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Snapchat's 10-Second-Video Glasses Are Real And Cost $130 Bucks (techcrunch.com)

Long-time Slashdot reader bheerssen writes that Snapchat "announced a new product yesterday, Spectacles, which are sunglasses with a camera built into the frame." TechCrunch reports: Snapchat's long-rumored camera glasses are actually real. The startup's first foray into hardware will be a pair of glasses called "Spectacles" and will go on sale this fall for $129.99, according to the WSJ... To start recording you tap a button on the side of the glasses. Video capture will mimic Snapchat's app, meaning you can only capture 10 seconds of video at once. This video will sync wirelessly to your phone, presumably making it available to share as a snap.
The cameras will be using a circular 115-degree lens to mimic the human eye's natural field of vision, and in the Journal's article, Snap CEO Evan Spiegel remembers his first test of the product in 2015. "I could see my own memory, through my own eyes -- it was unbelievable... It was the closest I'd ever come to feeling like I was there again." The camera glasses will enter "limited distribution" sometime within the next three months, which TechCrunch believes "could end up being like Google Glass when it first launched -- officially on sale to the public but pretty hard to come by."

4 of 92 comments (clear)

  1. My goodness, those are fugly by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Informative

    I was picturing something more like Oakley's MP3 glasses, but with a super-flat little camera between your eyes. Instead it's a child's toy. They got the button on the device right (because it makes it obvious when you're recording) but they seem to have everything else wrong, including the price. That's too much for something that goofy.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  2. Socialmedia is a third-person camera thing by grumbel5969 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    One thing with social media is that people seem to post a lot more pictures of themselves (third person camera) than they post about experiences they were having (first person camera). Meaning video glasses point essentially in the wrong direction, as they show what the user sees, but not the user itself. Selfiesticks seem to be more in tune to how people actually use social media.

    Either way, the 10sec restriction makes those glasses a rather limited gadget without much use outside of Snapchat.

  3. Re:Why do people care... by SeaFox · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... whether or not somebody else records them in a public place? For fuck's sake, if they are within earshot, they are recording your audio and if they are in eyeshot, they are recording your video... the only difference is that the device that is doing the recording is their brain. When wetware becomes a thing, even that distinction to external devices such as cameras or microphones will be irrelevant.

    Because currently a memory is only usable to the witness, and is often forgotten. It cannot be saved in perfect detail, duplicated (only described), or packaged and sold for monetary gain. When wetware comes to be, as you point out, these issues will need to be dealt with at an ethical and legal level, but the that's not coming as soon as you believe, I think.

  4. Re:Just like google glass by mjtaylor24601 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Threatening to punch anyone they see wearing them in the face isn't bullying; is that what you are trying to say?

    Your hyperbole is showing.

    That's not exactly hyperbole. Consider some of the comments in this thread alone

    Can they capture the full wind-up and followthrough of SnapChat glasses being slugged off someone's face?

    Does it come with a disclaimer that says.. "When you get punched in the face because of these glasses, and you will get punched in the face because of these glasses, you cannot hold SnapChat legally responsible because you are an asshat."

    If a person wants or expects privacy, I believe that the onus is upon them to take measures to sufficient degree

    They do. They beat the crap out of glassholes. Sufficient measures thus taken, effective privacy is restored.

    Some people seem to have no trouble advocating physical violence against people merely for openly carrying a camera (which seems silly because if you want to surreptitiously record people there are plenty of ways to do it that are much less obvious). I hope this is just a case of people "being tough on the Internet", but even so, the ferocity of the response seems totally out of proportion.

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    I wish I were as sure of anything as some people are of everything