Google glass release date, final specs and
price are still all in the works, but however developers have begun working on
apps for the high profile AR lens. Google has also been partnering with many of
them, even inviting developers to their Mountain View campus to bunk up and
begin coding Glass apps with the Google Glass Project team.
The new Google Glass
hardware will work with eyeglasses or shades, and include an ear bud to replace
the speaker in the current model. The bone-conduction speaker, which, similar
to some hearing aids, literally sends sound waves through the skull to the ear,
has been called faulty by some testers.
The swap begins Friday and testers will have 60 days to
decide if they want new Glass.
The roughly 10,000 current testers also be able to invite up
to three friends into the program, which requires testers to fork over the
current $1,500 price of the glasses.
"Over the next few weeks, all Explorers will have the
opportunity to invite three friends to join the program," the post said.
"They'll be able to buy Glass online and can have it shipped to their
home, office, treehouse or igloo. We're counting on you to get Glass to the
people you think will make great Explorers."
Google has not said when Glass will go on sale to the
general public, though it is expected to be some time next year.
Google Glass,
worn like regular glasses, has a high-resolution display and lets wearers use
voice commands to shoot photos or videos and access features like e-mail, text
messaging, Google Maps, Google search and a handful of other apps.
It's not clear what hardware changes will be made to make
the new Glass work better with other eyeglasses, though some in the tech press
were speculating that users will be able to insert prescription lenses into it.
It's possible to wear both Glass and eyeglasses currently, though many users
who have tried have called it awkward.
The post didn't say how the overall design of Glass will be
tweaked in the next version. Looking a little bit like something out of an '80s
sci-fi movie, some have said the device looks ... well ... goofy, at least on
the sometimes geekish early adopters who have been sporting them.Glass has been a groundbreaker in wearable tech, a movement
that's shaping up to be the coming wave in the technology world.
Samsung has weighed in with Galaxy Gear, a smartwatch that
works with its Android smartphones.
Google and Apple are believed to be joining the smartwatch
market soon, and Pebble and Sony are just a couple of the other names that have
wristwatch tech for sale.
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