Google Glass

SneakerNet

Retired
Premium Member
Joined
Jan 25, 2010
Messages
2,627
Reaction score
80
Interesting, that will be good to display texts or video with terp to see whatever the person is saying in front of you. Or walk right in to movie theater that will pick up CC. Not a bad idea.

Project Glass: One day... - YouTube

and more article about this:
Google unveils 'Project Glass' smart glasses - Apr. 4, 2012

Project Glass video's bandwidth look very laggy or disconnection from the internet (download disconnected and stopped in middle of "transmission" bar.).
 
Oh, wow, yeah! I need to look even more nerdy geeky! :lol:
 
Project Glass video's bandwidth look very laggy or disconnection from the internet (download disconnected and stopped in middle of "transmission" bar.).

Not necessary, there's a box attached to belt or in pocket and may have powerful antennae with 4G bandwidth and you will never hear it "You hold it wrong!!", all hand free.
 
I created my own animation!
finalanimation.gif

FINAL2-2.gif
 
Last edited:
I find it hard to understand why nothing does this already, for pre-recorded media I mean, not live. For most media the subtitle track is already separate, many have it as a .srt track. Shouldn't you be able to get an app which reads the .srt track on its own and can read the on time and off time information so the captions run in time with the original movie? Then I could sit down with subtitle haters and put on a digital movie and have the video and audio tracks play to the TV but the subtitle track play to my smartphone. It seems silly that you can't have this kind of thing through a variation on Multiple Monitors software that allows you to open some PC programs in one monitor and other programs on an entirely different screen, seems reasonable that instead of always showing a direct duplicate it should be possible to stream the movie to a TV and the subtitles to a smartphone, or show a small screen copy of the movie with the subs over it and a large screen duplication of the movie but with no subs track. If someone thought there was money in it it could be done reasonably quickly and easily on digital download types of media. Physical media (DVDs, Blurays) are more challenging for how to split a signal and also retain copy protection, etc. but it's not pie in the sky.
 
I have a 20/20 vision, and I don't need to wear eyeglass all day.....except sunglass. :D
 
I think roserodent has the right idea. A sensible scot. She needs to mske the app
 
Ah yeah - this was incredibly interesting to stumble on (when it was first releasing the project that is). That would be nice to be able to access subtitles when watching a movie, be it at home or in theater. My only main concern with the glasses is will it interfere with wearing hearing aids?
As it is, I already ordered a pair of "Morpheus glasses" (Pince-nez) just cause I find most sunglasses have too thick of arms.
 
Google Project Glasses costs $1,500 to be selling next year. Too expensive

Google's Project Glass gets some more details -- Engadget

Demo video / subtitle

Live skydiving with Google's glasses (video) - CNET News

Video quality is choppy! GoPro cam is better!!

Yes, GoPro "Wi-Fi" cam model had live steaming and like golf ball size. use iphone device remote GoPro anywhere, without PLAY-STOP-PAUSE switch on GoPro device.

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6JI0wUyH7q4]GoPro: New York City... A Day in the Life - Starring Skate Legend Ryan Sheckler - YouTube[/ame]
 
It's not meant to be a GoPro. It's a video smartphone albeit still in the development stages. I am very intrigued by the potential of this thing.
 
Interesting, that will be good to display texts or video with terp to see whatever the person is saying in front of you. Or walk right in to movie theater that will pick up CC. Not a bad idea.

Project Glass: One day... - YouTube

and more article about this:
Google unveils 'Project Glass' smart glasses - Apr. 4, 2012

So even if this technology becomes universal, the only thing interpreter needs to focus on is speaking/translating out the signs. $$ go down?

Unless deaf clients themselves are unable to comprehend the wider fundamental language usage.

Hmmm... I look forward to this magnificent technology upgrade! US being the primary capitalist country, it'd take a while for products to arrive here on much smaller scale >_<
 
Back
Top