19" Monitor Goes Portable 112
Reader redial writes: "You've seen them before, the glasses that give you the impression of a 19" monitor several feet in front of your face. InViso's eShades have a nice twist. The lightweight glasses use a standard PC-Card or Flash interface. Plug these bad boys into your YOPY and attract all the babes." Actually, the site says that PDA support is still in the future, and needing a Flash or PC Card interface seems a bit of a turn-off, though in fairness that is also the power source. But these look like a cool combination of a) acceptable size and b) the magic acceptable threshold of SVGA resolution. Yes, please!
is this only for laptops? (Score:2)
Just what the world needs... (Score:4)
Teacher: Johnson, what are doing with those sun glasses.
Me: Sir these, aren't sunglasses, it's a computer monitor
Teacher: Let me see... Well I'll be damned, by the way you have detention afterschool.
Me: Why?
Teacher: We don't play Unreal-Tournament in the middle of a lecture.
Me: Note to self, next time alt-tab out of game before handing over glasses.
Can i have one mom? (Score:2)
But it would be better with a few enhancements.
how bout splitting the images apart a few milimetres to give realistic 3d images.
Making the viewing larger that 800x600. Come on who uses that on 19" these days?
Other than those two, how bout adding some style to the way they look.
On another note I wonder if tempest [thecodex.com] would work on these.
These could be the future of computing displays. WIth these why not add a greater viewing angle and have a virtual keyboard. Chuck in a few vr gloves too.
Might reduce RSI and OOS.
Noviota.
De Novo. Iota.
Starting Afresh. Very Small.
Uh...what babes? (Score:3)
Not to be a cynic, but surely you jest. Maybe it's different out there on the west coast, but here in America's Heartland (read: flyover states) wearing something as geeky as a head-mounted display is a sure method to repel female attention, rather than attract it. Sure, I wish it were different, and maybe it is in some locations. Maybe having enough disposible income to buy things like head-mounted displays is it's own attractor. Ah well...married for 17 years, I'm not in the babe market anyway, so what the hell do I know?
Never make it to market (Score:3)
When are some of these designs going to make it into the hands of J. Random Enduser? I'm ready to put together a wearable, but all of the news on the display front is rather disheartening. People pay $800 or more for a 19" or 21" display -- hell, Apple's asking $4000 for their Cinema Display. Someone needs to get on the ball and start producing head mounted displays in some sort of quantity and I know there would be a market in the $1000 - $1200 range.
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WWhhaatt ddooeess dduupplleexx mmeeaann??
Re:Uh...what babes? (Score:2)
Ah yes. But with the proper image alterations to the proper images, the turn down and superimposed girl walking away from you would be less painful.
"Oh bummer, I was turned down _again_ by naked Natalie Portman. Oh well, I'll enjoy watching her walk away again"
I think they look cool. I want one.
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Beach Day (Score:1)
My only question is, "Do they provide 100% UV protection?"
Vapor (Score:5)
Unfortunately, someone from my company called these guys up to see if they wanted to work with us, and they admitted that most of it was basically wishful thinking.
'bout your .sig (Way off-topic) (Score:1)
Mikael Jacobson
Re:Never make it to market (Score:1)
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WWhhaatt ddooeess dduupplleexx mmeeaann??
Now if their web page... (Score:1)
Of course, for about the same amount of money I could hire some body builder to lug around a 19" monitor in front of me all the time. :) Hire another to carry its power supply.
Take this a step further. (Score:3)
Interesting tech for the future (Score:2)
Wearable computing has many interesting applications... the stopgap has mostly been the displays. Monocular, small, inobtrusive displays do exist though, usually for 1-2k if you want high-res and color. But a low-res grayscale display is only 500. Everything else is getting smaller, too. IBM's recent 1gig harddrive is about the size of a match book, and is 500 bucks.
Re:Just what the world needs... (Score:1)
Only a 19 inch display? (Score:1)
I don't recall who was supposed to make it, though, and I guess it never caught on because I've not heard of it in the past couple years. Anyone else know what I'm talking about?
Anyway, it seems like 19" is kinda dinky compared to what one could conceivably do with judicious use of the image projection.
blah (Score:2)
About the only market segment who would find them useful are gamers, and gamers have no need for the slim, chic design that the eShades boast [inviso.com].
Let's get a few good laughs by reading their marketing BS:
Because these glasses apparently make it difficult or impossible to read, write, or drink a beverage while using the computer (which I often do all at once while using a laptop), I really don't think a 25% power savings is worthwhile. Not to mention the fact that the only place I'd feel comfortable using such freaky glasses is in my home or office... where I have AC power anyway.
Holy shit, that must be some pretty hot tech to give me 800x600. I run 1024x768 on 15" monitors, for God's sake. On the "visual equivalent of a 19-inch desktop monitor", I expect a maximum resolution of no less than 1600x1200.
I guess I don't get out too much. I had no idea that today's popular sunglasses made people look like Geordi Laforge (sp?) with a hearing aid. [inviso.com]
They'll probably sell a pair to this guy [somethingawful.com]. And to a half dozen major corporations to make Powerpoint presentations "come alive". And they'll probably be bought in bulk by the Federal government for some obscure research project they want to waste taxpayer money on, and then pretty much fade away into LinuxOne [linuxone.com]-esque obscurity.
Timothy, that was a misleading story title. It sounds like the link has to do with 19" laptop screens, which would actually be useful.
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All generalizations are false.
What, no gyro/motiontracker? (Score:2)
If only they added asilicon micro-ring gyros [microsensors.com] for motion-tracking!
The inViso eShades [inviso.com] looks to be a lot less bulky than earlier personal-display devices [thevrsource.com].
I used to own a pair of Virtual Reality i-glasses [i-glasses.com], but they were too bulky and low-res to bother with after the novelty wore off. Still, it was fun playing FPS's with the head motion-tracker.
Alas, even in this era of disposable technology, VR-gears [thevrsource.com] are still way too expensive for the average Joe!
Re:Never make it to market (Score:1)
You're right, of course, about the prices gradually dropping on products which sell consistently. If the $5000 laptops of three years ago hadn't sold fairly well, there wouldn't be $1000 laptops here today. But HUDs are such a niche (read: useless to >99% of the human population) technology that the "trickle-down" theory doesn't apply so easily.
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All generalizations are false.
pda doom (Score:1)
Jaeger
www.JohnQHacker.com
GodHatesCalvinists.com
Re:blah (Score:1)
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All generalizations are false.
$800 or more for a 19" or 21" display (Score:1)
Re:blah (Score:2)
Me, for one. The monitor takes up a lot of space (well, the old ones do, that's why the 'new wave' is flat-screen, and portable, and so forth). I want that space. The monitor is bulky and the main thing tying your computer to your desk (the keyboard can be put on one's lap, the mouse is not always needed or can be in the keyboard, and the case with all the real stuff can be anywhere that cables reach. But the monitor always has to be close to you. And it's heavy and bulky. Thus, the need for a desk. You can put a computer on the floor, but not a monitor.
"eShades" would quickly become an annoyance, as your eyes tire from the constant, radical focus shifts needed to glance back and forth between the screen, a book, the keyboard, et cetera
Well, actually, I've been told by professional ergonomics people (snicker) that shifting your eyes to distant objects ever so often reduces monitor-related eyestrain -- it's not good to stare at the same thing for a really long time.
Not to mention the fact that they'd make it impossible to enjoy a cup of coffee. Or a soda; you tilt your head back to get the last few drops of Dew, and the glasses either fall off or make you dizzy
Do you wear glasses? Have you seen other people who wear them? Are they able to drink Dew? Or do their glasses fall off? And as far as getting dizzy
On the "visual equivalent of a 19-inch desktop monitor", I expect a maximum resolution of no less than 1600x1200.
Here, I agree. 800x600 is HARDLY a 19 inch monitor. I'm running 1280x960 on this 19 inch monitor, and the text is nice and big.
then pretty much fade away into LinuxOne-esque obscurity.
The strange thing is, I saw an ad for LinuxOne in the latest Linux Journal... I wonder if it's the same company.
Re:Only a 19 inch display? (Score:1)
It's late, so someone correct me if my math is off... but I believe the 19" display is equivalent to a 46" display at 6'. So it's not far off those other goggles you mention.
Putting field of vision coverage aside though, their 800x600 resolution sucks for data use. That res might be okay for movies and games, but it's fairly standard now to get 1400x1050 on a little 15" notebook screen and it's very usable.
Please don't be vapor ware (Score:2)
Re:Only a 19 inch display? (Score:1)
What? doesn't everyone use 640x480 on their 19" monitors? I don't usually put 800x600 on anything over a 23".
19" at 30" at 800x600 (Score:3)
Why all the criticism? (Score:3)
I mean, if the world is going to "go wireless" then this seems like a great product. One of the only drawbacks of making devices smaller and smaller is that the screen obviously gets smaller and smaller. To me, this seems like the answer to this problem.
And the glasses could be slimmed down and could eventually look pretty stylish.
There no such thing as a bad product, just an oppurtunity to make a better one.
--
Daniel Zeaiter
daniel@academytiles.com.au
http://www.academytiles.com.au
ICQ: 16889511
Re:19" at 30" at 800x600 (Score:2)
Saying 19" at 30" away sounds a lot more impressive than the equivalent "crappy 14" that will only do 800x600 at 22" away". Maybe they should have gone with claiming a 60" monitor just under 8 feet away.
Almost. My eyes would be a lot happier with the 19" monitor at 30" away....
Actually, it is. (Though running 1024x768, not 800x600.)
It's not just the angle-of-view. The focal distance makes a big difference in eye comfort. Farsighted that I am, I get headaches if the monitor is less than 18" away.
exchange (Score:2)
"What's the res, what's the weight, what's the..."
what you think:
"Yeah, but do I look like I kick ass?"
Don't front.
.02
My
Quux26
Re: (Score:1)
The REAL marketing niche (Score:3)
You don't suppose they're talking about porn, do you?
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Re:Take this a step further. (Score:1)
Re:is this only for laptops? (Score:2)
Do these thing work with normal glasses too? (Score:1)
Re:800 by 600? (Score:2)
These things are complete vapor (Score:3)
Very disappointing.
Re:Why all the criticism? (Score:2)
Email address need not be there - put it so mail is done by clicking your name.
Web-address - you are telling us twice. remove it from our sig.
Your real name isn't important, especially is you chose not to use it as a logon.
No need to give us the translation for 'Carpe Diem'.
Save the electrons. Wasteful people like you are destroying this planet.
I Agree (Score:2)
What'choo talkin' 'bout, Willis? (Score:1)
Available Q1 2001. (Score:4)
Doesn't sound all that much like vapor to me.
Re:The REAL marketing niche (Score:2)
Quake? (Score:1)
Sloow stuff. (Score:1)
- PC/FLASH bus is slow and 16bit - so no high fps rates. Extremelly low ones maybe. I don't think that the PC/Flash buses were ever designed for that.
- Driver problems (Second video card -ok- but how you disable the first one TO HAVE 25% POWER SAVE) (Hot pluggable video cards ? if i connect two sets of glasses (trough 2 pc cards) what do i get ? )
- See if they can fit 4 3D processors and 128mb of texture ram on a PC card to make a competing video card. (and where will they fit the coolers ?
Let's just wait until the industry creates an unified digital video-out connector/standard. (FireWire ?)
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Re:is this only for laptops? (Score:1)
Yes, but would it.... (Score:1)
....attract a female Zebra?
Re:is this only for laptops? or people who have (Score:1)
Re:800 by 600? (Score:1)
"All trademarks and copyrights ".... etc etc..
And my Monitor is 19". 2.5' is a pretty nice distance. Especially since it's "only" 800x600. That'll make everything comfortably big.
PS. I generally keep it at 1024x768 because even though I CAN read it at 1600, it's a little bit of a strain to do it all the time. Plus I got the value 19" monitor so the refresh at that res is a little abusive.
Re:Uh...what babes? (Score:1)
Potential BIG problem with these (Score:1)
Re:'bout your .sig (Way off-topic) (Score:1)
Rick
Re:19" at 30" at 800x600 (Score:1)
CY
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Not Laser Projection (Score:1)
The eShades don't seem to apply that technology. Does anyone know if anyone else is still developing that approach?
Not there yet... (Score:1)
Re:Uh...what babes? (Score:3)
But I have personal experience that tech toys attract attention, what's more, from the kind of girl I'm interested in. Go sit in a cafe with a laptop, or what the heck, with cyber glasses. Be completely into yourself for a while, have fun. *Everbody* will notice. Nobody will think 'what a geek'. Then put the damm thing down. After a while somebody will start a conversation about the tech toy, guaranteed, either that or you didn't brush your teeth.
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Re:Take this a step further. (Score:3)
real world just like in Quake!
There's an even better way - take off that fancy equipment and just use your eyes. The resolution is much better, and miraculously, it's in sync with your other senses.
It's an incredible i/o engine. Works every time for me. Changing the fov is a bitch though - you have to get pretty drunk to do that, or use your "configuration" method of choice. YMMV.
w/m
contact lenses? laser surgery? (Score:1)
Re:Sloow stuff. (Score:1)
Re:Potential BIG problem with these (Score:2)
Yawn, more old news. (Score:1)
Re:Uh...what babes? (Score:3)
You're right. Generally they'll think, "What a pretentious ass." That and, "If I have to endure the clicking while he types one more email, I'm going over there to strangle him." Playing with technotoys in cafes and the like tend to make me think the person just craves attention. And just wait for voice recognition in these devices. Then I will have to start strangling people.
Re:is this only for laptops? (Score:1)
Re:is this only for laptops? or people who have (Score:2)
It will probably depend on whether you can focus your eyes on something that's only an inch or so away. If not, perhaps you'd need to get a corrective lens added to the thing. I have to think that the makers won't want to exclude a significant portion of the population (particularly a segment that has the most disposable icome), and so will have made some accomodation.
one of their other products (Score:1)
A pcmcia interface was probably a natural step to broaden the product's market if it was already being designed for an ecase flashcard interface.
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Where can the word be found, where can the word resound? Not here, there is not enough silence.
Re:Uh...what babes? (Score:1)
Nope. Nope (Score:1)
Re:Not there yet... (Score:1)
Re:is this only for laptops? or people who have (Score:2)
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In flight porn? (Score:1)
How much? (Score:1)
Virtual Retinal Displays (Score:2)
A company called Microvision [mvis.com] has been making these sorts of displays for military applications, but they are now trying to bring the technology to more "mainstream" applications.
Eye focus (Score:2)
It will probably depend on whether you can focus your eyes on something that's only an inch or so away. If not, perhaps you'd need to get a corrective lens added to the thing.
Almost nobody can focus on something an inch away from the cornea. Goggles with displays use corrective optics so that the image resolves at a certain virtual distance. Hench, the description "19 inch monitor at 30 inches distance".
Some goggles may have diopter adjustments. Your left and right eyes may focus slightly differently, and a diopter adjustment allows each side of the goggle display to have a different correction to compensate. Otherwise, one eye will be fine, the other eye will give you a terrible headache for not being able to focus at the same virtual distance.
Re:Eye focus (Score:2)
I'm amazed that.... (Score:1)
Isn't that a logical step?
You have to have two screens (one for the left eye and one for the right eye).
Then all they need is a micro sized free floating "gyro/gymbal" that can resolve the rotation of the head and you've got an inexpensive VR device... but for real.
The technology is not new, its almost as old at THE INVENTION OF PHOTOGRAPHY
blah? No. Some Real Life Experience. (Score:2)
Okay... let's correct a few misconceptions here. I've only used the Sony Glasstron, but it looks like this is set up the same way by looking at the picture of the woman wearing one.
First off, there is a significant gap between your eyes and the glasses. Not enought to look wierd to other people, but enough so that you can sit at a desk and keep looking down to your keyboard and papers there without any difficulty. The space also allows you to wear prescription eyeglasses underneath the units.
As to falling off, the Glasstron won't. And it's a rather front heavy unit. I've even walked away (intentionally once, accidently forgetting that I was using a shorter cord than normal twice), and had the cord yank hard on the side of the unit, and it stayed on. My nose and ear hurt, but it stayed on. Swigging a soda is not going to make it fall off.
As for your worries for nausea, I has very big misgivings before I got my Glasstron. You see, I get motion sick at the drop of a hat. I can't ride in the back of cars, Quake and other FPSes make me nearly vomit (ROTT never did. Odd, that), I couldn't watch the beginning of Saving Private Ryan or Blair Witch without going to the back of the theater, and I had to leave the theater and/or close my eyes and look down several times (I did toss for SPR).
But I've watched movies and gone through most of FF7 and the Ghost in the Shell video game, and played around with computing with my Glasstron, and never gotten sick. Sometimes I'd read Slashdot while watching a movie on my Glasstron, lifting my head to look at the monitor, flicking my eyes forward to look at the movie.
Now, having said all this, the biggest problem I had with the Glasstron is: simply too many wires. The concept, as I say, is sound, but you wind up being the center of a tangle of wires. One single wire I would not mind, and if it went to a PDA, I'd be esctatic.
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Evan
Re:one of their other products (Score:1)
Because they've been vaporware for years. (Score:1)
- Mike Hughes
The future of computing displays (Score:1)
potential headaches (Score:2)
Virtual Boy
And one step back (Score:3)
Re:And one step back (Score:1)
Possibly you could come up with a useful echolocation device, but you'd want to do it without interfering with the detailed auditory sense of the world a blind person already receives (or a sighted person, we just tend to ignore it, especially those of us who use computers too much...).
Re:blah? No. Some Real Life Experience. (Score:1)
Now, having said all this, the biggest problem I had with the Glasstron is: simply too many wires. The concept, as I say, is sound, but you wind up being the center of a tangle of wires. One single wire I would not mind, and if it went to a PDA, I'd be esctatic.
got to make that baby wireless.
Catch me on AIM: SigningiS
800x600? No thanks (Score:1)
Re:Do these thing work with normal glasses too? (Score:1)
Sorry, but these designers have lost a lot potential clients here. Sure they look kind kewl but they are useless to me (and many others).
Re:Please don't be vapor ware (Score:1)
OT but helpful (Score:1)
BRTB
Price? (Score:2)
Re:Can i have one mom? (Score:2)
"how bout splitting the images apart a few milimetres to give realistic 3d images"
You need to do a bit more than just "split the images apart" to get the 3d effect you're referring to. Firstly the hardware needs to support this. There are a few ways you can do this. One is to have two seperate VGA signals, one for each eye. This makes the hardware more expensive bulky and complicated. Another common way is to interlace the two signals into one, and split it again at the eyepiece, but this drops your effective resolution for each eye from 800x600 to 800x300. Another way is to have each alternate frame on the signal go to each eye, alternately. This halves the effective refresh rate of each eye's display.
Note that all of the above options make all the electronics notably more expensive, complicated and unwieldy, and in general this is not worth it, since the "3d effect" is fairly minimal.
That's only the hardware problems. The software you're using has to support it too. Windows most certainly has no such features, and extremely few games do. Even if a game were to do this, then the game programmers would be responsible for providing the signal in the way the particular hardware wanted the signal (i.e. interlaced or frame-interleave.) This is a reasonable effort, considering that less than 0.01% of a games market has the hardware to handle this.
Also a game has to render twice as quickly to get the same frame rate as without the 3d effect. If your QuakeIIIarena is rendering in "mono" mode at 60Hz, it will drop to 30Hz update rate, if frame-interleave mode is used.
Also for this effect to work properly there must be a means to calibrate the display piece or the software for an individual's IPP (inter-pupillary distance, the distance between your eyes.)
The "3d effect" is anyway fairly minimal. It means nothing in non-3d apps like windows, web-surfing etc, and it doesn't mean very much in 3d simulation apps (e.g. games) unless the objects you're looking at are fairly close. So in general I don't think the added costs to the device would be worth it. The market is too small anyway for that. If the technology was cheap and common, sure, but not yet. Give it maybe another 5 or 15 years.
Another problem is that while it might be nice to have a bit of 3d effect, it won't really be worth too much if you can't "look around" in your 3d world. So you would probably want to have some sort of 3dof/6dof tracking device to track the orientation of your head so you could look around. Once again the software has to support this, and once again it makes the whole setup more bulky and expensive.
Learning (Score:1)
Re:Eye focus (Score:1)
Re:Take this a step further. (Score:1)
Hmm .. this could be potentially interesting, as you could render some extra stuff onto the image before it was displayed. You could be surrounded by scantily clad females wherever you went :)
We could just wait a few years though; the government will start implanting devices like this into each newborn child. Then if they don't like what you're seeing/hearing they could just override it with something more benign. Very useful in wartime, for propaganda. Or for keeping citizens docile. Of course they would sell the 'space' to advertisers so that ads can be beamed directly to your eyes all day long. Loads of fun.
I'm just talking crap now .. so relax, this isn't "Yet Another /. Conspiracy Theory Post" ..
Re:blah (Score:1)
Also, note that these are being marketed for use with laptops, to save power.
This brings up another point... when I'm using a PC (whether desktop or laptop), I've noticed that my eyes often flit away to other things in the room, on my desk, et cetera. I imagine this helps reduce eyestrain considerably. But when using the eShades, you don't have much else to look at but the screen. And if you do, it's a significantly shift in focus from something that's an inch in front of your eyes to a several feet, and back and forth, and back and forth. Imagine trying to read a technical manual with the eShades.
Take a look at the eShades, and note that they don't quite fit like normal eyeglasses and sunglasses. I can also guarantee that they weigh quite a bit more.I think overall my impression is that eShades are being marketed as making your PC experience light, simple, and carefree, while in reality they'd get in the way and be a serious nuisance. I can't think of one advantage these offer over a decent 12"+ TFT screen. If they made a pair that simulate a 19" monitor with a high resolution, I'd be interested. But as the eShades stand, they are YACBUT. (Yet another cool but useless technology.)
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All generalizations are false.
Re:'bout your .sig (Way off-topic) (Score:2)
Re:'bout your .sig (Way off-topic) (Score:2)
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:And one step back (Score:2)
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:19" at 30" at 800x600 (Score:2)
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Matchbox PC has a PC Card Interface available (Score:1)
If you have to ask.... (Score:1)
Re:Eye focus (Score:1)
Re:Potential BIG problem with these (Score:1)
Re:Uh...what babes? (Score:2)
"Yes, Dilbert, but what if you accidentally DELETE a FILE?"