Google Glass
Google Glass
Well this thread is inevitable
The main intro video google showed us
At SXSW a develper went into a demo of glass and you get to see more of what its like. He screen shares, what he sees and just shows some things you can do.
The main intro video google showed us
At SXSW a develper went into a demo of glass and you get to see more of what its like. He screen shares, what he sees and just shows some things you can do.
I am mixed on this idea. I see the genius in the concept and certainly understand how it fulfills a scifi dream. However, at the same time, the current execution of it looks tacky and there are a host of potential privacy and courtesy issues that have yet to be honestly addressed.
I am mixed on this idea. I see the genius in the concept and certainly understand how it fulfills a scifi dream. However, at the same time, the current execution of it looks tacky and there are a host of potential privacy and courtesy issues that have yet to be honestly addressed.
Yea well said. Personally I don't really see myself using something like this. Even though I love the tech, I'm just not sure I can pull this off. And if I did, it would not be for an everyday use for sure. I see no fit in my life, currently.
Now that glass has been out to those were able to get their hands on it they're are posting videos/pics. Easiest way is to search throughglass (no space) in google+
This is pretty awesome
Pictures are pretty good quality as well, kinda surprised too

This is pretty awesome
Pictures are pretty good quality as well, kinda surprised too

Trending Topics
Engadget got their hands on one. Guess the dude wrote it up after one day. Didnt say too much, but took a video.
Link to video taken with glass
http://www.viddler.com/v/295ee92d?secret=53599418
Link to video taken with glass
http://www.viddler.com/v/295ee92d?secret=53599418
In a loft atop Chelsea Market, Google is doing something special. Here, lucky Explorers will get their first taste of Project Glass. Yes, Google's latest X project (that we know about, at least) has finally made its way to the East Coast en masse. More importantly, it's also made its way to my face. A full Engadget review of the headset is most certainly on the way, but this is the sort of thing that will take some time to evaluate. You can quite quickly size up the next iteration of a great smartphone. Evaluating a wholly new product category to see how it fits into your life? That takes a little longer, dear readers.
I plan to spend a little while living with Glass in a variety of ways, some exciting and many less so, with the goal of getting comfortable with the thing -- or uncomfortable, if that's how it turns out. Given how many of you are excited to read about Google's new wearable, we wanted to let you come along for the ride. After all, isn't sharing an experience what Glass is really all about? Join me for my very first impressions after picking up my headset and some sample footage of the trip home.
So how did I get here? Did I post an inspirational video online pledging why I should be an Explorer? Nothing that aspiring, sadly. As you may recall, Google first started accepting pre-orders very nearly a year ago at its I/O developer conference. After being wooed by skydivers and extreme bikers, I stood in line like everyone else and walked away with my own little individually numbered Lucite cube. This week, nearly 10 months later, I got an email. My time, it seemed, had come. I set an appointment and scrambled down to NYC as quickly as I could get there to pick up my new headgear.
On the other end of an elevator hidden in Chelsea Market was where lucky ones got to pick theirs up. It's a clean, open space, full of stations where enthusiastic Google employees sat and patiently ensured that every aspect of Glass is perfect before letting those early Explorers start exploring on their own.
There were mirrors at every station and the whole place looked a bit like a high-end, open-air, futuristic salon -- minus the chemical smell and banal chitchat. Here it's just a team of very eager-to-please Glass experts who walk you through every step of the process, from opening the box to pairing to your phone, even adjusting the nosepieces so that the whole thing rests just perfectly on your face. The final step? A trip over to the window to sample the great view -- and to capture your first photo and video through your new headgear.
You do get your choice of color and I had my heart set on something pastel. Alas, currently available choices were somewhat limited: what amounted to gray, darker gray or white. I went with the latter, a particularly conspicuous hue that I may learn to regret. Indeed, I wasn't more than a few steps out the door before the curious looks started and, on my first subway ride, I noticed a total stranger smiling at me. This is not a typical thing.
"Is it as good as they say?" he asked, after a few moments. I apologized, saying I'd just barely put them on and didn't really have any impressions to give yet. "It looks cool," he concluded. Not a bad start.
I managed to capture our conversation on video, a process achieved by holding down the tiny shutter button on the right of the device. It records for only 10 seconds by default, but two quick taps on the touch-sensitive side of Glass will extend that indefinitely. Just shutter pressing the button once captures an image.
You can, of course, do all that using voice if you like, but saying "Okay Glass, take a picture" every time is a bit cumbersome. You can also speak to get directions, make phone calls and search the web; things I'll dive into a bit more next time.
The speaker on Glass, in case you're wondering, is a bone-conductive unit that buzzes just behind your right ear to create sound. It actually tickles a bit sometimes and is a little hard to hear in crowds, I learned, but if you plug your ears it works well even there. Interestingly, I found I could hear it best whilst wearing earbuds.
I captured a few other short clips on the long, late-night ride home that I've cut together in the video above. As things get progressively darker, you can see the limits of this tiny, 5-megapixel shooter when it comes to low-light capture. The last clip, of me getting home late at night and being greeted by our sleepy, but excited mutt Yoshi (who you may remember from an earlier review), looks like a murky scene out of a horror movie. It was very dark indeed, but after I turned the light on, I could still see my pooch just fine. All Glass could pick up was a hint of a happily wagging tail.
Don't worry; you'll get to see more of Yoshi later with future videos I'll be sharing, along with plenty of impressions leading up to our full review. Much more to come.
I plan to spend a little while living with Glass in a variety of ways, some exciting and many less so, with the goal of getting comfortable with the thing -- or uncomfortable, if that's how it turns out. Given how many of you are excited to read about Google's new wearable, we wanted to let you come along for the ride. After all, isn't sharing an experience what Glass is really all about? Join me for my very first impressions after picking up my headset and some sample footage of the trip home.
So how did I get here? Did I post an inspirational video online pledging why I should be an Explorer? Nothing that aspiring, sadly. As you may recall, Google first started accepting pre-orders very nearly a year ago at its I/O developer conference. After being wooed by skydivers and extreme bikers, I stood in line like everyone else and walked away with my own little individually numbered Lucite cube. This week, nearly 10 months later, I got an email. My time, it seemed, had come. I set an appointment and scrambled down to NYC as quickly as I could get there to pick up my new headgear.
On the other end of an elevator hidden in Chelsea Market was where lucky ones got to pick theirs up. It's a clean, open space, full of stations where enthusiastic Google employees sat and patiently ensured that every aspect of Glass is perfect before letting those early Explorers start exploring on their own.
There were mirrors at every station and the whole place looked a bit like a high-end, open-air, futuristic salon -- minus the chemical smell and banal chitchat. Here it's just a team of very eager-to-please Glass experts who walk you through every step of the process, from opening the box to pairing to your phone, even adjusting the nosepieces so that the whole thing rests just perfectly on your face. The final step? A trip over to the window to sample the great view -- and to capture your first photo and video through your new headgear.
You do get your choice of color and I had my heart set on something pastel. Alas, currently available choices were somewhat limited: what amounted to gray, darker gray or white. I went with the latter, a particularly conspicuous hue that I may learn to regret. Indeed, I wasn't more than a few steps out the door before the curious looks started and, on my first subway ride, I noticed a total stranger smiling at me. This is not a typical thing.
"Is it as good as they say?" he asked, after a few moments. I apologized, saying I'd just barely put them on and didn't really have any impressions to give yet. "It looks cool," he concluded. Not a bad start.
I managed to capture our conversation on video, a process achieved by holding down the tiny shutter button on the right of the device. It records for only 10 seconds by default, but two quick taps on the touch-sensitive side of Glass will extend that indefinitely. Just shutter pressing the button once captures an image.
You can, of course, do all that using voice if you like, but saying "Okay Glass, take a picture" every time is a bit cumbersome. You can also speak to get directions, make phone calls and search the web; things I'll dive into a bit more next time.
The speaker on Glass, in case you're wondering, is a bone-conductive unit that buzzes just behind your right ear to create sound. It actually tickles a bit sometimes and is a little hard to hear in crowds, I learned, but if you plug your ears it works well even there. Interestingly, I found I could hear it best whilst wearing earbuds.
I captured a few other short clips on the long, late-night ride home that I've cut together in the video above. As things get progressively darker, you can see the limits of this tiny, 5-megapixel shooter when it comes to low-light capture. The last clip, of me getting home late at night and being greeted by our sleepy, but excited mutt Yoshi (who you may remember from an earlier review), looks like a murky scene out of a horror movie. It was very dark indeed, but after I turned the light on, I could still see my pooch just fine. All Glass could pick up was a hint of a happily wagging tail.
Don't worry; you'll get to see more of Yoshi later with future videos I'll be sharing, along with plenty of impressions leading up to our full review. Much more to come.
I think the glasses are cool but I'm excited to see where the tech heads if this is a big success. I really want a HUD on the visor of my motorcycle helmet, give me an overlay of my Speed/RPM and some GPS and I'll be a happy camper.
do glasses have a GPS built into them?? Well they do connect to your phone via bluetooth, so I dont think it would be impossible to do that with Google glass. There are apps that show your speed limit and I think they're all right with accuracy. At least you can get that, wont be RPM though. That and a GPS would be cool.
Specs are here:
http://support.google.com/glass/answ..._topic=3063354
No GPS and no Wireless N. Makes sense as they try to maximize battery life as much as possible. Also, the phone will be tethered to an Android phone most of the time any way so it can use the GPS data from the phone and whatever other information it needs from the phone. I know there have been a lot of talks that you would need an Android device to leverage the full potential of Glass but that shouldn't be a surprise since iOS is so locked down which is why Robert Scoble switched to Android:
https://plus.google.com/+Scobleizer/posts/AiZucgD5JHg
http://support.google.com/glass/answ..._topic=3063354
No GPS and no Wireless N. Makes sense as they try to maximize battery life as much as possible. Also, the phone will be tethered to an Android phone most of the time any way so it can use the GPS data from the phone and whatever other information it needs from the phone. I know there have been a lot of talks that you would need an Android device to leverage the full potential of Glass but that shouldn't be a surprise since iOS is so locked down which is why Robert Scoble switched to Android:
https://plus.google.com/+Scobleizer/posts/AiZucgD5JHg
https://play.google.com/store/apps/d...bC50b3JxdWUiXQ..
This is probably more of the HUD you wanted:
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/jaz2EfJfQ-Y" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
https://play.google.com/store/apps/d...eption.hudfree
Unlike Torque though, it uses your Android device to estimate the speed.
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/jaz2EfJfQ-Y" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
https://play.google.com/store/apps/d...eption.hudfree
Unlike Torque though, it uses your Android device to estimate the speed.
This thing doesn't have built cell radios so you have have smartphone on you and you have to have tethering enabled. Which usually requires an additional tethering plan. Seems like best to wait until 2nd or 3rd gen comes out.
Which you use to tether to your smartphone.
Here's a cool video <iframe width="640" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/yRrdeFh5-io?feature=player_embedded" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Here's a cool video <iframe width="640" height="360" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/yRrdeFh5-io?feature=player_embedded" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Caesars Palace confirms ban on Google Glass-wearing gamblers
http://www.theverge.com/2013/5/7/431...s-for-gamblers
World famous Las Vegas casino Caesars Palace has confirmed that patrons won't be allowed to wear Google Glass when gambling. Previous statements had indicated that the heads-up display would be permitted on the casino floor as long as it wasn't being used to film. However, in a statement to The Verge, a Caesars Palace representative said that there would indeed be a Glass ban for gamblers in accordance with Nevada state laws.
"There have been numerous incidents around the country in which people have used computers or cameras secreted elsewhere to keep track of cards in blackjack games," a spokesperson told Computerworld. "When they were caught, they went to jail."
Glass doesn't make it obvious when the wearer is recording video — there's no red LED indicator or anything similar, though the tiny screen is always on while filming and could raise suspicions among those looking closely. In any case, it's not surprising that Glass would be banned alongside traditional cameras, but the hoards of people descending on Las Vegas for CES next January may wish to take note of the regulations nonetheless.
"Nevada gaming regulations (and those in other states, as well) prohibit the use of computers or recording devices when gambling. As a result, we cannot allow guests who are gambling to wear Google Glass."
Glass doesn't make it obvious when the wearer is recording video — there's no red LED indicator or anything similar, though the tiny screen is always on while filming and could raise suspicions among those looking closely. In any case, it's not surprising that Glass would be banned alongside traditional cameras, but the hoards of people descending on Las Vegas for CES next January may wish to take note of the regulations nonetheless.
google won't allow advertising or paid apps for google glasses.
I think thats a good move by them, well the advertising part. Paid apps brings incentives, but I'm sure the big names and lots of developers will still make apps just to have it.
I think thats a good move by them, well the advertising part. Paid apps brings incentives, but I'm sure the big names and lots of developers will still make apps just to have it.
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