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Wearable PCs

z0mbie writes sent us a link to an interesting article regarding Wearable Computers. Full powered machines the size of a Pilot with wireless networking, voice recognition, and an eyepiece. Thats the dream. Currently that dream is still wet though. Maybe Someday.

75 comments

  1. Three words... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good Times virus.

  2. Oh No! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did I smell a Paranoia reference?

  3. Windows? *sigh* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is there any way to get an "Itsy"? Those things are so cool.

  4. I want a machine installed into my skull! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    Just don't overclock it.


    I can't help it, this just lends itself to all kinds of jokes.

  5. Windows wearables by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ugh.

    Reminds me of the old joke (creatively updated to modern technology...): Company X has just released a computer that features four-way SMP with each processor capable of handling a trillion operations per second, has a HMD that works like a pair of clip-on sunglasses with full stereo-viewing and 16M colors at a resolution of 1600x1280, includes 10GB of local holographic storage, 1GB cellular networking, 99.99% accurate speech recognition with no training, works for a month on two AA batteries, and clips onto your shirt pocket but nobody will buy it because it doesn't run Win98.

  6. Non-Windows Wearable by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most students and researchers run Linux on their wearables. I don't understand how NASA could use Windows on the shuttle.
    A company is create wearable software in java so it can run on linux for us smart people and windows for the masses.
    http://www.wearpc.com is their site.

    Houston we have a GPF!!!!

  7. downloading on the loo? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would say 'dumping core'.

  8. People = 2-Way Computer Peripherals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    have you ever TRIED to AVOID TV for a period
    of a week or more? it's harder than avoiding SPAM!
    you CAN'T just turn it off when everyone is working to make it ubiquitous.

    Just try and tell it to the warehouse factory worker-droid five years from now.

    The question is: can you really turn it off?
    Let me ask you this question: Can you finish the following song lyric:

    "You know that we are living in a material world,
    and I am a _______ ____."

    If you answered "Material Girl", and you don't own a Madona Album, Congratulations! you just proved that you CAN'T just turn it off!

    But I didn't take the post that way - it offered a Choice - servant OR served. Mind you, most /.'s are in the techinical elite - they'll be on the end programming the systems that the bluecollar
    workers WILL have to obey - If they want to keep their job.


  9. People = 2-Way Computer Peripherals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've gone for over 5 months at least three times in my life. (Okay, 2 of those three times had 5 or 6 hours worth of tv in them, but that's so diluted it's hardly there.

  10. easy... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just take a hammer to it.. then you can't turn it on! hell just give me $20's and i will DO IT FOR you then you will NEVER HAVE TO watch tv..

  11. somebody needs to grow up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i thought rob knows better thn to use stupid words like 'wet dream' on a zine.
    slapdash: for horny pimple faced dweebs with glases.

  12. Oh for chrissakes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, true freedom is the freedom to say 2 + 2 = 4 hehehe.....sorry I couldn't help myself w/ the 1984 reference hehe

    Cha0s The0ry

  13. I already do this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    out of the shower, and i whip out my Palm III and Ricochet datamodem, and i'm all set with email and web browsing .. and ssh

  14. Eudaemonic Pie by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're referring to the book called Eudaemonic Pie


  15. WearComp stuff on RealVideo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you want to see some of the wearables stuff in action, go see the International Symposium on Wearable Computing webpage at:

    http://iswc.gatech.edu/iswc9798/Wearcon98/partic ipation/followup.htm

    Most of the conference is available on RealVideo. Pay close attention to the Gadget Show, it's quite cool. And it's got Itsy in action, as well =)

  16. Beowulf Cluster!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You and your frineds could all sit in a circle and make a Beowulf cluster with these things!!

    ***JOY****

  17. Wearable interfaces by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I made one of these with old bits of herring and burnt toasty diodes the other week. Trust me, it was shit.

    I'm not kidding.

    I'm not.


  18. RE: alienation by computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't think he did mean to prevent someone to do whatever they likes, but I agree if he ment that this "weareable PC" could be another step into the alienation from a "real" life that someone could suffer staying too much in front of a computer.

    Of course if you want to be an anti-social and an alienate, you are free to be as you like ;-)

    The major problems I see is that kind of PCs is that they could increase the distance between what you like to do and what you do for your job.

    I program for free when I can choose my platform (like the majority of us expressed in the poll) but I HAVE to program using Windows TO EAT. So imagine wearing a system that crashes everytime, and imagine this systems reacting to your body's attitude... imagine a *Micro$oft* program reacting to your body... or reacting ON your body... :-((( imagine a bug in the software and an electric shock every BSoD... or everytime you turn absentminded on your work... or imagine it liked to the Microsoft's internet site... everytime happen an "ADODB.Connection error" you may remain naked (after all, it's a wear)!

    Out of the joke, I think this "weareable PC" could be funny if used freely, but it could a very big step into the Orwell's 1984 if used at
    work...

  19. Oh for chrissakes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I think it's high time some people went outside and started enjoying life a little bit more.

  20. Yeah, indoor satellite reception sucks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Really, why do people want to use their own ideas about what is 'good for you' and beat you over the head with it? Think the 'net is a waste of time? Think wearables are for loons? Think video games are for losers? That's fine with me. But why do you feel the need to impose control over other people and tell them what they should and should not be able to do? Let people do what makes them happy without nagging them about it.

    True freedom is a wonderful thing. It's being able to do whatever you want so long as you do not prevent others from doing the same. And you sir, are stepping on the latter provision of freedom. And that sucks, IMO. :(

  21. People = 2-Way Computer Peripherals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2


    first you've got the parallel port dumping data to the printer -> a one way affair; kinda like TV (i.e. "programming unit) broadcast to the masses. then you get two way peripheral control - and you've got videogames and web browsers so you can interactively control your human peripherals. now you see the zombies everyday on the subway - with one-way electric plugs feeding signals into their ears from walkmans. then you beam stuff into their retina with "wearable display". so your human peripherals can be interactively be managed over a wireless TCP/IP connection...get a life! you really aren't living as long as you're on beck and call to your eletro-beeper gadget (oh wait, i just gotta answer my cell-phone...)

    technology - the servant of humanity;
    where's my star-trek communicator badge?

    humanity - the slave of technology.
    now go go gadget borg - THE WEB REQUIRES you to...

    take 'yer pick.

  22. Windows for the masses? Insulting to the masses. by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

    I'm rambling a bit here. In the end, all I'm saying is: be nice to the masses. It's the only way you'll win them over to Linux and all the other cool stuff.

    Most of marketing campaigns do not include any demonstration of respect to "masses", and some are openly insulting to them. Microsoft is one of the brightest examples of that kind.

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  23. Windows for the masses? Insulting to the masses. by gavinhall · · Score: 1

    Posted by Mike@ABC:

    Usually I wouldn't respond to this, and I mean no disrespect to the Anonymous Coward, but there's an attitude here which has the potential to alienate a lot of people. Yes, Linux and Java and other OSes and languages are great, they're much more flexible, and they're better than Windows. But think about this -- if you lump non-techies together with your disdain for Microsoft, I betcha the masses will get pissed. Nobody likes to be called stupid. The readers and posters here are very smart and very with-it (mostly), but a lot of those masses are also smart and with-it, just in different ways.

    I'm rambling a bit here. In the end, all I'm saying is: be nice to the masses. It's the only way you'll win them over to Linux and all the other cool stuff.

  24. wearables....sigh by mackga · · Score: 1

    I want one, bad, now, uhhhh, now! Seriously, it's getting closer. Nice sunglasses-like wrap-around display, clip-on-the-belt (aka pager) cpu, voice and maybe a pen-based interface, no Windows, fer Gawd's sake! Wireless networking. YummmmmY! Actually, the monocular borg-like eyepiece really would be a nice fashion statement.

    --

    "shop smart:shop s-mart" ash

  25. Oh for chrissakes... by mackga · · Score: 1

    Life? Isn't that a board game?

    --

    "shop smart:shop s-mart" ash

  26. gate$ of hell by PHroD · · Score: 1

    Thank god that Gate$ doesnt write software anymore, or windows would be totally in Visual Basic...come to think of it WOULD be good cause then the software would suck harder than a singapore whore

  27. For the people w/ no freinds...... by GeeWiz · · Score: 1
    Can you imagine this.. You're on this hot date (The first in many years for some of you) and in the middle the date you go and check your email.....

    Check email? No problem for me. I just put my Palmpilot with the IR port facing my cell phone and press "fetch mail".

    But what's that "date" thing you mentioned? :)

    Regards, Jochen

    --

    Regards, Geewiz

  28. I want a machine installed into my skull! by root · · Score: 2

    Forget wearable. I want a machine small enough to implant right into my skull with a 'heads up' display inside my eyeball. Just think, engineers could pack their device with formulas and tables; doctors with medical reference data; programmers with man pages; students with next week's test answers; all quickly searchable. Recording ability would be nice too. You'd be able to show what really happened to cause that fender bender. The unit could recharge via an induction charger built right into your pillow. Data could be downloaded into the unit in the charger too or via optical input (just look at a display and hit 'download'). None of this is to say the device should be able to control its host in any way. Just a way to keep a small useful reference library in your head. Add a 'net connection and keep up with Slashdot live and everywhere!

  29. One word by Derek · · Score: 1

    Borg!

    Anyway, this idea scares the living tar out of me! If I ever really had to have such a device implanted though, I want Linus to write the kernel and not Bill. :-)

    -Derek

  30. Oh No! by jd · · Score: 1

    That means there -WILL- be terminals the The Big Room with the Blue Ceiling!

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  31. Not far-fetched (and pretty dry) by red_dragon · · Score: 1

    Many things are already out there which can be combined to make these things mainstream:

    • Apple Newton MessagePad 2000 (they shouldn't have killed this one).
    • IBM 1-inch hard disk drives.
    • Your choice: small high-res colour touchscreens, or head-mounted displays.
    • Cheap RAM.

    What I would like now is someone to make 'em en masse.

    ^D

    --
    In Soviet Russia, Jesus asks: "What Would You Do?"
  32. Keyboards by apilosov · · Score: 1

    Take a look at twiddler at http://www.handykey.com. Its slightly on pricey side (150$+), but it does work. It took me around 6 hours of twiddling to get to 15 wpm speed on it. Fairly reasonable. There are few clones of it out there as well, which you can make yourself for around 30$ in parts.

    Check out wearables.blu.org for a load of information about wearable computers. Also, Steve Mann has a website at www.wearcomp.org with his writings...

  33. Notes by apilosov · · Score: 3

    Few items of note:

    1. ViA had some (battery?) problems with their units and weren't shipping the old version since December. New version had just been shipped to their beta customers. Unfortunately, to get on beta list, you have to promise to use it daily and talk to them daily regarding your experience. I passed up :)

    2. Prices aren't that much more expensive than a PC, at least for someone with few grand of spare cash. ViA 2 is 3200$, including batteries, chargers and liquidimage's M1 HMD.

    3. HMD are getting better. The coolest thing I saw was www.microopticalcorp.com selling their HMD for 5000$. While it can be too much for a college geek, its not that much for a company or a geek with a good job. The HMD is almost undetectable, it just looks like a pair of eyeglasses (albeit with a fairly thick frame). I'm getting one when I can get my hands on production VIA 2.

    4. It does run linux already. It has a cyrix mediaGX processor, which is supported by latest Xfree. I had a conversation with Steve Case (VP of Engineering at ViA) in which he stated that its already running in the lab, and it is possible to get a beta unit with Linux preloaded. Since you can buy a "bare" ViA, you don't pay MS tax on it...

    -alex

  34. downloading on the loo? by mikpos · · Score: 1

    I think you mean "uploading", unless you have strange habits on the loo.

  35. Wireless LAN in military? by GrenDel+Fuego · · Score: 1

    Is it just me or does this sound like trouble? Especially since it sounds like most of the wearables mentioned in the article are running Windows (I don't recall hearing about NetMeeting for Linux!).

    I wouldn't exactly call that trouble. Most standard PCs and laptops come with Windows installed on them as well. Dosen't mean you need to KEEP it on there. I'm sure Linux would be ported to them rather quickly.

  36. Windows? *sigh* by cdipierr · · Score: 0

    You think privacy concerns are a problem now...just wait until MS embeds a tracking device into each wearable. It wouldn't surprise me if WinCE devices already had some sort of privacy infringement.

  37. Who can it be now? by T.J.Hooker · · Score: 2


    Just imagine how easy it would be for big brother to track you with one of these beasties. Hell, just add a cookie where ever you go. Being able to track which store fronts catch your eye...

    Be carefull what you ask for.

    --T

    --
    _____________________ This Space for rent.
  38. wearables....sigh by CYberPhreak · · Score: 1

    So as to implement the borg-like interface, it wpuld require windows 95. I say this only because any machine that is running Win95 on it has been assimilated into the Microsoft Collective, almost never to be relinquished. However, if one was willing to convert a cybernetic race of beings over to Linux, I would probably line up to become Assimilated.

    --

    Buy the ticket, take the ride.

  39. Wireless LAN in military? by Anonymous+Commando · · Score: 2

    "The Via IIs used by military workers have high-speed ''wireless LAN'' connections to local- and wide-area networks... also use Microsoft's NetMeeting videoconferencing software..."

    Is it just me or does this sound like trouble? Especially since it sounds like most of the wearables mentioned in the article are running Windows (I don't recall hearing about NetMeeting for Linux!).
    ________________________

    --
    Corporate Jenga: You take a blockhead from the bottom and you put him on top...
  40. Who do they pay to beta-test? by JerkBoB · · Score: 1
    They never talk about that stuff in the Sci-Fi novels. Everything always works, and nobody ever turns into a drooling slob because some programmer somewhere wrote if(foo = 1) instead of if(foo == 1).

    I'm all for the neural shunt installed behind my right ear, but I want to make damn sure that the bugs have been worked out first.

    The other thing I wonder about is what all that EMF energy would do to one's innards. Even with wearable computers, does anyone test this sort of thing? I dunno, but sometimes when I'm talking on my little Nokia I feel a distinctly strange sensation on the side of my head that the phone is on. I know that radio wireless is lower energy than microwave wireless, but still.

    I guess I'm caught somewhere between techno-lust and paranoia. Leaning more toward the former these days.

    --
    A host is a host from coast to coast...
    Unless it's down, or slow, or fails to POST!
  41. Security Implications. by skroz · · Score: 1

    Oh sure, if you need to break into an office, cut the owner's arm off. Wonderful.

    --
    -- Minds are like parachutes... they work best when open.
  42. Wet Dream... by Type-R · · Score: 1
    Yikes, don't say wearable computer and wet dream in the same breath... ;)

    Way cool tho.

  43. It's inevitable... by UncleRoger · · Score: 1
    It's inevitable, but it may not be what you're thinking. Just as many people who thought they'd never want a portable computer are finding their palm pilots indispensable, so too, may those who think they'll never want a wearable computer find they are wearing one sometime soon.

    As computers get smaller, seems obvious that they will reach a point where current systems don't need to be any bigger than a pager, if you don't need exhaustive expansion capabilities (and not including i/o devices.) Imagine a pager-size system, with one of those CIA earpieces (for output) and a tiny mike (perhaps combined with a 3d, wireless mouse). Make it the size of an older celphone or walkman, and you can add pager/celphone circuitry directly to the unit.

    I'd buy one...

    --
    Stupid people will be persecuted to the fullest extent allowed by law.
  44. wearables....sigh - Get REAL! by Raptor+CK · · Score: 1

    Microsoft Collective... right... because we Linux users aren't zealots... of course not...
    Why the Borg would use Linux:
    1 - The Collective doesn't crash
    2 - It's the ultimate Beowulf cluster
    3 - Females use it too, we just tend not to notice them.
    4 - You ever see a Borg ship reboot to reconfigure something?
    5 - Why would any Linux user go back to Windows?

    As for the whole individuality deal, I can come up with a series of pro-Linux arguments in that direction as well. Stop using everything you read as a chance to bash Billy boy and M$. If the product sucks, it eventually dies, and no amount of marketing will help.
    Instead of whining about Windows, contribute something useful to the Linux community.

    --
    Raptor
    "Procrastination is great. It gives me a lot more time to do things that I'm never going to do."
  45. there are a bunch of originators by nwv · · Score: 1

    Thad Starner, Brad Rhodes, and Steve Mann were/are
    some of the key people in the wearable computers
    work at the MIT Media Lab.

    Thad and Steve have graduated and gone on to
    professorships. Brad is still at the Media Lab,
    and is working on various agent-based interfaces
    for wearables and computers in general. Of
    course he runs Linux on his wearable, :) and
    makes the source to one of his projects, the
    Remembrance Agent, freely available.

    http://wearables.www.media.mit.edu/projects/wear ables/
    http://rhodes.www.media.mit.edu/people/rhodes/RA /

  46. Oh for chrissakes... by Col.+Klink+(retired) · · Score: 1

    I plan to go outside... once I get my wearable!

    --

    -- Don't Tase me, bro!

  47. Linux wearables and more. by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 2
    There have actually been quite a few articles about this on Slashdot recently, and a few comments. I remember mentioning the Linux "wearcomps" from U of T a while back.


    Here is a list of relevant slashdot articles, including this one:

    • Wearable PCs by CmdrTaco on Monday March 22, @02:00PM EST

    • New Low-Power Wearable Monitor by CmdrTaco on Thursday March 11, @12:53PM EST

    • Wearable Computers in Canada by CmdrTaco on Sunday January 24, @12:46PM EST

    • More Wearable PC by CmdrTaco on Sunday November 29, @12:04PM EST

    • Wearable Linux Computer by CmdrTaco on Thursday November 12, @09:58AM EST

    • Wearable Computing Central by CmdrTaco on Thursday November 05, @10:45AM EST

    • A Real Wearable? by CmdrTaco on Sunday October 18, @02:34PM EST

    • World's Smallest Web Server by CmdrTaco on Sunday January 24, @05:35PM EST

    • Tiny PPC Motherboards by CmdrTaco on Thursday January 07, @02:34PM EST

    • The PDA Revolution hits InfoWorld by CmdrTaco on Monday December 21, @05:01PM EST

    • IBM enters the fashion world with wearable PC by CmdrTaco on Monday September 14, @08:01PM EST


  48. Papers on similar things by Christopher+Thomas · · Score: 2
    I don't have a citation for the article that you mentioned, but if you look up Professor Kensall Wise in the IEEE Journel of Solid State Circuits, you'll find about ten years worth of research and development in neural implants.


    If you find citations for other groups, btw, please post them. I'm doing a project in a related field, and am having trouble tracking other groups down (there is at least one other group making devices that interface neurons and circuitry in addition to Prof. Wise's, but I don't know who they are).

  49. Keyboards by Zoyd · · Score: 1

    The Twiddler rocks. I've had mine for about a year. For more on wearables, check out the FAQs, etc., at:
    http://www.media.mit.edu/projects/wear ables/

  50. I have to say... by pyrite · · Score: 1

    As much as it sounds like a good idea, the whole time I was reading it I was looking to see what they'd do for a keyboard... I can't comment on voice recognition, having never tried it, but it seems to me keyboards are still the way to go.. or maybe it's just that I don't want my typing skill to become useless? ;+)

    --
    -- ...able was I ere I saw elba...
  51. Already being researched by webslacker · · Score: 1

    I recall some successful project to implant electronics into humans 1 or 2 years ago. Some researcher implanted a little plug in his arm that had a unique radio-transmitted ID. He walked around a special building and when he walked up to doors, they'd open automatically when they scanned his body and received his ID.

    The premise was that with a unique ID for everyone, they could walk around a building and all the doors would open automatically. If a person didn't have security clearance for a certain area, his ID would reveal that fact to the scanners, and the doors wouln't open.

    After the experiment was over, the guy had the plugs removed from his arm and said he felt kind of "empty" and "disconnected"...

    All of this, just to save a couple calories of taking out your wallet and whipping out a keycard.

  52. Wearable PC by thorolf · · Score: 1

    Hewlett packard have a wearable PC they have promised to bring along to show me. It has a screen that goes on the forearm rather than using the eyepiece as they say the eye pieces available are not good enough yet.

    A horrible thought, being able to work anywhere never being away from your work. Not for me..

    --
    The Avalanche has stated its too late for the pebbles to vote !!! (Ambassader Kosh B5)
  53. Hmm, no mentions of one of the originators... by NightFlier · · Score: 2

    Dr. Steve Mann who started wearing computers
    in the 1970s at MIT and is now at U of Toronto.

    Check out the Wearable Computer site at:
    http://www.wearcomp.org

    Very academic, but full of interesting information
    on wearable computers.

  54. People = 2-Way Computer Peripherals by lucifel · · Score: 1

    Technology and information are super-powerful genies, but we (the sentient ones) aren't compelled to bend to their will. Quite the opposite, as a matter of fact. - yeah, unless your a programmer for m$...

  55. Wearable PCs by The+Cheese · · Score: 1

    Imagine; surfing the web on mass transit. Rebuilding your kernel while "downloading" on the loo. INstead of restarting and making lunch, you restart, and run diagnostics while making lunch.

    Wearable Pc... mmmmmmmmmmm...

    -The Cheese

  56. Looking Like the Borg by kmactane · · Score: 1
    >Unlike the mammoth eyepieces worn by the Borg villains on the Star
    >Trek TV shows, the IBM headset display is relatively unobtrusive.
    >``We're trying to break the geek factor for wearing these in public,''
    >says Budd, who envisions widespread headset use on commercial
    >airliners and commuter trains.

    I can see why they're trying to go for mainstream acceptance, but what about those of us who want to look like Borg? Or like k-rad cyberpunk hax0rZ?

    Someone could make a few bucks building eyepiece displays that look like high-tech, ultra-chromed things that you'd expect to have lasers in them.

    How about displays that look like they're grafted to your head?

  57. Windows? *sigh* by Grit · · Score: 1
    Now, picture this: a full-powered Windows computer little larger than a Palm device...

    The horror! The horror! :)

    Itsy isn't wearable, but it already offers speech recognition, and some enterprising soul already ported Doom to it. Not a commercial product, though.

  58. Read Michael Crichton's "Terminal Man" by AJWM · · Score: 1

    But forget the movie.

    The premise is a little different - the guy isn't wired to the net, but has a chip implanted to stop his epileptic seizures before they start.

    It doesn't quite work out that way...

    --
    -- Alastair
  59. lots of vertical specific use by AJWM · · Score: 1

    Exactly.

    Some other examples -
    - telephone lineman reviewing a schematic while up on the pole
    - firefighter checking floor plans while clearing a building

    And on more recreational note:
    - checking a map while riding a bike, or
    hiking (especially coupled to a GPS receiver)

    The head-mounted display doesn't have to look geeky (although that look might be a plus to some). With appropriate lenses and fiber optics the imaging electronics could be hidden and the display projected onto the back of a sunglass lens, for example.


    --
    -- Alastair
  60. One of the first wearables by AJWM · · Score: 1

    I recall reading a book about one of the first wearable computers, twenty or so years ago.

    A vest contained the cpu board, power supply, etc. worn under the clothes. Input was via toe switches concealed in the shoes, output was a series of LEDs hidden in the frame of a pair of glasses (visible to the wearer). It was used to count cards in casino blackjack games in Vegas.

    At least until the casino owners caught on.

    --
    -- Alastair
  61. For the people w/ no freinds...... by Ellis-D · · Score: 1

    I personally like my computer. But I don't think I would sink that low to carry a computer w/ me... Can you imagine this.. You're on this hot date (The first in many years for some of you) and in the middle the date you go and check your email..... Srike 1, 2 and 3....

    --
    I ate my tag line.
    -=Ellis (D)25=-
  62. Not far-fetched (and pretty dry) by Salgak1 · · Score: 1

    Give it a little time. Sony manufactures the
    Xybernaut boxes, and owns a big piece of Xybernaut. . . . .

  63. lots of vertical specific use by jnolan · · Score: 1

    To clarify my earlier post:
    - wearable computers have a large market for industrial use, as evidenced by the examples I provided.
    - I am skeptical about consumer use

  64. lots of vertical specific use by jnolan · · Score: 2

    think about it for a second:
    - carry a specification and repair manual in a wearable computer, display through visor (Boeing does this today).
    - wearable data collection devices are widespread in warehouse environments
    - wireless units for field service technicians, complete with repair procedures, notes, etc.

    Wearable computers for consumer use is still in it's infancy, at least until they become embedded in other things to truly be pervasive.

  65. Not that far in the future... by Orava · · Score: 1

    Actually, wearable networked computers and mobile
    devices are not that far in the future, at least
    here in Finland / Europe where the cellular phone
    network (GSM) is way ahead of the U.S. Digital GSM
    data traffic is routine, and combining that with
    Bluetooth and WAP gives you all the pieces you
    need. I'd say stuff like this will be on the market beginning of next year (in Europe, at least) - they already had demos of stuff like that at CeBIT last week.



    Since the States still doesn't have two-way SMS, let alone anything more sophisticated, you guys over there might be in for a bit longer wait, sorry :(

  66. does that mean... by Irie · · Score: 1

    i'd never have to go offline ??? LOL

    --
    use Signature::Witty;
  67. People = 2-Way Computer Peripherals by Moofie · · Score: 1

    This doesn't make a lot of sense to me. Just because I have access to a global information infrastructure doesn't mean it's going to control me. All you need to do is NOT buy stuff that coopts your free will. Is there some sort of odd compulsion...MUST answer cell phone? No. If it's not convenient for me to answer it, that's what voice mail is for. I am not, and never will be, at the beck and call of technology. Technology and information are super-powerful genies, but we (the sentient ones) aren't compelled to bend to their will. Quite the opposite, as a matter of fact.

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  68. People = 2-Way Computer Peripherals by Moofie · · Score: 1

    You must have missed the "sentient" qualifier. That excludes everybody in Redomond's reality distortion field.

    JOKE! That's humor, people. : )

    --
    Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  69. I want a machine installed into my skull! by Funky+Jester · · Score: 1

    The advertising would drive you insane.

  70. Book bout this stuff by dblado · · Score: 1

    Hey...good book that has all this wearable PC stuff in it..
    What Will Be by Michael Dertouzos (spelling) he is some guy from MIT lab for comp sci. Pretty good read, I suggest it!

  71. Looking Like the Borg: easy by SEWilco · · Score: 2

    Just buy several different plastic model kits. Chop them up. Glue assorted pieces together into shapes which fit on your head and around the tiny headset. Or for a sleeker look use automotive/plumber's epoxy putty and metal/plastic stock pieces to make a custom shape. Or just buy more tiny headsets and help drive the prices down for the rest of us.

  72. Already being researched by Grandpa_Spaz · · Score: 1

    Been trying to find the link... maybe someone else can help...

    Appearantly last year at Emory University in Georgia researchers were able to insert a brain implant in to the skulls of several quadrapalegics (no spelling flames, please) that allowed them control over a mouse and keyboard. Although, depending on chemical balances, the device didn't always work, it was useful in the majority of attempts. I will continue to look for it; I first heard it on NPR on the way to work one morning. If anyone else knows what I am talking about and knows the link, please, post it.

    Grandpa Spaz

  73. Wearable PCs by [daz] · · Score: 1

    There was a big article in Popular Science about this stuff like 2 years ago. The designs were really out-there. Let me dig out the article and I'll post it.

    How functional could the systems really be? Remember we spend hours and hours of time optimizing and refining our code and our systems.. they are built for functionality.. not fashion :)

    -[daz]

    ----------------------------------------
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  74. Wearable interfaces by NiteHaqr · · Score: 1

    Just think.........

    Imagine implanting electrodes onto the surface of the brain.

    This has been done for people with prosthetic limbs to give them control of simple movement with said limbs

    What if all you had to do was get a contact web implanted in your head, then spend some time to learn which thoughts controlled functions on your wearable.

    Combine this with wireless networking and the next thing you know.....BOOM - telepathy.

    Imagine a GeekCon in 10 years, and how it would look to an "off-liner" a room full of people all standing around, no one saying a word.

    Scary or what.....

    PS - Other advantage - you can eat Pizza, Drink Jolt and communicate at the same time


  75. Wearable interfaces by NiteHaqr · · Score: 1

    The reason for your poor perfomance with your mock up was your choice of aquatic organisms.

    I feel that Pink Salmon would have been more suitable as opposed to the Red Herring that I think that you used.

    Also we are talking about a Neural Interface here, not a Herring Aid.

    Any more kids wanting to waste bandwidth will be similarly replied to in similarly sarcastic tones.