New prototype glasses developed by Vergence Labs, if marketed, could
potentially enable consumers to use their spectacles as image and video
recording equipment, with a camera built into the bridge, and the rest
of the hardware in the arms
User will supposedly also be able to
share the photos and videos to social networks, and YouTube, via
Vergence Labs’ YouGen.TV site. The glasses will store data on a microSD
card, necessitating a transfer before upload, however, Vergence says
adding Wi-Fi, or even 3G to the device shouldn’t be too difficult,
allowing live streaming, and direct sharing.
A ‘magic’ button will also be available,
that converts the glasses into sunglasses, using chromatic shifting
conductive glass. Battery life for now is just two hours. According to a
Huffington Post report, other such glasses are already available in the
market (for pre-order), from a brand called ZionEyez, which feature Bluetooth connectivity, three hour battery life, and cost $199.
Vergence Labs says it intends to list
its glasses for pre-order at $199 as well, and $299 for the retail
version, which will feature Epiphany Eyewear branding. The company is
also looking to develop VR glasses.
Of course, one can't think of techno-glasses without thinking of the Google's Project Glass and the search giant's Android-compatible AR glasses.
Currently, Vergence Labs is looking for
funding for taking the video recording glasses forward, via the
crowdfunding platform – Kickstarter. The company’s founders are Erick
Miller and Jon Rodriguez, who say $50,000 could get them started. The
prototypes were reportedly made with a 3D printer.
Vergence Labs hopes to market three
styles – Clarke Kent, James Dean, and Buddy Holly. Describing the
product in a press release (and the below video), Vergence Labs said:
“Recording video or taking pictures is
clunky. You have to pull out your smart phone or your video camera, and
hold it up. What if you could just touch a button on your eyewear and
start recording from the actual perspective of your eyes instead? Sure,
there are products you can strap on your head, but what if the ability
was inside a regular pair of stylish & trendy looking hipster
glasses? That would be cool!”
“We are working with-in an accelerated
startup environment to reinvent the human-computer experience as stylish
computing enabled eyewear.”
“Our goal for the video sharing site is
to integrate with other wearable computers that output video and
embedded sensor products that output biometric data, to enable people to
optionally synchronize all available life data together, with their
point of view videos so it's all time-synchronized; such as pulse, body
temperature, blood pressure, calories burned, even in the future basic
brain signals, and more. Uploading biometric data along with the user’s
1st person point of view, can be encapsulated as a person’s “life
memory” data, time-synchronizing the biometrics with the 1st person
video.”
Source: Huffington Post
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