Google's techno-glasses offer emails, video chat and even directions over your view of the world.You can experience all these through a built-in screen in front of your eyes.Google's techno-glasses offer emails, video chat and even directions over your view of the world.The glasses are a product of Google's "Google X" blue-sky ideas lab - and the search giant is looking for ideas to improve them.The glasses appear to run a variant of the Android operating system, using the same microphone icon and other recognisable parts of Google's mobile OS.The glasses layer information "over" the world, and offer directions - as well as allowing users to "locate" one another in the real world, as with Google's current Latitude system.Google Glass is supposed to perform many of the same tasks as smartphones, except the spectacles respond to voice commands instead of fingers touching a display screen.Google's techno-glasses offer emails, video chat and even directions over your view of the world.You can experience all these through a built-in screen in front of your eyes.
The glasses include a tiny display screen attached to a rim above the right eye and run on Google's Android operating system for mobile devices.Google's techno-glasses offer emails, video chat and even directions over your view of the world.
no hands are required to operate them, Google Glass is supposed to make it easier for people to take pictures or record video wherever they might be or whatever they might be doing.Google also posted photos of the glasses in five different colours: charcoal, tangerine, shale, cotton and sky blue
Google co-founder Sergey Brin (L) wears Project Glass prototype glasses at Allen & Company's Sun Valley Conference on July 12, 2011 in Sun Valley, Idaho.
The glasses include a tiny display screen attached to a rim above the right eye and run on Google's Android operating system for mobile devices.Google's techno-glasses offer emails, video chat and even directions over your view of the world.
no hands are required to operate them, Google Glass is supposed to make it easier for people to take pictures or record video wherever they might be or whatever they might be doing.Google also posted photos of the glasses in five different colours: charcoal, tangerine, shale, cotton and sky blue
Google co-founder Sergey Brin (L) wears Project Glass prototype glasses at Allen & Company's Sun Valley Conference on July 12, 2011 in Sun Valley, Idaho.