Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Displays Portables Hardware

Designer Glasses With Microdisplay Unveiled 161

An anonymous reader writes to tell us about an Israeli company, Lumus-Optical, and their nicely designed eyeglasses featuring twin microdisplays and mini projectors. They will be demoed at CES in January. From the article: "The firm's latest prototype boasts dual 640 x 480 resolution displays as well as two wee projectors on each arm; the Lumus glasses can accept video inputs via an undisclosed connection, and projects an image akin to a '60-inch screen from 10 feet away.' Its Light-guide Optical Element technology allows the imagery to be reflected back on to the lenses so users can view them, all while being transparent enough to allow you to focus on the humans, trees, road block, or board room presentation ahead of you."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Designer Glasses With Microdisplay Unveiled

Comments Filter:
  • by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @05:56PM (#17214558)
    ...they do something!
  • Finally, (Score:5, Insightful)

    by rednip ( 186217 ) * on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @05:57PM (#17214562) Journal
    A way to watch porn 'in public' without being hassled by 'the man'. Better yet, can you imagine driving at 75 mph while your favorite 'artist' performs her special talent. Seriously, we'll look back to the 'good old days' when people were just distracted by their cell phones, and not email, porn, and shopping. Hopefully cars will drive themselves before 'Joe SUV' gets his hands on 'this'.
    • Re:Finally, (Score:5, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @06:37PM (#17215224)
      A way to watch porn 'in public' without being hassled by 'the man'.
      Ah, to be young again...

      When you grow other, you'll be hassled by "the woman" when you watch porn...
    • Dude, this car kicks ass! ..and I can watch Madagascar while I'm driving!

      ---------
      Madagascar plays:
      "What kind of music do you like, Gloria?"
      "Hippo-Hop. Woo-hoo, yeeah baby!"
      -----------

      Hahaha, DUDE, those animals are so FUCKING funny, they make me want to merge without looking!
      *cars crash*
      YEAH, RUMSFELD!
    • by biocute ( 936687 )
      A way to watch porn 'in public' without being hassled by 'the man'.

      Yes but I'm sure you (or the public) will be hassled by 'the other brother' if you're watching porn in the public.

      My apology in advance if I'm replying to a female.
    • Hey, maybe you could use these 'goggles' to put unnecessary 'quotes' around everything you 'see'!
  • Yet another way for people to get into car accidents, fall down stairs, and walk into poles!
    • Insurance companies really don't want people to get hurt, since they have to pay for it. Invest in Healthcare instead.

      On topic, the only thing I really want is industrial diamond glasses. No more soft plastic lenses or thick glass ones, just a few mm of diamond for any eye adjustment you could need. As an added bonus, you could use them to sharpen your knives.
      • by Andy Dodd ( 701 )
        Um, that wouldn't help.

        Diamonds are hard in terms of "they don't scratch" but are (relatively) brittle. I believe if you smash a diamond with a hammer it WILL shatter along its crystal faces. (I could be wrong on this)

        For eyeglasses, while scratchproofing is nice, impact resistance is far more important. I don't want diamond lenses that will shatter into a bunch of tiny sharp pieces when a hockey player with no aim sends a puck into the opposing team's pepband and not the goal. (Yes, Harvard hockey play
        • Diamonds are hard in terms of "they don't scratch" but are (relatively) brittle. I believe if you smash a diamond with a hammer it WILL shatter along its crystal faces. (I could be wrong on this)

          As far as I can tell, diamond has a similar toughness to strong plastics. References from wikipedia on fracture toughness [wikipedia.org] and diamond [wikipedia.org] aren't really clear, but seem to put diamond between metals and general plastics in terms of toughness, hence my assumption that they are probably about as strong as polycarbonate
  • displays as well as a wee projector
    is that like the sensor bar?

    allow you to focus on the humans, trees, road block
    for those of you driving in motor vehicles equipped with media players and the proper output connections. and if so - why not a hud built into the wind shield?

    i could see this as a cool thing but the whole lightness and cool factor drops a bunch when there's a cable running down your back and your tethered to whatever is feeding the projector.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

      for those of you driving in motor vehicles equipped with media players and the proper output connections. and if so - why not a hud built into the wind shield?

      In order for a hud to be viewable on the windshield in daylight the windshield must be special, which translates into expensive. People lose windshields to rocks falling off of semis and the like every day. That is why this is a stupid idea.

      Note that the HUD in a military aircraft does not display on the canopy. It displays on a transparent scr

      • i'm pretty familiar with huds in jets. (and i wouldn't call the ihadss helmet setup goggles) that's a good point about glass damage - but it seems you could do something similar by placing the hud inside. but with cutting edge stuff you can't really talk about cost -- of course any of this is going to be expensive. the point is, this doesn't make sense if you are driving - as they allude to in their example. it also doesn't make a lot of sense for walking around, unless whatever is connected to the proje
      • Good point. Why can't they make a windshield that doesn't fucking break every time a pebble falls off the rock in front of me?
        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          "They" can. It would just be very expensive. Lexan, for example, is used in race cars.
          • However I doubt you'd want a Lexan windshield on a passenger car, because it would scratch too easily. Particularly since most people don't really wash their windshields, and just sort of let the wipers grind the stuff around while the nozzles squirt some blue water on it.

            A cracked windshield is probably preferable to one that's translucent from being sandblasted with road grit. I suspect, though I don't know for sure, that the ones on race cars probably have a very short lifespan.
            • "I suspect, though I don't know for sure, that the ones on race cars probably have a very short lifespan"

              They do, about one race. Also, they use tear strips on the F1's helmets rather than cleaning them, and boy does it suck when you run out of tear strips!
              Fairly sure some of the Nascar guys use them on their windshields too.
      • People lose windshields to rocks falling off of semis and the like every day. That is why this is a stupid idea.

        Right... I've been driving cars for ten years, and never once had to replace a windshield. I've been wearing glasses far longer and replace them, on average, every 1-2 years. That is why putting a display in my glasses is a stupid idea.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        In order for a hud to be viewable on the windshield in daylight the windshield must be special, which translates into expensive. People lose windshields to rocks falling off of semis and the like every day. That is why this is a stupid idea.

        It isn't really as bad as you make it out to be.

        The "specialness" is really just a coating to prevent double-reflections (one from the front of the glass and one from the back of the glass). You can purchase a user-applicable version of this coating yourself. Various c
  • Augmented Reality (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Apocalypse111 ( 597674 ) on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @06:01PM (#17214632) Journal
    Lets get some higher resolution in these things and start doing some augmented reality! I can finally store a face next to a name, recall it in a subtle form through my glasses, and never have an awkward moment at a cocktail party every again!
    • by Knara ( 9377 )
      I agree. 640x480 sucks ass, and is no better than the i-glasses stuff that was out in '95. Yeah, the chassis is better, but I'd gladly use a larger setup to get better resolution. That make it less expensive, of course.
      • by IdleTime ( 561841 ) on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @06:22PM (#17214958) Journal
        I need glasses that give me an image similar to watching a 23" from an armlength's distance
    • by eno2001 ( 527078 )
      Ah yes. I don't know which is sadder. The fact that you're nerdy enough to think that out loud. Or the fact that I'm right there with you. ;P
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Das Modell ( 969371 )
      You could do a lot of neat stuff with those glasses if they had Internet connectivity and the right software. An overlayed GPS map should be easy enough. It could even three-dimensionally show your destination as an icon, and your distance to it.

      Artificial eyes and a computerized brain would be more handy, though.
      • by Virtual_Raider ( 52165 ) on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @09:53PM (#17217736)
        You beat me to the GPS example =) But I thought of a couple more... I recently bought some bluetooth stereo earphones to listen to mp3s on my mobile. Imagine if you could also conect this 'designer glasses' to a cell phone and be able to read your sms =)

        It would be really neat to have the small envelope icon pop up in a corner of your vision as another mean of informing you. Of course, this is not for everybody and I'm already anticipating the reaction of the I-don't-want-that-therefore-it-sucks crowd. It would also take some good design to make it so that it doesn't block your field of vision, I wouldn't want to be driving in the middle of a busy road and have a giant sms envelope popping right in front of my eyes. Yet, done well it would absolutely kick ass.

        Since I'm day-dreaming, how about coupling that with those keyboards made of light ala Final Fantasy Movie that came out for the Palm. You could see the keyboard in your glasses and type in thin air a reply. And don't forget a cyberpunk favorite, the digital watch.

        The future in the mirror is closer than it appears.

        • Well, anything can happen. 20 years ago the Internet was almost non-existent. 20 years before that, personal computers didn't exist (I think). I imagine that augmented reality will be completely mundane in 2026 (and the Internet will be wirelessly omnipresent).
    • by RealErmine ( 621439 ) <commerce@nOspaM.wordhole.net> on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @06:21PM (#17214954)

      never have an awkward moment at a cocktail party every again!

      How about "Look at the stupid glasses that guy's wearing!"

      • How about "Look at the stupid glasses that guy's wearing!

        You bring up a very good point. This technology has existed for a while. Unfortunately its developed by geeks, not fashion accessory designers. What I mean by that is if it is not as sexy as an iPod, or a Bluetooth earpiece etc. then it will not be picked up by the mainstream. And the mainstream is DYING for something like this if they can make it sleek, sexy, cheap and simple enough for the mass market.

        If they made one of these suckers able to p

    • More excitingly, link up your small web browsing device of choice, surf to Wikipedia during your college exams, and sleep your way to the top!

      I, for one, hope these things don't take off until I'm out of school or people will raise the bar for those of us who don't cheat.

      And then there's always the ability to watch porn anywhere, but that's a whole other can of worms.

    • Lets get some higher resolution in these things and start doing some augmented reality!

      Why do you need a higher resolution for that? There was a time when computers worked with 320x200 resolution and people seemed to do well. How much info do you really need to be there? How well will you be able to focus on both the digital info and the reality in front of you? It's not because 1600x1200 is now the lower limit for graphics cards that _every_ application suddenly needs them.

      • by Knara ( 9377 )
        As I said to the AC earlier in this thread, while that resolution is fine for simple augmented reality, why have different glasses for different purposes. If I want to web surf or watch movies or something, I'd like greater than 640x480 ad in full color, thanks.
    • Hah, you'll first have to get that name off of her, mr nerdy nerd :)
    • Face recognition is okay, but to really do augmented reality well you need to first figure out the geometry of the whole scene. Hardware is just getting fast enough to do that in real time, but portable hardware that can do it is still a few years away. For example, OpenVIDIA [sourceforge.net] is fast enough to track 1000 features in real time, but requires a high-end SLI setup to do it (at least, if I remember the benchmark correctly -- I can't find it again).

  • I can see severe beatings in store for users of these glasses on plane trips.
  • by QuantumG ( 50515 ) * <qg@biodome.org> on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @06:06PM (#17214702) Homepage Journal
    How freakin' dorky do those "designer" glasses look? What's so hard here, integrate your displays into a normal looking pair of sunglasses and make them no more bulky while doing so. Yes, that means you are going to have to do something revolutionary and hide that revolutionary technology in something that looks normal. Cause that's what people want when they are out in public; to look like everyone else; and that's where this product will be used.
    • by SEMW ( 967629 )

      How freakin' dorky do those "designer" glasses look? What's so hard here, integrate your displays into a normal looking pair of sunglasses and make them no more bulky while doing so. Yes, that means you are going to have to do something revolutionary and hide that revolutionary technology in something that looks normal. Cause that's what people want when they are out in public; to look like everyone else

      1.3 billion people would disagree with you. That's a pretty large fraction of the Earth's population who wears glasses (ignoring contact-lens wearers). Once 1.3 billion people are doing something, it *becomes* normal, and frankly, it's not only stupid but downright idiotic that you would imply that all 1.3 billion want to "look like everyone else" or "look normal".

      No to mention that you'd look pretty stupid wearing sunglasses indoors or when it's dark outside. But then, I'm guessing you do that alre

      • by QuantumG ( 50515 ) *
        Well, ya know, if they can make it look normal in a pair of regular glasses, that's fine too, I just think you have a lot better chance of doing it with sunglasses first.
      • No to mention that you'd look pretty stupid wearing sunglasses indoors or when it's dark outside. But then, I'm guessing you do that already.

        I'm Elwood Blues, you insensitive clod!

      • Based on the popularity of contact lenses and PRK-like surgeries, I'm going to say that most of those 1.3B really would prefer to just look like everyone else.

        OP had it right - quit making these things so homely that you wouldn't wear them where anyone could actually see you. If they have to tint the glasses to hide the electronics, so be it - for now. They can work on the transparency as you get better, but there will be be no money to keep them going if the only sales are to demo companies and the odd ric
  • when I can go buy a 60" widescreen plasma tv and sit 2 feet away from it?
  • It's a really nice design, but how does it function? Their website (www.lumus-optical.com) doesn't specify beyond potential application. Does it allow you to clip onto existing glasses, or do you have to use their display as well? It has a clean display in comparison to the My Vu specs (www.myvu.com), but there doesn't seem to be a lot more to it. Does it have built in audio, does it have a bulky adapter/controller? I for one would like to see more information on the website.

    Assuming these question

  • by grassy_knoll ( 412409 ) on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @06:14PM (#17214838) Homepage
    Lumus glasses can accept video inputs via an undisclosed connection


    Undisclosed? What, does the input jack require lube or something?

    "...So you see, the electrical impulses are carried along the central nervous system then back out through the epidural layer near the magnet on the glasses... "

    "Look, I don't care how it works that is Not an entrance!"

    [badum-ching]
    • Lumus glasses can accept video inputs via an undisclosed connection

      Undisclosed? What, does the input jack require lube or something?

      "...So you see, the electrical impulses are carried along the central nervous system then back out through the epidural layer near the magnet on the glasses... "
      "Look, I don't care how it works that is Not an entrance!"

      Of course, that input requires a special implantation surgery... From Hot Shots:
      "It's called a multipupiloptomy, but in order to keep from damaging

  • by Victor Fors ( 987095 ) on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @06:28PM (#17215060)
    link to home page: http://www.lumusvision.com/ [lumusvision.com] They have a technology section displaying an overview of the refraction elements used to display the image. They also seem to have developed (and brought to market) an earlier model of these glasses. I admit they do look shiny, but if i bought VR goggles i'd primarily use them at home. It's a cool toy, but would lug around something like that for everyday use?
    • It's a cool toy, but would lug around something like that for everyday use?
      Some people do it! [gatech.edu]
    • Aircraft mechanics: look at a part and call up the service procedures video while you're looking at the real part.

      Drivers of anything that has a blind spot at the rear, to watch the backup camera.

      Drivers at night, to watch the car's infrared camera without defocusing from the road.

      Parents: watch the nannycam in real time.

      Anybody with a swimming pool at home.

      Police: the police dog already has a harness, sometimes with a light so you can keep track of the dog as it follows a trail. Add an image-stabilized cam
  • microdisplays have been available at 320x240 resolutions for a long time now. i'm just waiting for a res boost. however, given the long sordid history of microdisplays, i suggest you not hold your breath for product releases. place little faith in a press release.
  • "This looks like VGA resolution displayed on a screen so big you can see the individual pixels!"
    • Better than not seeing individual pixels -- with resolution that small, you need every one you can get! (Seriously, I've used something like this (a MicroOptical SV-3, to be specific) before -- if anything, I wish the pixels were bigger.)

    • Yeah, that'd look like shit, even at ten feet.

      How about we shoot for effectively 17" XGA ...at, say, two feet.
  • by dave562 ( 969951 ) on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @06:41PM (#17215288) Journal
    What are the implications of using something like this on a regular basis? It's pretty well documented that people experience eye strain from staying focused at a fixed focal depth for too long (ie. when looking at a monitor). I've had my own vision deteriorate pretty significantly since I have started using computers despite genetics to the opposite (ie. my mom and dad both have great vision and they are in their late 50s). I shudder to think about the implications of remaining focused at a depth of less than inch from the eye for extended periods of time.
    • by mpoulton ( 689851 ) on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @07:17PM (#17215914)
      I shudder to think about the implications of remaining focused at a depth of less than inch from the eye for extended periods of time.

      You're not. The focal distance is much further away than that -- the apparent focal plane floats in front of the user at a comfortable distance. Thus, eye strain should be reduced compared to normal computer use.
  • I can't wait to see people hanging out at the grocery store or at the local mall, just walking around with those hideously ugly glasses, completely oblivious to their surroundings and watching some tv show. I can see how it can be useful in some situations, but to the folks that I'm sure I'll see walking about in crowded shopping areas, I ask what the point of all that is, other than to simply show off?

  • as well as two wee projectors on each arm

    Wii projectors or wee projectors? Wii projectors, body movements, and arm mounted Wii projectors and things could get dangerous. We just need portable power for the Wii and projectors. :^D
  • by TranscendentalAnarch ( 1005937 ) on Tuesday December 12, 2006 @08:29PM (#17216852)
    I was going to say that, at least with this type of display, you won't get any idiots chucking their Wii controllers at their 60" plasmas... But then I thought that, if you're stupid enough to do that, you'll be stupid enough to swing the nun chuck around and smack the crap out of your face and the glasses.
  • Phase-array optics, implemented in a coating several nanometers deep on the inside surface of the lenses, will in theory be able to display virtual images at a comfortable viewing distance. See more here [amazon.com]
  • Since the display is a pair of projectors, each aimed into one eye, why aren't they boasting a stereo display, like a 3D movie?

    What I really want to see is tiny cameras on the fronts of the projectors, registering the 3D scene so the projected display can be mapped closely onto it.

A morsel of genuine history is a thing so rare as to be always valuable. -- Thomas Jefferson

Working...