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Google Begins Testing Its Augmented-Reality Glasses

If you venture into a coffee shop in the coming months and see someone with a pair of

futuristic glasses that look like a prop from “Star Trek,” don’t worry. It’s probably just a Google employee testing the

company’s new augmented-reality glasses.

Google Begins Testing Its Augmented-Reality 

Glasses

On Wednesday, Google gave people a clearer picture of its secret initiative

called Project Glass. The glasses are the company’s first venture into wearable

computing.

The glasses are not yet for sale. Google will, however, be testing them in public.

In a post shared on Google Plus, employees in the company laboratory

known as Google X, including Babak Parviz, Steve Lee and Sebastian Thrun, asked people for input about the prototype of

Project Glass. Mr. Lee, a Google product manager and originally worked on Google mapping software Latitude, mobile maps and

indoor maps, is responsible for the software component and the location-based aspects of the glasses.

“We’re sharing

this information now because we want to start a conversation and learn from your valuable input,” the three employees wrote.

“Please follow along as we share some of our ideas and stories. We’d love to hear yours, too. What would you like to see from

Project Glass?”

The prototype version Google showed off on Wednesday looked like a very polished and well-designed

pair of wrap-around glasses with a clear display that sits above the eye. The glasses can stream information to the lenses

and allow the wearer to send and receive messages through voice commands. There is also a built-in camera to record video and

take pictures.

The New York Times first wrote about the

glasses in late February, describing an augmented-reality display that would sit over the eye and run on the Android

mobile platform.

A video released by Google on Wednesday,

which can be seen below, showed potential uses for Project Glass. A man wanders around the streets of New York City,

communicating with friends, seeing maps and information, and snapping pictures. It concludes with him video-chatting with a

girlfriend as the sun sets over the city. All of this is seen through the augmented-reality

glasses.

 

Project Glass could hypothetically become Project Contact Lens. Mr. Parviz, who is also an

associate professor at the University of Washington, specializes in

bionanotechnology, which is the fusion of tiny technologies and biology. He most recently built a tiny contact lens that

has embedded electronics and can display pixels to a person’s eye.

Early reports of

the glasses said prototypes could look like a pair of Oakley

Thumps — which are clunky and obtrusive sunglasses — but the version Google unveiled Wednesday looks more graceful. There

are reportedly dozens of other shapes and variations of the glasses in the works, some of which can sit over a person’s

normal eyeglasses.

People I have spoken with who have have seen Project Glass said there is a misconception that the

glasses will interfere with people’s daily life too much, constantly streaming information to them and distracting from the

real world. But these people said the glasses actually free people up from technology.

One person who had used the

glasses said: “They let technology get out of your way. If I want to take a picture I don’t have to reach into my pocket and

take out my phone; I just press a button at the top of the glasses and that’s it.”

Project Glass is one of many

projects currently being built inside the Google X

offices, a secretive laboratory near Google’s main Mountain View, Calif., campus where engineers and scientists are also

working on robots and space elevators.

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