Intel Is Giving Up On Its Smart Glasses (theverge.com) 41
Intel is planning to shut down the New Devices Group (NDG), and cease development on the Vaunt smart glasses project that was revealed earlier this year. The glasses are unique in that they use retinal projection to put a display in your eyeball. "There is no camera to creep people out, no button to push, no gesture area to swipe, no glowing LCD screen, no weird arm floating in front of the lens, no speaker, and no microphone," reports The Verge.
Intel issued a statement announcing the plans: "Intel is continuously working on new technologies and experiences. Not all of these develop into a product we choose to take to market. The Superlight [the codename for Vaunt] project is a great example where Intel developed truly differentiated, consumer augmented reality glasses. We are going to take a disciplined approach as we keep inventing and exploring new technologies, which will sometimes require tough choices when market dynamics don't support further investment." From the report: It was always unclear how precisely Intel intended to bring the Vaunt glasses to market, though sources indicated that Intel wanted to find a partner with retail expertise to partner with. Jerry Bautista, the lead for Vaunt, told me back in December that Intel was "working with key ecosystem hardware providers -- whether they're frames or lenses and things like that. Because we believe there's a whole channel to people who wear glasses that's already there." The story was first reported by The Information.
Intel issued a statement announcing the plans: "Intel is continuously working on new technologies and experiences. Not all of these develop into a product we choose to take to market. The Superlight [the codename for Vaunt] project is a great example where Intel developed truly differentiated, consumer augmented reality glasses. We are going to take a disciplined approach as we keep inventing and exploring new technologies, which will sometimes require tough choices when market dynamics don't support further investment." From the report: It was always unclear how precisely Intel intended to bring the Vaunt glasses to market, though sources indicated that Intel wanted to find a partner with retail expertise to partner with. Jerry Bautista, the lead for Vaunt, told me back in December that Intel was "working with key ecosystem hardware providers -- whether they're frames or lenses and things like that. Because we believe there's a whole channel to people who wear glasses that's already there." The story was first reported by The Information.
Not surprised (Score:2)
Who'd want to wear such an ugly pair of glasses?
(and what are you supposed to do if you don't normally wear glasses at all?)
Re:Not surprised (Score:5, Interesting)
The thing is all the obvious applications for smart glasses that are useful to you as a user are task oriented. Driving directions, for example. If you could get the price, styling, and performance of these things in the right place, they'd have niche applications.
But that's not the vision, is it? The vision is for you to have these things on your face every waking moment, so that the vendor can track and shape your behavior as a consumer.
That's easy with something like a smart speaker (which would be more accurately called a "smart microphone") that you buy and stick in the corner of a room. It's not so easy with something you have to wear, and have to recharge the more you use it.
Because they are stupid? (Score:4, Insightful)
I wonder if it's because smart glasses are a creepy, stupid and anti-social idea that only a very small niche of people are willing to actually pay money for?
Re: (Score:1)
A) Because the organization that built it is in no way to set up to sell products. They are there to push other manufacturers to buy Intel chips by showing what can be done with them.
B) The low power chip they used was cancelled.
C) They showed it to the world before showing it to tech transfer partners.
Re: (Score:3)
Take video of people with your cell phone the next time you're on a major USA city's transit system. They will beat the shit out of you for being creepy; those glasses are the same.
Re: (Score:2)
I wonder if it's because smart glasses are a creepy, stupid and anti-social idea that only a very small niche of people are willing to actually pay money for?
There are lots of applications for smart glasses in business which are not at all creepy. The question is whether people want to buy products from Intel at a price that will produce a profit margin that makes Intel happy.
Re: (Score:2)
Smart glasses. Stuck in some shitty place, I don't know, say public transport. Plug them into your phone, put them on and be taken away by beautiful scenery in motion along with music or just the sounds of nature, maybe even a movie or TV episode. Nahh, who would want that, just a waste of money :|.
Re: (Score:1)
Smart glasses. Stuck in some shitty place, I don't know, say public transport. Plug them into your phone, put them on and be taken away by beautiful scenery in motion along with music or just the sounds of nature, maybe even a movie or TV episode.
That's not smart glasses. That's just video glasses. Nobody gets upset if you want to put a video display on your face. It's adding a camera with software behind it that can recognize things and lead to people getting face tagged or whatnot that upsets people.
Of course, that's mostly because people are ignorant and/or stupid. They don't realize that it's pathetically cheap to make a camera that can recognize activities and objects, for example, and that the only way to protect society from excessive surveil
Competition Too Strong (Score:1)
Clearly the competition from Snap was too strong.
Hahahahahaha
Cameras in cell phones (Score:2)
Missed opportunity (Score:5, Insightful)
I could see, for example, smart glasses working with airline mechanics, bringing up the various specifications that need to be followed, the glasses scanning whole sections of aircraft making sure nothing is out of place. A system like this could even incorporate risk management; if X number of parts are showing the same Y issue, notify a safety team to a potential larger problem and have a larger inspection done.
Paramedics could use this in conjunction with emergency rooms; imagine an ER being able to remotely guide an EMT to look at specific injuries while en-route, use that information to prep an OR before they even arrive. Nurses in the ER could also use them on injuries, allowing doctors to better queue and prep for incoming patients. Calling in a "specialist" would be far easier, as the specialist could guide a surgeon remotely; especially if the smart glasses had dual cameras that fed into another smart glass the specialist was wearing enabling stereoscopic vision.
Complex manufacturing could use them too; seeing what electronics need to connect where, what bolts need to be tightened to what specifications. They could even be paired up with specialist tools that measured voltage, torque, etc that feeds back into a larger database. Such a system could send out automatic maintenance requests if later it was found that some bolt on some aircraft needed to be a X torque but was done Y instead; or type X fuse was used but a safety report shows that Y should have been used instead; or even that X IC was installed on a flight circuit board but they all need to be replaced with type Y instead.
Re: (Score:2)
Google Glass is still being sold, for pretty much these purposes. Did you really need to write like an essay about something so elementary?
But I will disagree. I don't know if I would want a weird prototype version, but if this technology became sufficiently developed, I'd love a pair of sunglasses which project a huge monitor or TV in front of me.
Verge had a decent write up about the tech (Score:2)
Back in February there was a decent write up on the Verge behind some of the tech. Intel was hoping "data is the new oil", aka data-mine-the-hell-out-of-people would pay off in the long run, along with practical applications.
https://www.theverge.com/2018/... [theverge.com]
For those saying these don't solve a problem (Score:4, Interesting)
The advantage of putting the display in glasses is that it's not really the physical screen size which matters. It's the apparent screen size - a combination of physical size and viewing distance. By putting the display right next to the eye, you can create a display with a massive apparent size even though its physical size is tiny. You avoid the drawbacks of a large physical screen size (loss of portability, easier to break, greater battery consumption).
The only solutions I've seen to this problem are a foldable/rollable display, a projection display, or a display mounted close to your eye via glasses.
Re: (Score:1)
Is there any speculative project that Intel has not cancelled?
They didn't cancel it. They started it, did it and they finished. Selling them was not part of the plan. For all we know, there might be companies who sell finished products to the public who are working on similar things because this team showed what was possible.
I'm still waiting for my charging bowl though.
Re: (Score:2)
Intel lost its mojo (Score:2)
Even if this last one and the rest aren't technically failures, they're market ones. They bet on the wrong horse or couldn't make them profitable. Which is what matters.
It seems Intel is just too old, big and static to achieve anything they aren't already successful at.
Because their server and desktop products are still very successful, but those c
It is continually, not continuously (Score:2)
Ooh good job Intel this'll work out! (Score:2)
A pity (Score:2)
This is exactly the smart glasses product I'd be willing to buy. No camera, no distractions, just information in front of my eyes when I want it.
Hiiii (Score:1)