And not just any shades, I mean Google's Project Glass shades. Project Glass is a pet project of Google co-founder Sergey Brin and is touted as the next form of computing, an augmented-reality lens that provides access to online data such as weather, mails and messages. It takes the form of a pair of glasses that takes photographs, facilitates social networking and communication on the internet while storing everything on a cloud, all this, without hindering your ability to see. Google is currently in talks with several eyeglass manufacturers to tie-in sales
for custom frames for Glass.
Project Glass is part of Google's strategy to adapt to the increasing shift to online mobile platforms, which now account for
approximately a third of all Google searches, while creating a legacy product akin to Apple's iPhone that places technology in our lives in such a fashion that makes it
essential and makes it feel like a natural extension of ourselves.
For those interested in it's features, Glass is expected to be voice-controlled via an Apple Siri-like voice engine as well as by
gestures. Swipe gestures on the touch panel on its side control basic navigation while a button on the top serves as the action button for everything else. Additionally, a single gesture - a quick
jerk up with your head, turns off the screen and sets the device into a
sleep mod.
Though the commercial release of Project Glass is still sometime away, it will be available for $1,500 to those attending the Google I/O event. After this test run, and
gathering product feedback, Glass is expected to be made available next year.
No comments:
Post a Comment