Google Glasses be host for new patents, competition, quickly gaining speed

Today I’ll share Google Tech Article about Google Glasses be host for new patents, competition, quickly gaining speed. Google got just their hands on four more projects glass-based patent this morning. Discovered by Engadget, granted U.S. Patent and Trademark Office patent this morning as the majority of Google glasses-right in the details.

Eye-hover the camera and its internal function hidden within the spectacle rim was successfully patented, as well as the nose-bridge sensor and feature illustrates the sounds in heads-up Display source, direction, and various details.

Mountain View, California-based company also obtained rights to use eye glasses as separate screens. The patent included, for example, portrays as shown above, a map that is visible in an eye with navigation data stream to the other eye.

Google-Glasses Tech News

Last week showed patents published by the USPTO, Google patented successfully at least ornamental plant design of its augmented reality glasses that were unveiled last month. The Patent shows a device that doesn’t look exactly like the prototypes that revealed the concept videos, nor the pair worn by Sergey Brin, but most models have changed before hitting the stores shelves yet.

Meanwhile in related news, according to the Wall Street Journal, eyeglasses, designer Michael Pachleitner Group jumping on the bandwagon, integrating technology to view information and pictures of spectacles in the labour force. The Austrian company dressed recently its employees with $ 13,000 frames built by Button AG.

The units provide visual information via a Wi-Fi connection, so the warehouse employees can access over 1.4 million items stored at the facility. Eyewear company hope to staff all six locations, with employees who will wear the expensive apparatus throughout the day. The measure aims to reduce “picking the wrong” with an estimated 60%.

Button began to develop pick glasses after buying lenses from Israeli-based Optics company Lumus. The u.s. Air Force is obviously the same lenses on the fighter pilots ‘ helmets to view details of the weapons. The company told the WSJ that working with “multiple hardware manufacturers to build consumer technologies around advanced glass.

With today’s Google patents, and competitors that are bursting at the brim with similar products, it appears finally that augmented reality is no longer a thing of the future, but rather a fact in the present.

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