Sunday, March 30, 2014

Which smart glasses will be right for you?

Which smart glasses will be right for you?

Above: Google Glass with sunglasses

Image Credit: Google

Smart glasses are expected to gain a lot of momentum as “wearable computing” takes root in the consumer market. A lot of the details, like how to protect privacy in a world full of smart glasses, still have to be worked out.


Sales of the devices could grow from 87,000 in 2013 to more than 10 million a year by 2018, according Juniper Research.


As you can see from the shipping dates, many of these devices aren’t ready yet. It may pay to wait, as prices come down and more models become available. Samsung is rumored to be moving into the market, but details aren’t available now.


We’ve round up the details on a bunch of the announced models so far. Please take a look and vote for your favorite.


google glass prescription frameGoogle

Product: Google Glass

Price: $1,500

Timing: Available now

Features: High-resolution display equivalent to a 25-inch HD screen from eight feet away. Camera that can take 5 megapixel photos and 720p videos. It has a bone conduction transducer for audio. It has 802.11b/g WiFi and Bluetooth. Glass has 12GB of usable memory. The battery lasts for a day under typical use. It has a micro USB cable and charger.


 


Atheer One

Above: Atheer One


Atheer Labs

Product: Atheer One

Price: $500

Timing: December 2014

Features: It has dual 8-megapixel cameras. Sports a 65 degree field of view. Operates on 5 milliseconds of latency. Expected weight is 75 grams. It will have a touchscreen and an ARM processor. It has a depth sensor, phone connection, and interchangeable lens.


 


 


EmoPulse nanoGlass-4

Above: EmoPulse nanoGlass-4


EmoPulse

Product: nanoGlass-4

Price: TBA

Timing: $25

Features: The display resolution is 320 x 240, and, as such, it is an inexpensive foray into smart glasses. It has Bluetooth 4.0 and a lithium battery that allows for two days of intensive use or seven days in power-saving mode. The user interface makes use of seven colors. Blue colors light when you receive a text message. It connects to the phone via wireless Bluetooth 4.0.


 


Eric Mizofuka demonstrates Epson Moverio

Above: Eric Mizofuka demonstrates Epson Moverio

Image Credit: J. O'Dell / VentureBeat

Epson

Product: Moverio BT-200 smart glasses

Price: $700

Timing: March or April

Features: The Moverio has a dual screen for a 3D, transparent display (with a resolution of 960 x 540 pixels); a front-facing camera which can capture video or detect markers for augmented reality apps; head-motion tracking sensors; a gyroscope; accelerometer (for measuring motion); magnetic compass sensors; and a separate, smartphone-sized touch-sensitive control unit with Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 3.0 and Android 4.0. It has native support for MP4, AAC encoding, and H.264 video playback. It has a MicroSDHC card slot that supports up to 32GB of external memory.


 


EyeTap

Above: EyeTap

Image Credit: EyeTap

University of Toronto

Product: EyeTap

Price: N/A

Timing: N/A

Features: EyeTap uses your eye as both a display and a camera. It shows computer information to the user and allows them to view a “computer-mediated reality,” or augmented reality.


GlassUp

Above: GlassUp

Image Credit: GlassUp

GlassUP

Product: GlassUp

Price: $299 to $499

Timing: TBA

Features: Weighs 20 grams. It works via a Bluetooth LE connection with your phone and supports Android and iOS. Battery is expected to last for a day and recharges via micro-USB. Its sensors include an accelerometer, compass, and ambient light sensor. It has a touchpad for controls. Basic version has no camera or prescription lenses, while prescription lenses and a camera will cost $499.


iOptik

Above: iOptik

Image Credit: Innovega

Innovega

Product: iOptik

Price: TBA

Timing: TBA

Features: iOptik is a contact lens that can display images to your eye with a wide field of view. It is good for watching immersive, wide field of view movies or playing 360-degree video games. Innovega licenses the technology to other manufacturers who will ship consumer products. You can see the outside world through the lens for augmented reality applications, or the lens can block light as needed.


 


K-Glass

Above: K-Glass

Image Credit: KAIST

KAIST University

Product: K-Glass

Price: TBA

Timing: TBA

Features: The head-mounted display device can recognize objects and tell you what you’re looking at. It is a wearable, hands-free display created by students at the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology. It delivers an augmented-reality experience, like show you how many tables are open a a restaurant and images of the kinds of dishes served. The device runs at 250 megahertz and uses a 1.2 volt battery. It uses a real-time augmented reality processor, it has a touchpad interface, a five-megapixel camera, and an 800 x 600 micro display.


 


Icis

Above: Icis

Image Credit: LaForge Optical

LaForge Optical

Product: Acis

Price: $820 for beta version; $200 for final.

Timing: Mid-2004

Features: Six-hour battery life. Designed to look like a normal pair of glasses. It has prescription eyewear that displays notifications from your phone. It has a camera, microphone, and speaker. It will come in a variety of glasses styles. You control it with a touchpad on the side.

News: Laforge was in the midst of a successful crowdfunding on Indiegogo but decided to end the campaign thanks to interest from investors.


 


 


Lumus

Above: Lumus

Image Credit: Lumus

Lumus

Product: DK-40

Price: TBA

Timing: TBA

Features: Lumus uses Light-guide Optical Element technology, which can display a high-quality image using a transparent lens. It uses a mini projector to display high-definition 720p images in front of your eyes, creating the effect of watching a large virtual image on a transparent screen. It has a 5-megapixel camera. The display has a 25-degree field of view, an onboard OMAP processor running Android, an embedded depth-of-field motion sensor.


Meta Pro

Above: Meta Pro

Image Credit: Meta

Meta 

Product: Meta Pro

Price: $3,650

Timing: September 2014

Features: It has a 40-degree field of view with a screen area that is 15 times the screen area of Google Glass. It lets you view a giant, 3D holographic HD screen, which can display 1280 x 720 pixel images for each eye. It has twin RGB cameras, stereoscopic 3D, 3D surround sound, 3D time of flight sensors, and a 9-axis integrated motion unit with accelerometer, gyroscope and compass.


 


Pivothead Smart

Above: Pivothead Smart

Image Credit: Pivothead

Pivothead

Product: Pivothead Smart

Price:

Timing: May 2014

Features: It has a centered camera that can take 8-megapixel images or record 1080p high-definition video. The camera has autofocus and you can save data on 16GB of internal memory. It can connect via Bluetooth 4.0, NFC, or WiFi. It sends notifications to your display. It has a an ARM processor that runs Android apps, 4GB of random access memory, and a slot of Micro SD storage. It has a connector for micro USB, it has an audio out jack, and a microphone. It has mods that can add new capabilities such as global positioning system navigation. The battery can last for 180 minutes while recording video.


 


Recon Jet

Above: Recon Jet

Image Credit: Recon

Recon Instruments

Product: Recon Jet

Price: $499

Timing: available

Features: Recon Jet has a consumer heads-up display for sports. Its sensors include 3D magnetometer, a gyroscope, and an accelerometer. It has a pressure sensor, ambient temperature sensor, and an optical touch sensor. The touchscreen works even if you have gloves on. It has a gigahertz ARM Cortex-A9

News: Recon Jet is like Google Glass for athletes.


SixthSense

Above: SixthSense

Image Credit: MIT

MIT Fluid Interfaces Group

Product: SixthSense

Price: estimated $350 or more.

Timing: TBA

Features: It includes a pocket projector, a mirror, and a camera. The device is mounted on top of the wearer’s head. The camera recognizes and tracks users’ gestures. It will connect to a user’s mobile device. It has an optional microphone.


 


CastAR concept glasses with wand

Above: CastAR concept glasses with wand

Image Credit: Technical Illusions

Technical Illusions

Product: CastAR

Price: $100 or so

Timing:

Features: CastAR lets you see projected augmented reality, which is like seeing 3D holographic projects as if they were in front of you. The glasses have two micro-projectors that send a stereoscopic image to a retro-reflective surface. It has a 3D display that can deliver 1280 x 720 resolution per eye at 120 hertz. It has a 65-degree field of view, 8.3 milliseconds response time, six degrees of freedom for tracking, and weighs less than 100 grams. It fits over most prescription glasses. And it connects to a PC via an HDMI or USB cable. A camera tracks infrared light-emitting diodes.


 


Vuzix says it has superior optics for augmented-reality glasses. The M2000AR is for industrial markets.

Above: Vuzix says it has superior optics for augmented-reality glasses. The M2000AR is for industrial markets.

Image Credit: Vuzix

Vuzix

Product name: M2000AR head-mounted display

Price: $6,000

Timing: Shipping now.

Features: It’s a smart monocle. It has a 720p display and a 1080p camera. It has an HDMI interface, electronic sunglass tint, a 30-degree field of view, integrated head-tracking, an integrated compass, anodized aluminum alloy enclosure, rechargeable lithium ion battery. It is built with Vuzix’s Waveguide optics for smaller electronics.

News: Vuzix said it will make smart glasses for the U.S. Navy under a research grant.


 


WeOn Glasses

Above: WeOn Glasses

Image Credit: WeOn

WeOn Glasses (formerly ION)

Product name: WeOn Glasses

Price: $99

Timing: 2014

Features: It operates on Bluetooth Smart 4.0. It has a battery that can last seven to 10 days, depending on usage. You can recharge it via a micro-USB. It has a multicolor 256-color display, a buzzer, and two buttons for remote control. WeOn Glasses send you notifications by lighting different colors in the sunglasses display. You can use it to control mobile devices. You can press a button to skip a song or turn up the volume. It has a camera, video recorder, and voice recorder. It connects with an Android or iOS app that you can use to set the controls.


 



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Which smart glasses will be right for you?

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