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Showing posts with label Glass. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Glass. Show all posts

News Google Glass Update : New Google Glass For Businesses Will Reportedly Attach To Other Eyewear

The next edition of Google Glass will target enterprises and feature an attachable design, a news report suggests, shedding new light on rumors that have been circulating over the past several months.

The device will feature a curved, rectangular form factor much the way the first, consumer-focused Glass edition did, according to an article in the Wall Street Journal. It will differ from that version, however, in that it will reportedly feature a button-and-hinge system rather than a fixed frame, making it attachable to different kinds of eyewear.
Google aims to have the device in use by this fall at companies in healthcare, manufacturing and energy, and is already distributing it to software developers creating applications for that purpose, the WSJ reported on Thursday, citing anonymous sources familiar with the situation.

A new consumer version is also in the works, but it reportedly won’t appear for at least a year.

Google didn’t immediately respond to a request to comment for this story.

The original $1,500 Google Glass version is widely considered to have been released before it was ready for consumer use, and it encountered a strong backlash over privacy concerns.

Expected in the new, enterprise version are a faster Intel processor and improved wireless connectivity. An external battery pack connects magnetically to the device, the latest news suggests, promising better battery life than what was offered by its predecessor.

Finally, a longer and thinner prism display is adjustable both vertically and horizontally, the WSJ said, offering improved flexibility.

“The new Google Glass story sounds much better the second time around,” said wireless and telecom analyst Jeff Kagan.

Consumers will probably become more comfortable with such technology eventually, but “it will take a while before the average person gets to that point,” Kagan added. In the meantime, “taking Glass to certain industries to start sounds like a much better idea.”

News Google Glass Update : Will the GG2 Be Bulkier Than Google Glass? Enterprise Edition Will Have A Larger Prism, Sources Reveal

  • Rumours suggest Google will release a new version of Google Glass, dubbed the Enterprise Edition, with a larger prism display
  • Improved screen could help to reduce eye strain for wearers
  • Smart specs are also said to include an Intel Atom processor for improved performance and battery life compared to the previous version
  • Some users of Glass, which was pulled in January following poor sales and mixed reviews, complained of eye strain after prolonged use
Despite complaints that Google Glass was too bulky and nerdy, rumours suggest the tech giant will release a new version with a larger prism display.

The Enterprise Edition (EE) is also said to include an Intel Atom processor for improved performance and battery life.

Some users of Glass, which was pulled in January following poor sales and mixed reviews, complained of eye strain after prolonged use.

This may explain why Google might have decided to include a larger screen in its next design, 9to5Google reported.

It’s rumoured that final iterations of the EE include a prism that extends further, allowing wearers to glance upwards and focus on the screen more comfortably than before.

Sources suggest the screen resolution of the EE might be better too.

In December, The Wall Street Journal reported that the forthcoming device will have a new low-power Intel chip in a bid to boost battery life.

This has been confirmed by 9to5Google’s sources, who say it will boast an Intel Atom chip, although it’s not clear which model.

This could potential make the smart spectacles a bit faster than top of the range Android smartwatches.

The EE has also been spotted with a Google-made external battery pack, although it’s not clear whether this will be included in the final design, or how much battery life it adds.

Google has previously vowed to design Glass 'from scratch' and papers filed by Google last month, reveal the tech giant has successful tested a mystery device dubbed GG1, which is thought to stand for Google Glass.

The test report was submitted to the Federal Communications Committee (FCC) at the start of June and was made available on 1 July. It was first spotted by fan site DroidLife. 

Google's mystery device is simply described as an instrument in the filing and as 'Bluetooth & DTS/UNII a/b/g/n/ac', suggesting it is Bluetooth and Wi-Fi enabled.

The model number is the biggest hint at the device being the next-generation headset, although tablets and phones also come with these features so it could be a different device entirely.

Aside from saying it was committed to working on the future of the product, Google gave no timescale for the launch of an improved product.
The previous Google Glass headset was launched in a beta version under the firm's Explorer programme.

This programme gave software developers the chance to buy Glass for $1,500 (£990), and was launched in the US in 2013 and in the UK in last summer.

'It's hard to believe Glass started as little more than a scuba mask attached to a laptop,' the Glass team said in a post on Google+ last month.

'We kept on it, and when it started to come together, we began the Glass Explorer Program as a kind of 'open beta' to hear what people had to say.'

'Glass was in its infancy, and you took those very first steps and taught us how to walk.

'Well, we still have some work to do, but now we're ready to put on our big kid shoes and learn how to run.'

THE RISE OF THE GLASSHOLE :

The previous Google Glass headset was launched in a beta version under the firm's Explorer programme.

This programme gave software developers the chance to buy Glass for $1,500 (£990), and was launched in the US in 2013, and the UK last summer.

But, as the Explorers hit the streets, they drew stares and jokes.

Some people viewed the device, capable of surreptitious video recording, as an obnoxious privacy intrusion, deriding the once-proud Explorers as 'Glassholes.'

'It looks super nerdy,' said Shevetank Shah, a Washington, DC-based consultant, whose Google Glass now gathers dust in a drawer. 'I'm a card carrying nerd, but this was one card too many.'


The Enterprise Edition (EE) is also said to include Intel Atom process for improved performance and battery life. An older version of Google Glass is show

News Update On Google Glass : How Google Glass v2 Could Change The Enterprise

This week a new device passed through the FCC—codenamed GG1—and many have speculated that it’s the next generation of the Google GOOGL +0.68% Glass hardware. While the Explorer Edition was anything but a runaway success, what some are calling the “Enterprise Edition” could very well be what Glass needs to take it mainstream into the office.

When Microsoft MSFT -0.18% launched their Surface Tables years ago I could see a lot more enterprise use from the device than simply moving photos around during the early days of the demos. Since then Surface adoption was a commercial disaster and are consigned to be little more than a gimmick than for day to day business use. With Hololens now in the frame, Microsoft are back in a big way, touting virtual and augmented reality as the next big thing in the office, and at home.

I’ve been writing about marrying up touch and virtual enabled devices with an enterprise productivity purpose for years and personally I still feel that losing the mouse and keyboard is somewhat inevitable, hands are infinitely more adept at manipulating an environment and objects and having a touchscreen/ gesture based version of enterprise tools would be a natural transition.

At the time in 2010 I also got in touch with Schematic (www.schematic.com), the firm behind the technology as seen in Minority Report because creating such a device for enterprises in a workshop environment would be an exciting prospect. If anything it would be a boon to lose the frankly archaic brown paper model. I even pointed towards John Underkoffler at TED demonstrating the very same thing, and in which towards the end he lists the kinds of end user industries he’d see this kind of technology implemented in (I urge you to watch the demo all the way through and try to imagine integrating this in an enterprise context. Great stuff. http://bit.ly/9lMx2G)

Anyway, I digress, back to Google Glass v2. Just how can Google Glass and Augmented Reality add value in the enterprise. If we look to an article which discusses how Glass can change advertising you can begin to see where this can lead.

    ….what if the ads you saw were different than the person next to you? What if, like the ads you see online, they are based on a composite sketch of you created by all the searches you’ve done and the websites you’ve visited? In other words, what if you looked up and instead of seeing an ad for something you would never buy — like women’s shoes — you saw an ad reminding you of that Amazon search you did a few days ago ?
So, what if you’re sitting in a call-center and instead of staring at a productivity pie-chart on a screen you pop your supervisory head above the parapet and with your Enterprise Edition Glasses can see each individuals performance figures ? By calling up the person in question using the interface you can see their stats in a heads-up (HUD) display. Plus with not being tied to your desk you can floor-walk at the same time or do this anywhere, anytime, without the need to carry a tablet or phone interface with you.

In an interview I took with Dr Ross Brown of QUT he stated that “Augmented reality system tools for Business Process Management would be nice as well.  Imagine six sigma data overlaid on the artifacts used in a process model…all on a heads up display as you walk around the company – a “BPM Tricorder”.

That was in 2011. Before Google Glass v1.

And similar to the article about advertising, every co-worker will have a different view based on their own work and position in the organisation, again able to call this up at any time, any where. Go deeper and you could have enterprise social integration, the obvious trick is to offer filters for the noise from the relevant and actionable information to present in front of the user.

It’s not just implications for workflow scenarios and businesses in customer service industries, healthcare is another example of where wearable technology like this could be a massive boost in real-time and mobile patient informatics. Or in education, no more ‘smart boards’ if the kids are wearing augmented reality sets and receiving tailored tutoring depending on their own individual needs. Indeed, BMW were experimenting with augmented reality in the workshop several years ago.

Google Glass v2 could very well be the catalyst for true mobilility and personalisation in many industry sectors.

Whether enterprise software vendors will make a serious investment in Glass v2 will remain to be seen but Glass “Enterprise Edition” will not be the only AR device on the market to develop for when it’s eventually released.

It’s interesting times as consumer devices lead the revolution in the workplace we’ve all been waiting for.

News Sony Product Update : Sony's Google Glass Rival SmartEyeglass Goes On Sale For $840 Or £520

Sony is making a pass at Google Glass, announcing that a developer edition of the Sony SmartEyeglass high-tech specs are available to order now -- and they're cheaper than Glass, even if they're nowhere near as elegant.
The SmartEyeglass Developer Edition SED-E1 is the first set of smart glasses from Sony to go on sale. They are available from March in the US, the UK, Germany and Japan for $840, £520, €670 or 100,000 yen, and pre-orders are open today in the UK and Germany. They'll also be on sale to business customers in France, Italy, Spain, Belgium, the Netherlands and Sweden. No Australian prices or details were announced but the UK price converts to around AU$1,020.

Smart glasses are like regular specs with a transparent screen in the lenses, so you can see features like emails and notifications floating in front of your very eyes. Paired with your phone, the glasses can show you information or tell you what's going on with the apps in your pocket.

The SED-E1 displays information in the colour green only. The battery lasts around 2 hours 30 minutes.

Although there are plenty of high-tech eyewear alternatives, the Google Glass specs are the best known. Glass was one of the early devices that kickstarted the trend for wearable tech, but earlier this year Google stopped selling it. Costing $1,500 and only available in limited numbers, it was never aimed at a mass audience. What's more, the camera-equipped device raised controversy over questions of privacy -- bars banned them and wearers earned the nickname "Glassholes".

In design terms Glass is much more subtle than Sony's chunky 77-gram (2.7-ounce) black-rimmed SmartEyeglass. Having worn them in September last year, I can tell you they're pretty cumbersome. Glass is also wireless, whereas Sony's specs connect with a wire to a hockey puck-sized control unit that holds the battery, speaker, microphone and touch controls.

New Product Release Update : Sony SmartEyeglass Developer Edition On Sale Now

 Where Google failed, Sony hopes to succeed. Its SmartEyeglass Developer Edition eyewear is available now for pre-order in the U.K. and Germany.

The SED-E1 transparent-lens headset will go on sale in eight more countries—Japan, the U.S., France, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Netherlands, Sweden—next month. Developers can access the official version of the SmartEyeglass SDK today.
Using holographic wavelength technology, Sony's futuristic glasses connect with compatible smartphones to superimpose information onto the wearer's field of view—"without any half mirrors that may obstruct the user's vision," the company boasted.

It also comes with a built-in 3-megapixel CMOS image sensor, accelerometer, gyro, electronic compass, and brightness sensor, behind the 3-millimeter lenses. Together with GPS location data from the attached phone, the headset provides information tailored for the current task or scenario.

A separate (but wired) circular controller that clips onto your jacket or shirt collar houses the battery, speaker, microphone, NFC, and touch sensor.

Early application concepts include a step-by-step guide on how to assemble an engine, scrolling in front of the mechanic's eyes as they work. Sony also suggested an app to share player stats while watching a sports game, or to display sightseeing information while visiting a tourist attraction.
Early developers will have access to a handful of SmartEyeglass apps—available in the Google Play store—which enable access to Twitter, Facebook, Gmail, RSS, calendar, and voice control.

The developer edition will cost $840 in the U.S., £520 in the U.K., €670 across Europe, and ¥100,000 in Japan.

Sony hopes to release its SmartEyeglass headset to consumers sometime next year.

Great News: Windows 10 Cortana A New Browser And Holograms

Microsoft today provided an early look at what consumers can expect in Windows 10, from Cortana on the desktop to a totally revamped Web browser, dubbed Project Spartan. Oh yeah, and holograms (seriously).

When the OS does make its debut (in late 2015), Windows 10 will be a free upgrade for those currently running Windows 7, Windows 8.1, and Windows Phone 8.1, Executive Vice President of Operating Systems, Terry Myerson, said during a press event in Redmond. 

Meanwhile, Phil Spencer, head of Microsoft's Xbox division, promised that "gaming on Windows 10 will be more social and interactive," thanks to the Xbox app, which will be loaded on all Windows 10 devices.

Microsoft first showed off Windows 10 in the fall during a small, business-focused event. It took a different approach than in the past, opening up an early build of the OS to developers in order to get feedback. Since the launch of the Windows 10 preview, 1.7 million developers signed up to test out the OS, installing it on more than 3 million devices, Myerson said today. They shared more than 800,000 pieces of feedback on over 200,000 topics, "and our team is really embracing this feedback and leaning in to this open development process," he said.

That feedback has helped inform some of the features Microsoft showed off today. Joe Belfiore, Corporate Vice President of the Operating Systems Group, stressed that everything on display today was in the early stages, but "it's our psychology now to involve people in that development process."


Among the things he showed off was Cortana on the PC. Microsoft's digital assistant has been integrated into the desktop, where she will live—listening, learning, and serving up tidbits of information she believes you will find useful.

You can summon Cortana by voice ("Hey Cortana, will I need a coat tomorrow?") or type a query, Belfiore said. The more you use Cortana, the smarter she will become, though you can edit what she knows about you. 

Cortana will also play a role in Microsoft's new browser, currently codenamed Project Spartan. Right-click on an item displayed on a webpage, and ask Cortana for more information about it. She might also pop up unannounced to tell you that the restaurant whose website you are browsing has menu items that work with your diet.
Project Spartan, Belfiore said, features a new streamlined user interface that fits in with the design landscape of Windows 10 and puts the focus on the content of a webpage. With Spartan, you can draw or write notes on a website (using a touch screen or by typing on a keyboard), which can then be shared or saved to a program like OneNote.

Microsoft also wanted to improve the reading experience on Spartan, so it features a reading mode for a standardized view of Web content, as well as built-in support of PDF files.

Belfiore also showed off the apps that Windows 10 users can expect, all of which will have a similar look and feel no matter what Windows 10 device you are using (PC, tablet, or phone).

Word, Excel, and PowerPoint will be included on all Windows 10 phones and tablets, he said, and provide a "highly rich and complete experience," like the familiar Office ribbon and wireless printing. 

Redmond has been working on a new universal app for Outlook, he said, which will allow for easy email organization: swipe left to delete, right to flag - no matter which device you're using.

Belfiore also demoed revamped apps for Calendar, Photos, People, Music, and Maps, which will include - among other things - automatic photo album creation, music support in OneDrive for playlist syncing, and Cortana remembering where you parked your car.


On the gaming front, meanwhile, Spencer showed off a DVR function that will let you record gameplay - including the previous 30 seconds, in case you want to remember a particularly epic play.

Every Windows 10 PC and tablet will have the Xbox app, according to Spencer, who talked up the power of DirectX 12. Power consumption is cut in half when compared to DirectX 11, he said, which is important as mobile games continue to soar in popularity.

"None of this is possible if we're not getting adoption from studios," Spencer said; Epic has already signed on, and the exec said today that Unity has also adopted DirectX 12.

Holograms? Holograms!
The most unexpected part of today's press event, however, was Microsoft's introduction of Windows Holographic, a hologram-based virtual reality offering intended to bring you "beyond screens, beyond pixels, and beyond today's digital borders," Redmond said.

Those equipped with the Microsoft HoloLens will be able to see and interact with items in front of them - from a screen displaying Netflix movies to a model needed for work. Microsoft had researchers from NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab (JPL) describe how Holographic has been used in their Mars rover work.


Gallery :

1. The prototype headset looks more like Oculus Rift than Google Glass.  
2. HoloLens is augmented-reality headset that allows you to mix the virtual world with the real world. Put on the headset and the glass screen can project a digital overlay on top of the physical word. 
3. In addition to the holograms, you can also see through the lens into the world around you, unlike Oculus Rift.  
4.  Interestingly, the HoloLens maps physical space using a scanning technology that is very similar to the one used in Kinect. 
5. The model building was impressive, especially since the room was filled with models that were built with HoloStudio and then sent to a 3D printer for manufacturing. 
6.  My first actual HoloLens experience was with a Minecraft-like building game. Once strapped in, the small living room I was in filled with blocky castles—on the coffee table and along the wall. 
7. I could walk around the structures, gaze upon individual blocks, and then make changes to them using the air click. Voice command let me change tools quickly. 
8. Want to watch some augmented Netflix? 
9. I tried a HoloLens-enabled version of Skype. At its core, it was a Skype video call. A small window appeared in my virtual field so I could video chat. But because I was wearing the HoloLens, that person could see what I was seeing.
 

Google Glass Development Still In Progress : Project Head

Google’s enhanced truth venture, Google Glass, remains one of the most expected items of technical this season. Babak Parvis, who leads the Google Glass venture, lately reduce some light on on the wearable enhanced truth show in an meeting with IEEE Variety. While he did not discuss any particular functions, Parviz did expose some of its primary capabilities— you can take images and discuss them. Parviz even included that the function set of Google Glass had not yet been completed and that "it is still in flux."

Parviz described that with the Google Glass, the company was basically looking at a system able of doing two things that would be useful to a lot of individuals. The first would be to create a system that would allow customers to have 'pictoral communications', i.e. have customers link with each other with images and movie. "Right now, we do not have any gadgets that are particularly designed to get connected to others using images or movie. So we desired to have a system that would see the world through your sight and allow you to discuss that perspective with other individuals," he said. 

Parviz described that they are regularly trying out new concepts as to how customers can use their foundation. Parviz also described that they were working towards making the software and components more solid, so as to be able to deliver it to designers beginning this season.

Google has been creating the enhanced truth wrap-around colors for a while now. The driveway at From von Furstenberg’s Spring/Summer 2013 selection show at New You are able to Style Weeks time, lately saw a shock entrant—Google Glass. Designs sashayed down the slam in their best clothing putting on the Glass at the occasion. Also seen at the occasion was Google co-founder Sergey Brin.

This digital sunglasses can click images, start movie conversations and show guidelines at the audio of a customer's speech. Images illustrate that the groups on every ear phones were created to supplement the colors of the clothing presented by the models. Remarkably, reviews also recommend that one design turned on the lamps video-recording operate and handled to catch her perspective of the driveway.

Project Glass is an fascinating idea. Google’s amazing advertorial movie for the prototypes was launched lately. The idea that we could have cellular technological innovation along with AR in a compact, wearable component spurred the globe's fascination.

Recently, there were reviews of analyze results of the Project Glass prototypes. A few images taken from the product created it to Project Glass’ Google+ page. While some may look a little too ideal, study, electronically washed up, others seemed very real for a mobile-like photographic camera.
 
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