Google Glass Teardown 97
saccade.com writes "Ever wonder how Google packed all of the Google Glass functionality into a slender eyeglass frame? Find out by checking out this teardown by Scott Torborg and Star Simpson. Goodies found inside include proximity, light and inertial sensors, sound transducers, a TI OMAP CPU, flash, RAM, camera and tiny projection display."
Missing part? (Score:5, Funny)
What, no government mind control device? I am shocked!
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What, no government mind control device? I am shocked!
Google are planning to release a special version of Glass for people such as you. It is called Google Glass: Tin Foil Hat version :-)
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Well, there was this one chip they couldn't identify with the id PRISM666 etched into it.
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The only chip I could identify was the one on his shoulder
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On the right hand sight there is a magic coin that is used for mind control. It must be used for mind control!
Cause I dont believe it is there for scale, people generally have an idea how big glasses are...
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Well, I thought I knew how big a console controller is until the Xbox came along [penny-arcade.com].
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What makes you assume that it isn't embedded in one of the other parts? Just because it says one thing on the box doesn't mean that that is all that it does. ;)
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What, no government mind control device?
According to their legal dept. it's strictly a Google mind control device with no direct government access.
It's obvious really (Score:3, Funny)
Ever wonder how Google packed all of the Google Glass functionality into a slender eyeglass frame?
They're evil.
Re:It's obvious really (Score:5, Funny)
They got help from the NSA's spy-gadget development labs.
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Download our new app today and get reassuring feedback that the person you have just walked past was detected by our network.
People using complex glasses, makeup, hair styles or clothing to avoid our software will result in a beep.
Find a police officer or private security official via the domestic counterterrorism tab, show your coeducational affiliate badge and play back your footage.
If in a mall for example the person can be questioned
Re:It's obvious really (Score:5, Interesting)
I could see people actually installing that app.
I could see people fighting to install that app if there were something like a $5 Dunkin Donuts gift certificate for every month (five hours per day) of use.
I could see people killing to get into the beta program if it meant you got a shot at appearing on random_popular_reality_show if you found x_amount of wanted people over a year long process.
I just want you to know that I am NOT kidding nor am I amused by this. I just see it as a plausible result if said application were made available. Given the results of the various polls that concern privacy, I'd not be in the least bit surprised. Those of us who see the problem want so very much to blame the government, and rightly so - they should know better, but so much of the blame rightly belongs with you and me (the populace).
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I could see people actually installing that app.
So could I. With the way people come to rely on technology instead of thinking, I could also see somebody with that app failing to notice the guy sitting next to them with a bomb in one hand, an AK-47 in the other, and a headband that read "Death to the Great Satan" (or whatever the terrorist slogan du jour is).
That's also a "more truth is said in jest" thought. With all the government electronic sniffing up everybody's butt the 4th Amendment doesn't apply to terrorism crap, let's not forget some recent l
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It will be used. And don't laugh about the 'Death of the Great satan'. here it will be 'Death to the mark of the beast; whose the beast? Who ever is responsible for implementing the next banking system to help us be more convenient.
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It shouldn't be a surprise to people that many put different values on different rights
Of course it's not, and people who feel that the 4th Amendment is a bad tradeoff are free to push for its repeal.
the issue is not that they don't understand, but that they have different priorities
Different priorities and take the government's word for it that wholesale electronic spying does something to reduce terrorism, despite a complete lack of any evidence that it does.
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“Doublethink means the power of holding two contradictory beliefs in one's mind simultaneously, and accepting both of them.” Turns out Orwell was wrong. There was no one single Big brother. We are Big Brother. And we are only just now discovering this: “Now I will tell you the answer to my question. It is this. The Party seeks power entirely for its own sake. We are not interested in the good of others; we are interested solely in power, pure power. What pure power means you will understan
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To be fair, how would they know until recently that the program was illegal? When the Three Letter Agencies show up with legal documentation that says to do something and to not reveal it to anyone, I don't care who you are, you do it. You may wish to pretend you wouldn't but, frankly, we know better. Everyone complies.
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Scott Torborg and Star Simpson
how trekkie
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Actually there could be a large market from people who recognize faces as familiar--but can't remember the name and other associated information.
The coin ... (Score:1)
Re:The coin ... (Score:5, Informative)
Scale? Is not the price.
Re:The coin ... (Score:5, Funny)
It can be exchanged for goods and services.
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For those who haven't read George R. R. Martins 'a song of Ice and Fire' (otherwise known as 'A game of Thrones' on HBO) The first phrase means 'all men must die' in High Valyrian. The second is spoken in reply to the first. 'All men must serve.'
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Do you feel elevated now by living the high life of fame vicariously through him? ;) (Only poking at you.)
I, too, got a little excited when my small (like 350 people in the winter) town was main-page news on Fark and the story was three houses up from mine. I am not sure what causes it, I'm sure it wouldn't be the same if I lived in a giant impersonal city, but I'm sure there's some sort of name for it and reasoning behind it.
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It's the same, but it only applies when the story is about your specific neighborhood.
By the way, is 350 people even enough to be called a "town?" That's not just small, it's tiny -- like a village or a hamlet or something. If I lived in an area that rural, I'd get excited at a mention of anything in the entire county!
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It's a legal thing, I understand, and we can even be a "city" if we wanted I suppose. We're an incorporated town, meaning a real town (we even have a post office but no stores) by definition. We swell to 550 (maybe even 1000) during summer and hunting season. We have a town government, we have a voting public, and we have property taxes that pay for it. (Property taxes in unincorporated areas go to the State.) So, yeah, we're a town by definition as I understand it.
We do get excited by little things. Our vo
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Join the Central Intelligence Corporation, become a gargoyle.
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You really are butthurt about this. (Score:1)
One reason why there's a law against murder is because despite it being patently obvious that murder is a bad thing, people will still insist on doing it.
Likewise, when people insist on buying a 100oz bucket of syrupwater despite knowing that it'll lead to cardial malfunction later on which will be hellaciously expensive to fix, and meaning zero productive output from the lardass in question for many months either side of this fix, then there will be a law against it.
The cinemas are told they can't sell you
Re: You really are butthurt about this. (Score:1)
You conflated drinking large sodas with murder and molestation.
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FTFY
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I though TI was killing its OMAP division
It is, after Nokia and some others switched to parts from other companies. They may keep making some OMAP parts for a while though (typically how reliable semi companies do things). Going forward Google can obviously switch to another mfg or something like TI's da Vinci line. I never did understand why TI had both the OMAP and da Vinci lines anyway.
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Different focus. The TI OMAP was designed for the smartphone market - the DSP to be used for the radio part. Da Vinci was designed for media players - the DSP us
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Different focus. The TI OMAP was designed for the smartphone market - the DSP to be used for the radio part. Da Vinci was designed for media players - the DSP used to accelerate video and audio en/decode.
That's what the TI reps always told me. I don't buy it - sounds like a marketing dept line where they talk about "applications areas" rather than what the chips do. Drives me nuts. When you look at the detailed guts of OMAP vs. da Vinci there is amazingly little difference. Where there are different specialized peripherals, they could easily adapt da Vinci to OMAP style uses. In fact one of the last "OMAP" parts to be released come from the da Vinci line but was branded an OMAP.
I have a bad feeling about this (Score:1, Insightful)
After the PRISM leaks I can't imagine wearing something like this. I hope Google Glass gets banned in all public spaces and commercial spaces. Your company is competing against Booz Allen Hamilton or it's corporate parent The Caryle Group, would you be comfortable knowing employees of those companies are apparently using the NSA as their personal search engine? I wouldn't.
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I suppose if you have full root access with a known trusted open source firmware it would not be so nefarious. At least then you could be reasonably sure it doesn't phone home to Google, the NSA, or anyone.
Smartphones, Pencams have same risks as Glass (Score:2)
I know you're mostly just trolling, but smartphones and pencams have the same risks to public privacy as Google Glass, in terms of being a small portable camera with a radio-based internet connection. (They're actually more risky, because they have better battery life.) What Glass does is give you a display and somewhere to head-mount the camera instead of having to clip it onto your pocket or whatever, plus make it much more obvious that you're using it.
Would have been great... (Score:5, Funny)
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No, we don't want them to catch on too quickly. That's why Skynet decided it had to kill all the humans.
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Since when does Skynet has a shiny metal ass?
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Except decent video quality is nice to have.
Move along; Nothing to see here... (Score:2)
No, no I haven't... because I've seen the insides of a cellphone and tablet. I'm surprised it's not smaller!
[*] 90% of a cellphone is it's battery; even more for a tablet. If there were no need for a screen or keypad, the whole thing would be the size of a sugar packet.
Really encouraging (Score:2)
I'm surprised it's not smaller!
Yeah, me too - but that's really encouraging. Look at that Synaptics board - it's freaking huge for what it needs to be. It could be instantly half the height, as-is, but it's made to be the same height as the Sandisk flash chip.
That this thing looks like a prototype is great, though. The 'real' versions should be able to easily fit inside 50's nerd / 00's hipster-thickness black plastic frames, which many people find to be actually comfortable to wear.
Cyanogen (Score:2)
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[Cyanogen] is a colorless, toxic gas with a pungent odor.
Re: Cyanogen (Score:2)
That works, too. Either way, fun for all involved.
Miniaturize even further (Score:3)
(To those with a limited sense of humor: This is a joke. Admittedly a very mediocre one at best.)
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Fascinating how they cram so much in so little space
That's what the judge said about the Muslim pedo gang rapists
I don't know whether this should be moded sick, informative, or funny. Possibly all three
On this episode of Where are they Now? (Score:3)
Bet she won't be wearing those into an airport [boston.com] anytime soon!
Fits on spectacles (Score:2)
I was quite pleased to see that the tech and the frame are held together by just a torx screw, and you can screw it onto ordinary glasses. It doesn't work very well that way, but at least it means that spectacle users are a small step away from being supported.
Ha ha, who am I kidding, I'm never going to own one of those.
That's odd.. (Score:2)
They found a dime inside when they tore it down?
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A.K.A. I don't want to live on this planet anymore [kym-cdn.com].
Camera (Score:2, Interesting)
>"Goodies found inside include proximity, light and inertial sensors, sound transducers, a TI OMAP CPU, flash, RAM, camera and tiny projection display."
You forgot the camera- the part that makes it such a rude and privacy killing and controversial device. If it really were missing, it would probably fare much better...
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"Goodies found inside include proximity, light and inertial sensors, sound transducers, a TI OMAP CPU, flash, RAM, camera and tiny projection display."
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>"Goodies found inside include proximity, light and inertial sensors, sound transducers, a TI OMAP CPU, flash, RAM, camera and tiny projection display."
OK, I obviously need to take reading comprehension class :) Sorry about that. Damn I wish there were a "delete" function...
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successful troll.
If you're saying that last correction was a troll (perhaps for laughs) then don't bother on Slashdot. People here are so anal that they will correct the smallest thing 27 times, or not realize when a correction is a joke. Ok, I fell for it this time, but yesterday I made a "correction" about mean vs. median and forgot the <irony> tag. Umpteen posters said the correction wasn't significant. No kidding, that was the joke! I "corrected" the correctors by becoming even more absurdly anal. They still didn'
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I get that when someone gets overly pedantic it is annoying. However I would argue that it is a result of the fact that we are constantly being bombarded by half truths and or outright lies from every direction. I'm not so naive to suggest that this is a new phenomenon but with the amount of information we are ingesting (and of course outputting) there is bound to be a level of rebellion.
All the more so for those of us who have to work with/within systems that require our output to be correct. Missing a
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I get that when someone gets overly pedantic it is annoying. However ...
You're being pedantic about being pedantic :)
with the amount of information we are ingesting (and of course outputting) there is bound to be a level of rebellion. All the more so for those of us who have to work with/within systems that require our output to be correct. Missing a bracket
Technical people can actually think and communicate in a way that's precise and meaningful. Everybody else is an idiot. At least that's the way I look at it.
The Borg (Score:2)
all that functionality (Score:2)
Ever wonder how Google packed all of the Google Glass functionality into a slender eyeglass frame?
I honestly don't know what all that functionality is. what exactly it's good at has so far been a lot of hype and conjecture. AFIK it's really just a secondary display for your cellphone.
Overdesigned (Score:2)
That huge CPU coupled with the memory and flash disk has to consume arround 200mw, no way it can last more than 1 hour on that tiny battery.
IMHO cramming a 500 MB Linux distro into something that is basically a proxy for google services is a complete waste of resources.