Google Releases Glass Factory System Image, Rooted Bootloader 74
Krystalo writes "In a nod towards the modding community and hackers in general, Google has released the first factory system image and rooted bootloader for the latest version, XE5, of Google Glass. Nevertheless, the company is at the same time warning that using these downloads will result in a voided warranty for the experimental device."
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Hipsters were hacking their glasses before it was cool.
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Google glass - crowd-sourcing invasion of privacy. Way to go Google.
PS. send me one plz
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Talk about crowd sourced fear mongering.
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So when the pizza guy comes into your apartment complex and snaps a shot of you trying to seduce him into a gay sex orgy for free food and posts it on his google+ equivalent of a facebook wall you'll be alright with that?
I'm not sure a pizza delivery guy would be able to afford Google Glass.
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So people will take it off when they enter restrooms?
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The only douchie people I have seen in in relation to the Google glasses release are the socially retarded (technical term not insult here) that threaten to kill or main the wearers of said glasses. While it may look funny now these could be useful eventually (these are really a tech in its infancy and the glasses are more a public beta then a finished product).
Everyone seems to fear that they will become the ultimate spy device used by evil mega corp Google to spy o
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opensource like android
This should be modded funny.
vc:idiocy
really? you mean the apache license BSD license and the GPL aren't open source?
That's a really odd position to take. (Score:2)
With as much hype as Google is trying to create for an existing product by another manufacturer, you'd think they'd give a little more leeway for innovation.
Re:That's a really odd position to take. (Score:5, Insightful)
More than giving you complete freedom to mess with it, but saying that, if you break it in the process, they aren't going to assume responsibility?
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Full Disclosure: I didn't buy one.
They want few people who paid ~3x as much as an existing competing android product (that is really cool and works) to void their warrantee to make new stuff for them. They want to OWN this segment. It's just stupid.
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You've said that twice now and still haven't provided a link...
FU (Score:1)
I'll give you a clue. People who venture outside and go skiing wear goggles... oh fuckit.
http://developers.reconinstruments.com/ [reconinstruments.com]
http://www.reconinstruments.com/ [reconinstruments.com]
The HUD is ~$500 from them. Oakley, Scott, Smith, etc... all had Recon hardware (with a markup) last year.
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Your source is a single eye version of the as-seen-on-tv home theater glasses with some basic modern sensors and X-TREME rebranding? And you want to compare this to an actual look-through heads up display? Seriously? The obligatory car analogy is comparing an actual HUD on the windshield (glass) with classic instrumentation that you can look down at.
You're trying to play up a screen on a hands free mount like it's an Eyetap.
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GG is an actual look-through heads up display? I thought it was classic instrumentation that you can look up at and powered by an ARM computer. Is looking up better?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j8lScHO2mM0 [youtube.com]
There is a hardware difference of course, the Recon doesn't have a $1000 webcam. Some people might consider that a plus.
My main reason for mentioning the Recon unit was to point out the extreme price of GG and their attitude of "you broke it so fuck off" compared to another android powered HUD that coul
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Here's [imgur.com] what the view THROUGH google glass looks like as opposed to the Recon which is nothing more than one of these [bigboxsave.com] cut in half with a modern set of sensors bolted onto it.
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I think they want people to build stuff to the stock Glass APIs. They are willing to allow users who want to do additional experimentation to do so freely (as long as those users, not Google, are responsible if they make the device unusable in the process). There is a crucial distinction there.
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The killer app: (Score:1)
Rooted? (Score:1, Troll)
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I'm guessing that living in those countries does not render you unable to determine the meaning of a technical term when used in context. I could be wrong, as there are rumours of unusual activities with sheep.
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Unusual?
You mean usual activities with sheep and the wayward kangaroo...
Ah! Yes, I see you're American, mate!
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Well, thus far, I can only see one person whining... and it's the person I'm responding to.
Maybe, I dunno, try being less butthurt about perceived ills? Perhaps redirect that energy into something useful, like finding a girlfriend to fuck?
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Your mom was a pretty good fuck last night, just sayin'...
PLEASE DON'T HIT ME! lol
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THANK you.
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Open Source, but voids a warranty? (Score:1)
It it just me, or does this make no sense. Isn't Open Source suppose to ALLOW you to run the SW in any form, as you like on a piece of HW?
Ok, so this only runs on Google's HW... and they are within their right to set terms of what they're going to support. But this sure sounds really screwed up...
and at least doesn't seem to follow the "spirit" of Open Source, though it does follow the "letter-of-the-law"...
Google continues to slide on my score sheet. Use to seem to be taking a new exciting path, now j
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You're going to be installing software that they don't know that has low level access to the hardware and could potentially harm it. Voiding the warranty makes sense to me- they can't be responsible for harm done by software they can't control. It doesn't apply to apps, because the apps don't allow direct hardware access except through the APIs Google has written and tested.
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They also have a reputation for being pretty forgiving if it's obviously not a firmware problem, although I haven't had the need to try it myself.
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yeah that's why if you buy a cpu it has no warranty?
this doesn't affect mandatory hw responsibilities they have by the way.
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It it just me, or does this make no sense. Isn't Open Source suppose to ALLOW you to run the SW in any form, as you like on a piece of HW?
Ok, so this only runs on Google's HW... and they are within their right to set terms of what they're going to support. But this sure sounds really screwed up...
and at least doesn't seem to follow the "spirit" of Open Source, though it does follow the "letter-of-the-law"...
Google continues to slide on my score sheet. Use to seem to be taking a new exciting path, now just turning into yet another huge corp, with a similar mental model as any other. (Granted they all have their own tweaks, but they're not anything special any more). Nothing to see here, move along there...
it has no practical software warranty to begin with.
and in most areas it wouldn't change the mandatory guarantee towards the hardware...
Would you hit a man with glasses? (Score:5, Insightful)
It won't be long before the Google Glass tech will be put into glasses that don't look obvious and a little ridiculous. For those of you who think you're always going to be able to tell who's recording video of you with wearable Google Glass tech: think again.
Right now they look like "nerds" and "geeks" according to the people who are angry about losing their privacy (or who can't afford them). Pretty soon, they'll look like anyone with eyeglasses. I've seen people here talk about punching anyone they see wearing Google Glass looking at them. What are you going to do when this technology is so ubiquitous that anyone with glasses might be recording you?
Maybe the best we can hope for is that the tech is so widely-available, and moddable, that it's a level playing field (a very exposed playing field). But like it or not, it's coming.
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Exactly. The time to get upset about privacy loss passed about a decade ago.
If anything, Google Glass democratizes intrusion. It levels the playing field a little bit with Big Brother. I think a lot of very interesting footage from "closed door" meetings and smokey back rooms will become available.
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Well, first of all, Google Glass incorporates facial and clothing recognition, so everyone captured can be tagged by Google and their movements tracked. Right now, the cameras don't have this, so people still are
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I am not arguing with your thoughts on it being bad. I do want to point out there all ready is people recognizing software running of cameras. Maybe not as intrusive, but there.
I do want to ask though, is there a difference from a polite society and a polite one?
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You could frame it another way - a polite society can also be formed if everyone was armed to the teeth, but I'm sure there are people who'd rather live in a polite society where a misstep wouldn't result in you being pumped full of lead.
Likewise, a
Would you hit a man with a shirt button? (Score:2)
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It's already a "mainstream activity" but one that's only now becoming available to all of us.
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Have a look at a british series called "Black Mirror", season 1, episode 3.
<sigh> (Score:3, Informative)
You better not hack* out stuff!! <wink> <wink> <nudge> <nudge>
* Please make our stuff seem cool.
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You're just not allowed to make it a device quality issue.
Hack on.
no word on if they're waterproof
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No, they don't care if you do hack them, its just that if you break your toy don't come crying.
A perfectly acceptable way to do business.
How About this Hack? (Score:2)
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nominally that means the owner of the device. software bullshit aside, the person taking the pictures is the owner.
now that gets us into another interesting legal mess.
let the fun begin
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Another emerging issue is that others are currently selling their personal recording devices, and are not having any of the problems that Google is having. One has to wonder if Google is, "protesting a little to much?"
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Nope.
Copyright belongs to whoever recorded it, unless it's a work for hire with a contract and everything.
Every time you hand your camera to someone for them to take a picture of you, they own the copyright NOT you. I will agree that copyright is screwed up because of this, but nothing needs to be resolved as far as glass is concerned.
Recovery mode? (Score:2)
Google Discontines Glass Factory System Image, (Score:2)