Thursday, 4 April 2013

Google Glass: The lowdown



                                     
                      A year since the unveiling of Google Glass a lot more information about it is now starting  to pour in, with the internet  giant revealing many details at  numerous recent events, such  as SXSW and TED Talks. Let  us summarize everything you  need know about Google Glass. It projects a smartphone-likeexperience into your field ofvision. The basic idea is that youcan see texts and email, queueup your music and check theweather, among other things,while doing other real worldtasks.

                                  You can also respondor call up items with voiceactivated commands, while the augmented-reality interfacecan highlight things you see in real life and tell you more aboutthem. In addition, you can sharelive video of what you’re seeing with friends. Google Glass itself is roughly a smartphone, in terms of hardware. 

                                There’s a camera and a button on top for taking photos, a touch pad on the side, a plethora of gyroscopes and accelerometers, a compass, multiple radios, a micro USB charger port, several micro phones, and a tiny bone-con-ducting speaker. It’s roughly a W i-Fi-only Galaxy Nexus, lacking only the cellular radio, and with some fine-tuning to the TI OMAP 4460 processor. We still don’t know if there’s onboard storage or how powerful the camera sensor is. 

                                      The  OS doesn’t look like Android;  Google won’t say what it is. It’s the first virtual reality- style pair of glasses that look (almost) like normal glasses. Google Glass is designed to be extremely lightweight and reportedly weigh less than a standard pair of sunglasses. Right now, Google is showing them off in five colors: black, orange, gray, white and blue.

                               It can apparently work in direct sunlight, thanks to either a translucent shade built into the other side of the glasses, or possibly photochromic material.  Google mentioned that it was  also working on a prescription version of Glass. It’s still not available, and still in beta. 



                       Back in June, Google began accepting pre-orders for an early Project Glass Explorer Edition, but you had to be a Google I/O conference attendee, live in the U.S. and shell out the entire $1,500 Google was asking up front. It’s now expected to launch by the end of the year in limited quantity and regions at the same asking rate. 

                             Google recently held developer events in San Francisco  and New York called  Glass Foundry, which  focused on jumpstarting third-party  a pp development  using its Mirror API and PHP, Python,  and Java.  Some people are going hysterical by the privacy implica - tions of Glass, and rightly so. One Sea ttle bar has already turned it into a PR stunt.

                                     But the fact remains that those on the other side of Glass don’t always want the world to know exactly where they are and who they’re with at all times. And  the fact that Google Glass can  snap photos and record video automatically opens up all sorts of social and privacy concerns, as it’s much less obvious than someone holding up a phone  or camcorder. We’re starting to learn about Google Glass apps. 

                         During SXSW, Google showed off some early app partners for delivering the little bursts of information that appear inside the glass. We’re as excited about this product as you are and understandably so. For updates,  take a look at the company’s  Project Glass Google+ page.  Unfortunately, Google’s ‘How  to Get One’ page is currently not  accepting new applications, but  you can put in your name and email address to stay informed.


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