has been proven over and over to be bad for your eyes and brain. 2, it can actually be out of focus until your eyes adjust to an object about a quarter inch in front of them, which is straining and difficult and throws off your left-right eye depth combination abilities. This is going to be found to be bad for anyone's eyes at any age and kill the project before it even causes people to walk off cliffs and in front of cars and stuff.
By the way, I attempted for 2 weeks to get used to "see behind yourself" reverse mirrored tipped glasses. I have very fast eyes from gaming all my life and and better at multitasking than the average person and even I couldn't get used to quickly snapping focus back and forth between the two views, in front of me and behind me. It's just not possible to focus on 2 "video streams" (for lack of a better term) at the same time or hop back and forth between them quickly. The only way this will ever work is an overlay-based image replacement technology that intercepts real life and puts text or colors over top of buildings and streets but even a 25ms delay would make it seem unreal and no tracking system is that fast.
I'm so keen to see what that little screen displays in your eyeball, so these video promos annoy me a little that I don't get to see live action shots.
"You need to have the Adobe Flash Player to view this content."
This is a feature right?
Blah, blah, blah. Where do I need to fast forward to to see the cute girl from the thumbnail?
This thing REALLY needs a tally light (an led showing when it's recording) so we'll know when we're being photographed or video recorded.
In a world with of facial rec software, a camera like this WITHOUT a tally light is very valuable. Just record everything, do facial rec vs. people with facbook accounts, and dump the video, keep a signed still every few seconds. Now you can sell movement info with gps locations to facebook or anyone else. A fraction of people with Glass do this, and you can keep a database and sell location info and a photo (and proximity to other people) at any instant (or a short duration) for ... $100? (Maybe the service doing the facial rec and agregating the results keeps 70% of that. You get $30.) In a crowded city, you could make some serious change by just farming people's identities and locations complete with image for proof, signed with a private key known only to the recorder, who could be called upon to testify at te divorce trial that the images were his/hers.
At some point enough people would be doing it that it wouldn't be very profitable, but we could also assume that everyone would know where we were at all times.
And that's without big brother watching (Google capturing this themselves), because we can't trust our peers.
If these things don't have a tally light, I'm buying a gorilla mask as soon as glass become popular. Hmm. No, I guess we'd all have to start buying the SAME mask...
The Jerk (1979) - IMDb
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0079367/
I hope Google has serious liability insurance.
These interactive glasses would be way more attention distracting than a cell phone call or texting.
The fact that you are still looking in the direction of straight ahead doesn't matter at all.
Your brain can only pay attention to one thing at a time.
There are many experiments demonstrating people looking straight at things and not noticing them because they are attending mentally elsewhere.
Faceplants into poles while walking would be the least of your worries.
Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
Newsflash: Absolutely nobody cares what you do in private.
You should be so lucky, to have one person who cares what you do in private.
Where are we going and why are we in a handbasket?
Resistance is futile. You will be distracted.
If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
if someone's not yelling "it can't be done"...it might not be worth doing!
My God can beat up your God. Just kidding...don't take offense. I know there's no God.
Now that would look interesting: "That man is either dreaming or playing track and field"
Plan My Week for iPhone
It's called a motorcycle: http://i.imgur.com/SpZFK.jpg
Neal Stephenson has got to get his residuals yo.
yes google glass is something great achievement.