jeudi 27 mars 2014

High Temperatures Damaging Glass Beyond Repair

Many of the Explorers face a problem they wouldn't have imagine at first. However Glass is full of high-tech components and is most of the time used for a few hours, so it's easy to understand that users can face high temperatures.
The temperature of the components clearly alters comfort and the whole experience as users then have to switch of the device and let it cool.


A team from Lesnumeriques.com (specialized in high-tech devices) has tested the device and here are the results :

  • For a normal use the temperature is around 40° and no one seems to be bothered by the heat.
  • During intensive use (GPS, camera, etc.) Glass brushes against 50°


Test de température des Google Glass en usage modéré
Temperature during a normal use
Source : GOGlasses, Scoop.it

Update : What Glass Allows You To Do

Get the trailer of a movie from a movie poster

We all have dreamt about that! How many of you have ever arrived at the cinema, not sure about what to see and hesitating in front of all these movie posters? Now you will be able to use Glass and the app Preview to get the trailer from the movie poster you're looking at. This will avoid you wasting some time on your smartphone and will definitely change your movie life!

NBA teams start using Glass

Sacramento Kings and Indiana Pacers have started using Glass during games. So far players won't be allowed to play with the device but cheerleaders will be wearing Glass during the whole game and will share their point of view with the world. However, some player still use Glass during trainings and before the game to share precious footages with their fans.

Medical diagnosis via image recognition

An App now allows you to take a picture of medical analysis and to get an analysis and a quick diagnosis. Soon Glass will be considered as a medical device on its own. This app is based on a large picture library of medical results and will then compare the uploaded picture to the existing ones. So far, the diagnosis has been accurate in 99% of cases.

Learn English through Glass

A Vietnamese start-up, called Topica, has just started using Glass to teach English. Topica has decided to provide one of its students with the device and to allow all the other students to follow his activity. The Glass user will then have to go to a place where he will practice his english (order food in a restaurant, ask for a cab, etc.) and will then share this with his classmates.


Source : Scoot.it, Twitter, L'Atelier, GOGlasses

Glass Becomes A Marketing Tool

Google has expressly prohibited advertising on its Glass apps. However, some companies were smarter and started using Glass as a marketing tool. That's precisely what Kenneth Cole has tried recently. He claims to be the first one to use Glass to market its products.

The campaign is based on courtesy. Kenneth Cole has launched an app, that users can download and they will be asked to achieve a good deed and take a picture of it every single day during 21 days.  This campaign promotes Kenneth Cole's new perfume Mankind and the first user who will achieve all the deeds will received a Mankind kit worth 1000$. Glass users have faced reluctance and mean behaviors as they tend to remain in their bubble but the aim of this app is to interact with other people and share. This is also a way to make the device more popular and user-friendly.



Kenneth Cole also mentioned that this campaign will help restore Glass image and is an answer to the two lists that Google has published : How Not To Be A Glasshole and Top 10 Myths About Glass.

According to Matt Karolian (Arnold Worldwide Agency), using Glass as a marketing tool will put a huge pressure on companies. Indeed, if the campaign is a failure, it would be displayed directly on users face and it will be even closer than it actually is through mobiles or Internet.
Marketing Guru think that prohibiting ads on Glass isn't such a bad idea as companies will have to be more creative and will thus avoid displaying the same banners as on mobile devices, without taking into account the new device's specificities.

However, Google has filed a patent in 2011 about measuring the attention of human eye. One of the potential uses would be to figure out if the user has turned his gaze on an ad (displayed in the real world), which would allow companies to calculate their return on investment.

Source : Clubic Pro, Focus Optique, Scoop.it

Google fights Glass Haters

Glass is an impressive technology performance but Google constantly has to deal with haters, rumors, anti-Glass events, etc. Indeed, the Explorer Program is an amazing marketing tool as it creates excitement and curiosity but it doesn't always benefit Google. So much that Google had to publish  The Top 10 Google Glass Myths to fire back at Glass haters. This list comes months after Google explained in a similar post How Not To Be A GlassHole.




Google still should keep in mind that people tend to be reluctant to change and keep hating things when it first comes out. But things change and people just need time to get used to it. Now Google's strategy is to release huge social campaigns to improve Glass image.
Taking into account the recent controversies about driving with Glass, Google has approached various Heads of State to make sure Glass will be allowed on the roads of their countries. As a reminder, New Jersey, New York and Maryland states have already banned Glass.


You will find below the Top 10 Google Glass Myths :

Myth 1 - Glass is the ultimate distraction from the real world
Instead of looking down at your computer, phone or tablet while life happens around you, Glass allows you to look up and engage with the world. Big moments in life -- concerts, your kid’s performances, an amazing view -- shouldn’t be experienced through the screen you’re trying to capture them on. That’s why Glass is off by default and only on when you want it to be. It’s designed to get you a bit of what you need just when you need it and then get you back to the people and things in life you care about. 




Myth 2:  Glass is always on and recording everything

Just like your cell phone, the Glass screen is off by default. Video recording on Glass is set to last 10 seconds. People can record for longer, but Glass isn't designed for or even capable of always-on recording (the battery won’t last longer than 45 minutes before it needs to be charged). So next time you’re tempted to ask an Explorer if he’s recording you, ask yourself if you’d be doing the same with your phone. Chances are your answers will be the same.




Myth 3 - Glass Explorers are technology-worshipping geeks

Our Explorers come from all walks of life. They include parents, firefighters, zookeepers, brewmasters, film students, reporters, and doctors. The one thing they have in common is that they see the potential for people to use technology in a way that helps them engage more with the world around them, rather than distract them from it. In fact, many Explorers say because of Glass they use technology less, because they’re using it much more efficiently. We know what you’re thinking: “I’m not distracted by technology”. But the next time you’re on the subway, or, sitting on a bench, or in a coffee shop, just look at the people around you. You might be surprised at what you see.




Myth 4 - Glass is ready for prime time

Glass is a prototype, and our Explorers and the broader public are playing a critical role in how it’s developed. In the last 11 months, we’ve had nine software updates and three hardware updates based, in part, on feedback from people like you. Ultimately, we hope even more feedback gets baked into a polished consumer product ahead of being released. And, in the future, today's prototype may look as funny to us as that mobile phone from the mid 80s.




Myth 5: Glass does facial recognition (and other dodgy things) 

Nope. That’s not true. As we’ve said before, regardless of technological feasibility, we made the decision based on feedback not to release or even distribute facial recognition Glassware unless we could properly address the many issues raised by that kind of feature.  And just because a weird application is created, doesn’t mean it’ll get distributed in our MyGlass store. We manually approve all the apps that appear there and have several measures in place (from developer policies and screenlocks to warning interstitials) to help protect people’s security on the device.




Myth 6: Glass covers your eye(s)

“I can't imagine having a screen over one eye...” one expert said in a recent article. Before jumping to conclusions about Glass, have you actually tried it? The Glass screen is deliberately above the right eye, not in front or over it. It was designed this way because we understand the importance of making eye contact and looking up and engaging with the world, rather than down at your phone. 

Myth 7 - Glass is the perfect surveillance device

If a company sought to design a secret spy device, they could do a better job than Glass! Let’s be honest: if someone wants to secretly record you, there are much, much better cameras out there than one you wear conspicuously on your face and that lights up every time you give a voice command, or press a button. 



Myth 8 - Glass is only for those privileged enough to afford it

The current prototype costs $1500 and we realize that is out of the range of many people. But that doesn’t mean the people who have it are wealthy and entitled. In some cases, their work has paid for it. Others have raised money on Kickstarter and Indiegogo. And for some, it’s been a gift. 



Myth 9 - Glass is banned... EVERYWHERE  

Since cell phones came onto the scene, folks have been pretty good at creating etiquette and the requisite (and often necessary) bans around where someone can record (locker rooms, casino floors, etc.). Since Glass functionality mirrors the cell phones (down to the screen being off by default), the same rules apply. Just bear in mind, would-be banners: Glass can be attached to prescription lenses, so requiring Glass to be turned off is probably a lot safer than insisting people stumble about blindly in a locker room.



Myth 10 - Glass marks the end of privacy
When cameras first hit the consumer market in the late 19th century, people declared an end to privacy. Cameras were banned in parks, at national monuments and on beaches.  People feared the same when the first cell phone cameras came out. Today, there are more cameras than ever before. In ten years there will be even more cameras, with or without Glass. 150+ years of cameras and eight years of YouTube are a good indicator of the kinds of photos and videos people capture--from our favorite cat videos to dramatic, perspective-changing looks at environmental destruction, government crackdowns, and everyday human miracles. 


Source : TechCrunch, Google +, Reuters

Google Gives Geeks A Touch Of Glamour!

Rayban and Oakley partner with Google Glass


Google has just signed a partnership with Luxottica, owner of Rayban and Oakley. The aim of this alliance is to deliver more and more stylish headwear. Google envisions Glass as a natural version of everyday eyeglasses. This luxurious version of Glass will appeal to different customers, who so far were mainly High-Tech addicts.



This partnerships shows Google strategy to offer both a wearable and high tech device but also a trendy accessory. Google had already signed a partnership with an insurance company to combine Glass with prescription lenses, but the company is now trying even harder to make its headset something really worth wearing.

Luxottica also has an experience in connected glasses as some of its products included an MP3 or a screen that was showing speed and altitude for skiing uses.

Google is desperately trying to fight this geek label and tends on making Glass more and more glamorous. Google published a post on Google + on March 20th, where the californian firm was saying that users are not only geeks but parents, students, firemen, journalists, doctors, etc. Also at the various recent Fashion Weeks, wearing Glass was the height of chic.

Google, however, still hasn't revealed the public launched date for Glass and hasn't mentioned when Explorers will have access to this new fashion device designed by Luxottica. According to the Wall Street Journal, this partnership would be an opportunity for Google to sell its products in more than 5000 retail stores as Luxottica owns a lot in the country.




Source : Figaro, Business Insider, Twitter

lundi 24 février 2014

Some Updates on Google's Competitors

Epson Moverio BT-200 :


Very few people are aware that Epson already owns a pair of connected glasses. Epson launched the Epson Moverio BT-100 in 2011, but they were a bit bulky and not that user friendly. However Epson plans on launching the Epson Moverio BT-200 in March, that will be sold for $699 and targets daily users.

What differentiates Epson smartglasses? The lenses are more transparent, which means that the projected heads-up images comes into magnified angled sections in the middle of clear lens, but early users say that it looks like crazy bifocals.




The new glasses are 60 percent thinner than before, and even easily fit over eyeglasses thanks to a flexible nosepiece. It still looks very weird!
A handheld Android console with a touchpad powers the floating display, which includes 3D if the contents matches. The Smart Glasses have a 960x540 resolution 16:9 display, which allows a 23-degree field of view. The device supports H.264 video playback and works with Dolby Digital Plus to carry audio to connected headphones for surround sound.
The device works with Android and uses Bluetooth 3.0 and an SDHC card slot for up to 32GB of storage. Built-in WiFi will also works for streaming video content, and with an extra bridge adapter they could be used to mirror HDMI connected set-top boxes and other entertainment sources.
Some apps are also developed to improve customer experience. Epson is also introducing a wristband : Pulsense PS-100, allowing heart rate monitoring.

Laforge ICIS : Prescription Smart Glasses


Icis is a line of eyewear that displays notifications from your phone, such as texts, tweets, and turn-by-turn directions around your field of vision. Icis is a fashion-tech product, so it will come in a variety of styles and colors. This project is open to international customers. Icis supports Android, iOS, and Windows Phone. Icis beta version is offered for $200.

                     

Indiegogo says that the specs will be released as late as possible to guaranty the best component available. However we already know some caracteristics. Icis is a bluetooth accessory that leverages the power and intelligence of your smartphone through an app, called SocialFlo. With SocialFlo, you can easily select which apps appear on your dashboard when you wear Icis.

Design: The device is still on a development stage. Laforge team has completed several frames designs for the Icis and Icis BOLD lines. Laforge is also currently testing other features that will be announced at later date. More colors, textures and designs will be added later.



Engineering: Laforge team has completed a couple iterations of the circuit board for the first prototypes and will be going through several more iterations over the next few months. The group is currently designing the developer's board that will ship this summer. They are working with suppliers to integrate components such as cameras and speakers into certain models of Icis.

Software: They have developed an alpha version of the SocialFLO app which allows smartphone's apps to be recognized by Icis. They have also completed the foundational work for the API so that developers can start making their own widgets!

Manufacturing: Laforge is working with a wholesale optics lab in western New York State to create the lenses for both of the Icis lines. This company has more than 30 years of experience in the eyewear manufacturing industry. The partnership allows Laforge to leverage near $30 million of capital equipment which keeps costs down. They will handle grinding in all of the prescriptions and final assembly will occur here in the US.
Laforge is currently narrowing down the list of suppliers that will manufacture the frames and raw lenses.






To resume I would say that Laforge did a good job as the glasses are "fashion-friendly". The glasses look much like regular trendy glasses and Laforge has directly positioned on the prescription lenses market, which was a very smart move. The device offers all the benefits of a hands-free mobile device and a premium version of the glasses also feature a camera, microphone and speaker.





If you're interested in the competitors, I have also published an article 2 weeks ago about 5 other Glass competitors.


samedi 22 février 2014

How To Interact With The Device - Users Reviews

I bet you all have many questions on how to use Google Glass, how it feels or if it's user friendly. I've been in touch with some Explorers and I have read many reviews and want now to share this with you.

How to interact with the device


You first need to install the MyGlass app on your smartphone and tap a few choices to setup the settings and pair a new headset. When you activate Glass, a small screen is supposed to float in the upper right-hand of your field of vision. It takes a moment to adjust the spectral screen in your vision and feels a bit odd at the beginning, but you get used to it very quickly. The here is what you see : the time is displayed, with a small amount of text underneath that reads "ok glass". That's basically how you most of the time interact with the device. It's actually a two-step process : first you have to touch the side of the device (the touchpad) or tilt your head upward slowly, which "wakes the device up" and then you can start issuing commands by saying "ok glass" or scrolling down the options using your finger along the side of the device. You can scroll options by moving your finger backwards or forward along the strip, select by tapping and move back by swiping down. However, most of the interactions is done by voice.

Glass does all sort of basic things after you say "ok glass", such as taking a picture, recording or video, "play Michael Jackson" or get directions. The voice recognition works most of the time, but also sometimes doesn't, which can be confusing. The device doesn't always hear you properly or the answer isn't always appropriate. I would compare it to Siri - Apple's iPhone assistant. When the voice assistant gets it right, the device responds quickly and jumps into action. Sounds is also conducted through the bones as I mentioned it in a previous article.

The device gets the data through WiFi on its own via an Android device or iPhone, or it can also works via Bluetooth. This means that you can deal with a "no data situation". Indeed, a good data connection is obviously key for the device to function properly and losing data or experiencing slow data on a phone put the headset into a near-unusable state. Google however tries to work on this issue.

Users feel like the most interesting functionality isn't the search assistant but much more the access to realtime data. You can easily access to the weather, directions, or info about something you see. Recently golfers have even started using Glass to get a constant stream of information: yardages, live scorekeeping, wind directions and aerial hole views.
Google Glass

Hangouts are also a big part of Glass and you can start one by saying "start a hangout with" followed by the individual or Circle. You unfortunately can't start a public Hangout, which means you have to build those Circles asap. Explorers feel that Hangouts are a great experience as you're able to quickly share something you're seeing with friends. You can easily impress someone by looking up to an author's name or getting info on the last social controversy. Business users also enjoy grabbing pictures of receipts and having them synchronized to the cloud.

About the way it works, users really feel that the device is user-friendly, light, surprisingly comfortable and has an amazing potential.

Google Now


Google Now is an increasingly powerful part of the operating system, making recommandations based on where you go and what you do. The device saves your choices and habits and can then recommend something in a more efficient way. For example, Now will suggest you directions to go back to a place you've been earlier or to your office. It will also throw up a list of nearby restaurants at dinnertime. Explorers say that the suggestions aren't always perfect, but Now can regularly suprise you with a good understanding of what you want and need. You also can interact, once you get recommendations: you can tap on a restaurant to call or get directions. Early users regret that you couldn't pre-configure a bit more the device to get more accurate suggestions or informations.