Intel Processor Could Be In Next-Gen Google Glass
An anonymous reader points out this story that Intel could be in charge of creating the chips for the new Google Glass. Intel is expected to supply the chips for a new version of Google's Glass device in 2015, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal, citing unnamed sources. The Intel processor will replace one from Texas Instruments, which is used in the current version of Glass, which is a device that allows people to view the Internet or take pictures while wearing it on their heads. Intel hasn't commented yet. The Wall Street Journal said that Intel plans to promote Glass to hospital networks and manufacturers. Google watched the web-connected eyewear in 2012, but it carried a hefty price and was regarded as something that only nerds would wear.
You're now getting your hardware in cutting edge technology people are already tired of.
...and I don't think processing power wasn't a problem, at all.
You mean the social experiment/performance art that was supposed to change the world, a la Segway?
Does it even still exist?
...certainly their chips will also have some real world uses as well? It's not like Google spy hardware has much of a future after all.
Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
Because already they had too much.
We have already evaluated these at my hospital. Though I'm not in IT (I'm a clinical pharmacist), I was on the committee. Basically, unless fully firewalled against the Internet, as in fully offline, we can't allow them in any room with a patient.
The only complaint so far is that the processor wasn't good enough. This fixes everything.
How does Google Glass compare to Gorilla Glass or sapphire? How far can I drop Google Glass before it shatters?
Which people are those? Oh, you mean yourself? Just because you're a closed-minded technophobe doesn't mean the rest of us are.
Let me break this down. Here's Intel's apparent product planning meeting:
1. Mobile processors. What to do for the 4th gen Haswell ones...umm...let's make the Pentium 1/2 the speed of the 3rd gen one and still throw it in laptops. Yay! Let's do that! People freaking love double the battery life when it takes twice as long to do everything. I wonder why half the U-series underclocked 3rd gen chips are all on clearance right now...hmmm...
2. Let's take the atom that runs x86 and just emulate ARM and throw it in some tablets like the ASUS MeMO Pad. That'll be efficient and not glitchy at all. Yes, best meeting ever!
3. Next, let's make chips for a controversial product that nobody wants.
I guess this is what happens when AMD says they don't want to compete in mobile processors. Oh well, at least Intel is running out of feet to shoot themselves in.
The article takes some real information (Intel to be used in next gen Google Glass) and extrapolates it into "x86 to be used in next get Google Glass". But this seems to be a wild guess.
Remember Intel makes ARM chips also.
The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
Why does the /. article link to the Venture Beat page? It is completely content free except for the WSJ link, which is what this post should have had.
"This mission is too important to allow you to jeopardize it." -- HAL
For the longest time, Intel tried winning in mobile by controlling the narrative. Although, STRANGELY, Intel's practice of STEALING the IP of others (when x86 went RISC with the PentiumPro, Intel wholesale stole every piece of technology behind the Pro (which became the Pentium II, III, first Celeron and so on) and use their mega-profits to pay-off the inevitable patent-infringement lawsuits that would inevitably occur down the line) had the side effect of Intel becoming the owner of a line of VERY successful ARM chips in the early days of PDAs.
Intel created the impossibly dreadful ATOM line, that led to the brief mega-success of the unthinkably poor 'netbook' fad. The netbooks were utter garbage, but every tame tech site pushed them so successfully, Atom was a giant success for Intel. However, the dirty little secret was that EVERY person working for every tech site knew Atom was the worst possible 'mobile' x86 part.
Intel followed the first crap Atom with a whole series of crap follow-ups, just as ARM was making breakthrough after breakthrough, in partnership with Google/Android. Informed people got used to the idea that Intel was a VERY BAD JOKE in the ultra-mobile market. But Intel wins NOT by being the 'best out of the gate' but by outspending its rivals THOUSANDS-TO-ONE, and NEVER giving up.
Last year Baytrail hit. While Intel calls this an 'Atom' chip, it has NOTHING to do with any (lousy) Atom that came before it. Baytrail is a four-core wonder chip, with superlative CPU and GPU performance in its segment. Its power consumption is poor compared to the best ARM parts from Apple, Qualcomm and Nvidia, but it offers the ability to build CHEAPER devices in the same form factor that provide FULL x86 Win8.1 functionality.
When Baytrail is put into an Android device, you get a FAST but poorly compatible tablet with mediocre battery life. When Baytrail is placed into a tablet (like the Linx 8 that a major supermarket chain in the UK sold for 80quid), you get a MIRACLE of our technology age.
A Baytrail tablet is simply BETTER than an Android or iOS tablet. Special use cases may say otherwise- this is true for ANY inferior product. But considered for general use, a tablet compatible with ALL ordinary Windows software exterminates any possible competition in functionality.
Intel doesn't get worse with time. Intel is having problems with its FinFET initiative, and its current TRUE process shrink, but even if it takes another TWO years, Intel will iron out the bugs, and produce a MUCH better successor to Baytrail. This will mean Intel will move from being the best option in tablets to Intel being the best option in phones, at which point it's game over for ARM and Android.
People like 'slashmydots' rely on the CHILDISH concept that "what was true in the past will always be true in the future"- the fallacy so deadly, UK investment ads are obliged by LAW to point out the untruth of such thinking. Intel ultra-mobile solutions, save for their brief period of manufacturing ARM parts, WERE atrocious, but no longer.
PS yes, I KNOW Google Glass II will still run on Android- but it will be a CUSTOMISED version of Android that Google is happy has LOW COMPATIBILITY with ARM based Android. x86-based Android is less hack-friendly, and that suits Google fine. Google needs REAL, stable multi-threaded performance- something that ARM promises but never delivers. Once I believed ARM's self-promoting propaganda, but ARM has had several years now of providing actual PC-class SoC (in theory), and their real-world performance disappoints greatly. 99.99% of all ARM software still relies on a SINGLE high-performance thread, other threads if used only doing very low performance tasks- like we are back in 2004.
ARM's Mali GPU initiative has been a TOTAL and utter failure- seemingly a thousand variations of ARM designed GPU, all with totally dreadful performance ( the best ARM SoC parts use GPUs from Nvidia, PowerVR or derived from ATI - adreno- NEVER Mali). If ARM is so utterly hopeless at the t
No, this is "regarded as something that only dorks would wear".