Head Mounted Displays Get Cheaper 165
Jason Swank writes "It looks like previous model of Sony's Glasstron was mentioned back in July, but it seems like they are now better and MUCH cheaper: 52" Virtual Viewing, 3.5 ounces, and only $499.
" The one we reported on last july costed 5 times as much, but
the cheaper model is 800x255, the $2600 version is 800x640. Still it
looks pretty sweet. I wonder if I could use these without my contacts. That would make things a lot easier.
Re:Not for computer (Score:1)
PAL version? (Score:1)
Also the resolution seems a little low -- is
180k pixels enough to be equivalent to
a wide screen TV?
This is old hat! Virtual IO did it 4 years ago! (Score:1)
But it *was* good. I still shiver when I remember playing the Doom II Alien Total Conversion...with the sounds and graphics from Alien. It was really creapy.
ttyl
Farrell
Sometime VR Guy
Re:grr (Score:1)
Eyetrek the reason for the price cut... (Score:1)
Similar spec, but a nice low price - and you can see the outside world at the same time, need one.
(Still only TV in, no computer input, but its portable and some of the airlines are starting to take it for business class!)
Funnier than Tom Green (Score:1)
I nominate a kick in the crotch as being funnier than Tom Green also.
For a truly funny Green, check out Red Green [redgreen.com]. Been on the telly for about 3 years now.
Re:grr (Score:1)
Hey that's my idea! (Score:1)
It's also cool that with a laser display you can do either raster or vector graphics. So far vector graphics seem to be done more often because of the slow scanning speeds that mechanical mirror deflectors are capable of.
My latest idea is to use a laser display to paint messages on other people's cars on the freeway. Stuck behind some slowpoke conspiracy of cars going the same speed across all the lanes? Well now you can let everyone else know just what you think of them.
More info on & questions about the new model... (Score:1)
The resolution on the 800 x 640 model is actually 832 (H) x 624 (V), and it's the 'PC Glasstron, PLM-S700'. It also says that it's equivalent to 'only' a 30" screen approximately 6 feet ahead (different from the 52" mentioned in the cheaper, low-res version). Good news - it's got composite video in, woo-hoo!
The problem here is - the TV I want to match up to a Toshiba 5109 is the Toshiba Cinema series 36" TV - 6" larger than the 'apparent' size of this thing, plus the TV is about $600 cheaper. Of course, I'll also be sitting more than 6' away from the TV.
Decisions, decisions.
To check out the expensive version, check this URL [sony.com] .
Re:a better deal... (Score:1)
Not a better deal, IMHO.
Jordan
Re:"External Motion"? (Score:1)
Contacts (Score:1)
Re:My 12" monitor will do just fine (Score:1)
Re:Not for computer (Score:1)
Though it's resolution isn't great, it would be fine for a text console. X would just look weird, but that resolution should be fine for things other than tv.
What I'm not sure about is what sort of inputs it accepts. From what I saw, it looks like it only has RCA a/v inputs, and not the analog VGA type that would be more useful.
Re:"External Motion"? (Score:1)
As for the sun, I live in Washington. On the rare occasions when it does make an appearance, the clouds invariably sneak up on it and cloak it again.
Re:The idiot lawsuits (Score:1)
PS: I think it's:
"Hens love roosters
Geese love ganders
Everyone else loves Ned Flanders"
--
Re:If you read specifications... (Score:1)
If you read specifications... (Score:1)
it sucks (Score:1)
Re:What about eye strain .... (Score:1)
Mono-ocular nightmare... (Score:1)
Where will the price bottom out? (Score:1)
Battery death (Score:1)
The data I've seen on Glastron battery life leads me to belive they were created to eat batteries. For the SVGA unit in SVGA mode it chews 1500mA on a 7.4V battery.
No Linux plugin? :-( (Score:1)
image at every pixel (Score:1)
Almost forgot, you can then use the computer to raytrace or whatever you like into a scene description and come up with the correct light in each direction from that pixel.
Oh and I found my copy of Nanosystems, ISBN 0-471-57518-6 its by K. Eric Drexler, and its a pretty good book. I especialy like the beginning where he talkes about how different forces scale as you change in size by orders of magnitude. Its interesting to see how some forces just arent a consideration when you get smaller (or larger).
Ah ah. (Score:1)
You see I live in a small rural town in Saskatchewan that goes by the name of North Battleford. Our town has few men of my calibre, and even fewer willing to stand up to me in an M&M duel.
I have been proforming rigorous testing religiously every weekday at 3:00pm at which time I go through exactly two 400g bags of M&M's to find the strongest of each bag. I save these chosen ones in a specially crafted Barrel of Monkey's container until I have ammased several hundred Chosen one's. After, several years I think I have found the strongest M&M ever produced by man or beast. It is twice the size of a normal M&M however X-ray, sonar, and density analysis show that is little, if any chocalate contained within it's candy coated walls.
But I find now that I have competition. Let me tell you this, straight up. I like your style, champ, and I am willing to take you under my wing, train you and release you, and a team of elite Special Op M&M's, to the world to achieve World Domination. I have long thought those linux hackers are on the total wrong path; World Domination can only be achieved through specially chosen M&M's.
Well, are you up for it?
Re:High Definition Version for Computer Available (Score:1)
Re:Sony? Feh. (Score:1)
Regarding the short lives of Sony monitors, here's what I've discovered (I have a Sony Trinitron, 17", that's busted) These things fail frequently, but 99% of the time the cause of failure is the little thing inside which checks to see if the current in the monitor is too high (at which point the tube would start emitting dangerous amounts of radiation) This part dies and thinks the current level is ALWAYS too high, so it doesn't let the monitor power on. It's a $30 part and easy enough to replace yourself (although that would void the warranty).
just FYI
"Software is like sex- the best is for free"
-Linus Torvalds
Re:Glasses over glasses? (Score:1)
But for something like this I imagine that they would be able to compensate by altering the image. You wouldn't have much use for the "see-through" feature, but nevertheless they would be useful.
Well, perhaps "useful" isn't the word to describe these toys.
Re:Not for computer (Score:1)
I think it has to do with childrens developing brain-visual systems. Like VR messes it up or somthing. I remember there was a simlar warning with nintendo's virtual boy
"Suble Mind control? why do html buttons say submit?",
the girl next door... (Score:1)
Re:"External Motion"? (Score:1)
*smile*
The thing is probably likely to cause motion sickness in those people susceptible to that. Which for such devices would actually be a significant number since most people can not completely decouple the stationary visual imput to the motion they sense in their middle ear. Fi reading /. on board of a ship in heavy seas would create a huge discrepancy between the staionary visual imput and the rolling and bucking you would feel, rather like those completely covered rollercoasterrides in amusement parks.
On the other hand, if I read the specs correctly the lenses/projection-screens can be made clear. With a small gyroscope built in you could project an artificial horizon in your surroundings which would actually be a decent antidote against motionsickness.
Laptops (Score:1)
Any chance these things will be on laptops in the future? I'd guess that it would do wonders for battery life (or maybe not)
-me
Inner Ear Headphones??? (Score:1)
Re:Inner Ear Headphones??? (Score:1)
Looks like your humour transplant didn't take.
I'd sue that quack for every dollar you can get.
Re:[OT] Gotta eat em' all! Gotta eat em' all! (Score:1)
Sony? Feh. (Score:1)
Maybe the Glasstron is different. Maybe it works reliably for years. Watch me not care, not want to find out. Been burned by them too many times. I'd just as soon buy junk from Goldstar.
Re:HMD? (Score:1)
The two items are seperate - mainly because the motion tracking system can be used to track other things - arm, leg and body positions, for example...
Yes... (Score:1)
Re:VFX 3D kicks ass (Score:1)
I think this HMD is one of the best - the only better one I have tried is the 2nd rev of the Visette on the Virtuality 2000 pods...
Don't Buy - Build! (Score:1)
Of course, one has to be willing to spend a little time and effort here to build such a device, and your first one may not be perfect. Still, it is possible to do!
Re:health warnings - sm41153441 (Score:1)
1. Eyes - because most people have a tendency to focus on the screen, rather than "just" beyond it, like you would for stereograms, so there is increased eye muscle strain, after using for long periods (they also don't take the damn thing off after 30 minutes or so, and relax, which you should also do).
2. Regarding heart and blood pressure - probably due to the fact that having such a device show such a large image can cause (in some people), a form of motion sickness (actually simulator sickness), that causes nausea and higher heart rate due to the brain being confused by different signals (ie, you are playing quake and "running" down a hall, your brain sees you running, but doesn't feel you sway via the ears, or feel your feet moving, causing conflicting signals)...
Thus, because of these two reasons, and the fact that everyone is "sue happy" - they have to have these discalimers...
Re:My 12" monitor will do just fine (Score:1)
Lack of demand (Score:1)
Re:Mono-ocular nightmare... (Score:1)
Either way, I wouldn't worry too much, I've seen more monocular prototypes than stereo for standard computer applications. The only applications that really "need" stereo are gaming and VR.
Eye damage (Score:1)
A third to half the day, every day for a week ?
I know my eye doctor told me to glance away from my monitor and focus at something far away a few times an hour, for a moment or two and rest my lenses.
Don't sit to close to the TV... no, have a 52" TV 6cm in front of your face ?
Try wearables (Score:1)
Be ready with a bucket for all that drool. On second thought, better get a boat
"Now you can see that evil will triumph, because good is dumb!"
Tried it (Score:1)
I wasnt actually that impressed. The resolution wasnt that good and it wasn't very comfortable (I think it was adjusted for Japanese people and wouldnt fit on my roman nose.)
On thing it would be excellent for is watching a few DVD's on long hall flights, But where theres room I'd rather have a tv.
Re:Computer Land (Score:1)
a better deal... (Score:1)
http://www.i-glasses.com [i-glasses.com]
these are $399
Re:"External Motion"? (Score:1)
Re:If you read specifications... (Score:1)
LCD Panel (2)
Now, two questions:
Computer Land (Score:1)
Or are the more expensive models for different things?
What about eye strain .... (Score:1)
Re:off topic - xerox electronic paper (Score:1)
Have you ever read _The Diamond Age_ by Neal Stephenson? This is the perferred means of displays in the book; imagine carrying around a folded piece of paper that is your web browser/desktop/computer. You can write on it and it remembers, transfer information between pieces of e-paper... I get aroused just thinking about it.
It's a good book too.
---
[OT] Gotta eat em' all! Gotta eat em' all! (Score:1)
The greatest hacker of them all Willy wanka needed to beat the vile sorceror who conjured up the candy so he decided to make a team of Everlasting Gobstoppers(tm) and Nerds. Now we all know through so extensive similar nonbiased clinical trials that they will last longer.
However some scientists have speculated that rarest candy of them all perhaps may be even tougher yet.
George Mayfield of Planfield, Illinois the CEO of the bllion dollar a week Pokemon craze has decided to market Pokemon brand pellets of crack cocaine and sugar printed with smily faces and different pokemon characters through 150 (well actually its 3,000 with such original names as billgatesadrobe who uses his bloatware attack and RMSachu who will sing in a sweet voice about emacs and the one true source so his enemies will drop to their knees).
So me and my everlasting gobstoppers and nerds with the full collection of Pokemon rocks will take on your silly M&Ms any day of the week.
/* The raiting of this post
1. -1 too acurate about hidden cultural truthsa
2. -40 because I am using Xemacs to write this post and I made myself look foolist.
3. -1000 Anyone knows that M&Ms are officially backed by Rob and therefore any post that desecrates the sacred candy will elicit a very bad attack of the drain_karma_really fast spell which also takes down 700hps from the character and causes blindness and confusion as well. This must be left up to people who didn't just buy their weight in pokemon rocks.
New meaning to "X coredump..." (Score:1)
Can you imagine trying to get XFree86 monitor timing configuration right, with one of these?
Re:Not for children (Score:1)
I've been thinking about a similar idea. The "screen" is held at the same distance from your eye as a normal pair of glasses (about 2cm) - too close for you to focus on, but you don't focus on an image projected on the screen, you focus through the screen. The image is blurred using software so that each dot on the "virtual screen" (which you are focussing on) becomes a semi-transparent circle on the real screen (which you are looking through). Your eye resolves these blobs back into dots when you focus on the virtual screen, and the apparently long focal length gives the illusion of distance.
Since you have a separate screen for each eye, you could even encode different parts of the image at different apparent distances (use different size/opacity blobs for different distances and show a different side of the object to each eye), creating depth of field. You would be able to change focus from an apparently nearby object to an apparently distant object just as you would in real life, and the other parts of the image would slip out of focus just as they do in real life (the blobs would be the wrong size to be translated back into sharp dots).
Hey presto - slimline 3D glasses with depth of field, no tracking hardware required. And because the screen is so close to your eyes, you would get a very wide field of vision.
The only problem that I can see would be getting LCD screens which were small enough (about 3cm * 4cm) but which had high enough resolution. Low resolution would not result in things looking pixelated as it normally does, because you would not be focussing on the screen. However, I think it would cause problems with focussing - objects in the virtual space would never be in sharp focus because the blobs would not be perfectly round.
Can anyone confirm that this idea would work, given good enough LCDs? It's been buzzing around my head for a while now.
Glasses over glasses? (Score:1)
Waiting for the laser head mount (Score:1)
I want the laser that draws straight on the retina. These displays will be even better than the LCD head mount, all you will see is a thin wire that runs out just above the eye. They could be worn as a visor, or in a pair of glasses as well, and nobody would be able to tell that you were using any type of VDU other than the wire running down the side of your neck.
Re:"External Motion"? (Score:1)
Re:Looks like a health hazard... (Score:1)
Do not use in the bath tub
Do not use while using power tools
Do not use while climbing trees
Do not use while standing on a ladder
Do not use while eating green eggs and ham...
Head Tracking (Re:Hardcore Gamer's Wish) (Score:1)
As for the wider field of vision, all they'd need to do is build an oversized pair or something. And in doing so they could most likely up to resolution to 1024 x 768...
SVGA? That's probably not hard, although it may have to built specifically for that setting.
Re:My 12" monitor will do just fine (Score:1)
And I thought I was the only sad bastard who'd ever think of such a pointless way to waste time...but fun!
You can do this for $10.00 - 15" looks like 30" (Score:1)
Re:Funnier than Tom Green (Score:1)
Re:Eye damage (Score:1)
Needs higher resolution (Score:1)
Notice that 800x255 resolution? Unless they can get the res higher I'm not buying. :( OTOH Once the resolution is around 800x600 I think this type of technology is a valid alternative to standard monitors. Sure you can't view it with other people. But 52 virtual inches is pretty good for $500. Now I wonder what the refresh rate is...
HMD? (Score:1)
D-rock
Re:grr (Score:1)
yes but it doesnt take VGA (Score:1)
"Any way you look at it, all the information that a person accumulates in a lifetime is just a drop in the bucket."
Re:Not for computer (Score:2)
health warnings - sm41153441 (Score:2)
Re:"External Motion"? (Score:2)
WHERE? Where can I get such a great deal? How many points do they give?
--
Hrmph. (Score:2)
More seriously - just wait about 18*2+n (n is how badly you want the device) months and it'll be reasonably priced and have a much nicer resolution.
off topic - xerox electronic paper (Score:2)
Re:a better deal... (Score:2)
Anyway, I need glasses (short-sighted) - I'm much more interested in the little things etched onto a pair of "normal" glasses [microopticalcorp.com]...
Re:Needs higher resolution. (Also 3D) (Score:2)
Re:My 12" monitor will do just fine (Score:2)
Re:Not for computer (Score:2)
Re:Looks like a health hazard... (Score:2)
Re:Inner Ear Headphones??? (Score:2)
Re:Looks like a health hazard... (Score:2)
"Do not attach dual shock to any part of your body" or the like...
Re:3.5 oz NOT 1/3 pound! (Score:2)
Troy ounces are 12-to-the-pound, and avoirdupois are 16-to-the-pound. Or possibly the other way around; I can't be arsed to look this junk up.
So 3.5 ounces are a shade under 1/3 pound if they're the 12-to-the-pound kind of ounces.
gomi
Re:Mono-ocular nightmare... (Score:2)
Tried a pair ... (Score:2)
That said, this is very much a first generation, low resolution device. It only accepts NTSC video - no S-Video or computer output. A 52" display may be the calculated virtual size, but don't kid yourself. It looks like you are watching a movie through binoculars.
That said, when the second or third generation comes around and they get this right, this will be THE WAY to watch porno flicks and play video games.
My 12" monitor will do just fine (Score:2)
Hardcore Gamer's Wish (Score:2)
1. It supported SVGA
2. It had an optional head tracking device
3. It covered a wider field of vision
This would probably cover about 30 degrees of the field of vision, but all VR studies show you have to cover about 70 degrees to get the "I'm there" feeling.
Dammit, I've been waiting for this kind of thing for over ten years and they still haven't come close, although all the technology is there...
Oh well.
3.5 oz NOT 1/3 pound! (Score:2)
Not for computer (Score:2)
I have also something similar, but they could be used with your computer too. You can find more information at TigerDirect's Homepage [tigerdirect.com].
Also, does anyone know if these glasses are also available for PAL? The page says that it can be connected to any NTSC source but it does not mention anything about PAL.
Did anyone else notice the warning? "This product is not intended to be used by children age 15 or younger." Does anyone have information on this? Maybe it does more damage to the eye than a normal TV screen?
There's a term for the effect... (Score:3)
It's "Barfogenisis"
(Example: The Star Trek ride at Disneyland has just enough mismatch that, at least for me, there was slight nausea which hit as I was leaving the ride.)
Apparently this is a survival mechanism: Under prehistoric, evolutionarily-significant conditions, the main thing that would cause significant mismatch between the motion perceived by the eyes and the inner ears was ingestion of a neurotoxin - typically from a poisonous mushroom or spoiled food. In such a situation, immediately emptying the stomach had a significant chance of allowing the victim to survive to reproduce when he would otherwise have died.
Re:Needs higher resolution. (Also 3D) (Score:3)
They are making the same mistake as Casio did when they came out with their color projection TV based on a slide projector light source and lens, dichroic mirrors, and three monocrhome LCDs. It was tiny. It COULD have been high quality and inexpensive.
Instead they used crummy low-res LCDs apparently left over from their midget black-and-white Radio Shack grade pocket TV sets. Half of TV resolution in each dimension, for an overall pixel count of 1/4 that of a normal TV set. (Then the projection lens blew it up to wall-covering size.) Rectangular (not square) pixels - so computer graphcis is a pain. To make it even harder: pixels arranged in a brick pattern (each row offset 1/2 pixel from its neighbors). And with a black border (i.e. "the mortar") around the pixels. (Blown up to wall size it really showed.)
And to top it off they wanted several thousand dollars a unit. B-b
This thing needs square pixels, 640x480 at dead minimum. And it should have a separate screen and interface for each eye - at least as an option.
I recognize those earphones - I used to use the earphone-only equivalent all the time. Good audio. But they're fragile. They (actually their cabling) need to be plug replacable, or the headset will fail in about 3 months of use.
The idiot lawsuits (Score:3)
-"Everyone who counts loves Ned Flanders"
Re:High Definition Version for Computer Available (Score:3)
Looks like a health hazard... (Score:3)
Looks pretty deadly to me...
"External Motion"? (Score:4)
Caution:
Do not use while subject to external motion
Well, this seems a bit unfair. This means that, say, a female could wear them during sex (internal motion) while a male could not (external motion). I say that we all go sue sony for sexual discrimination.
Mr. Gerbiks in depth review of the glasstron glass (Score:4)
Sony boasts that the glasses present you with a 52" screen that is about 6 feet in front of you. Here is what I saw. A 5 inch lcd screen 4 inches in front of me. I was impressed however with how the two lcd screens blended together as one. I was expecting to see some sort of line down the middle, or some overlapping.. nothing, it looked like one single screen.
As for resolution, I thought it lacked. I demoed the glasses with a DVD copy of "A bugs life" The best way to put it would be to imagine watching the movie in a 240x160 window on your desktop. The LCD just couldn't push the kind of resolution needed to make the movie look good.
In the end, they were neat. $500 neat? I decided not. I went home with some blank minidiscs in my shopping bag.. but no glasses. I would love to try the high resolution pair, but I'll definately be waiting on the price to drop... a lot.
High Definition Version for Computer Available (Score:4)
If anyone can find more information on this product such as max. resolution, and number colors, please share it with us.
You can find this computer version here. [sony.com]
17" Mobile Display (Score:5)
Not for children (Score:5)
As a continuation, I had always thought that a solution could be doing depth of field in software and displaying the resultant image. You still need the gaze tracking hardware to figure out what the user is looking at and thus what depth should be in focus, but you wouldn't need the extra optical hardware, but now that I think about it this is of no use at all (well it would probably look pretty). The problem is that the blured image would still be completely in focus everyware. And once again, since your mind no longer has to keep track of focal lengths... disaster.