Google Shows Early Preview of Augmented Reality Glasses (bloomberg.com) 24
Alphabet's Google, which failed to find a consumer audience for its internet-connected glasses about a decade ago, on Wednesday presented a prototype of augmented reality glasses aimed at the general public. Bloomberg: In a brief demonstration at its annual I/O developer conference, the company showed glasses using an AR version of Google Translate. The company didn't say when the glasses would be ready for consumers, but Chief Executive Officer Sundar Pichai indicated Google has a "long way to go" before releasing them. "It's important we design in a way that's built for the real world and doesn't take away from it," Pichai said.
Why couldn't you just put this under one topic? (Score:4, Insightful)
Yes, Google announced *things* today, why not just put all of it under one topic?!?
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-AKA more profits.
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Well, I guess they're trolling Google like they troll Apple . . . I'm just too exhausted with Google's nonsense to even be bothered with it.
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Paywall (Score:5, Informative)
There is tons of coverage today. WTF did the editors choose the one site with an ironclad paywall?
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There's a paywall?
https://archive.ph/WYD2a [archive.ph]
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Lazy
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I'm not sure what you're seeing, but for me I can see an article (for free) - it's about 1/3rd the width of the screen, and takes about 3/4 of the height of it if I discount the image from twitter (https://twitter.com/Google/status/1524464030668177409). Illuminatory, it is not. It's more or less just one of the longer slashdot summaries.
It does say, "Alphabet Inc.’s Google, which failed to find a consumer audience for its internet-connected glasses about a decade ago, on Wednesday presented a prototyp
Maybe the article tells; DNR, but (Score:1)
Which coffee shop were these found in?
Translation function is useful, but can I play... (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
It autodetects pronouns, too (Score:2)
As seen in the demo video: "Guillermo (he/him)," a "research participant", an older blue collar Hispanic guy, probably a correct guess.
Yawn (Score:1)
If someone wanted these things a small company, who knew what they were doing, would have already successfully made/sold them.
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You're crazy. These should be a huge hit with deaf people, at the very least -- and that doesn't even take into account translation.
Re: Yawn (Score:1)
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My daughter-in-law is deaf. Lost her hearing as a child due to illness. She doesn't want a cochlear implant because the surgery looks too invasive. But most of her communication is via a cell phone thru messaging and the like. She also loves to read.
Because of where we live, she isn't part of a deaf community as one really doesn't exist around here.
She's chomping at the bit for something like this.
Oh YAY! (Score:2)
Revenge of the Glassholes.
I'll never know because I won't pay to read this. (Score:2)
Babelfish vs Google (Score:2)