The Glasses
BLOG POST ZERO 3-of-5: This blog post is the 3rd of a series of 5 posts. These 5 posts were also cross posted to my Linkedin account as a single article
I’ve been riding the metaphor of a wave and I’ll extend that to propose the glasses as the metaphorical surfboard. Corny? Yes, but you’ve come this far–don’t abandon me now! AR on your phone or tablet is already more than viable. However, once we get the glasses right the surf will be up big time.
Like the first big lumbering (actually lumber) surfboards used by Duke Kahanamoku the first glasses such as the Google Glass fiasco (which weren’t really AR glasses anyway) and others haven’t yet provided a very smooth or exhilarating ride or even really support a true AR experience. Right now, there is not even a decent taxonomy to describe the variations of (quote unquote) AR glasses.
- 2D
- 3D
- Heads Up Display (HUD)
- V and H FOV
- Degrees of freedom
- Eye tracking
- Head tracking
- Plane detection
- Hand tracking/gesture capabilities
- AR, VR, MR XR
- Location-based
- World-scale
- etc.
For my purposes, placing geolocated data in the visual scene, only a few current “AR” glasses provide the necessary capability. In any regard, its likely a few years before any of the glasses are mass market ready anyway.
The list of work going on in this area would fill the rest of the page. To name just a few, we’ve had Epson’s MOVERIO glasses for a while. Their premium version seems to support location and augmenting the 3D scene. Bosch’s Light Drive an OEM HW/SW toolkit solution for “AR” glasses is a great start down the toolkit path but is just a HUD method right now, not 3D location-based, or whatever we will call it. I do wish someone like Norm Glasses would add location, and Snap Spectacles seem to be close but I’m not sure they have actual location capabilities.
I’ve only started my organization down this path of research and for now the phone and tablet are still king. Also, if this posting is a few days old, who knows what else has come onto the market since I wrote this. So, for now the field looks mostly like HoloLens, MagicLeap and maybe nreal. HoloLens and Leap both have lots of good and bad aspects but at least they are out there trying to catch (or create) the wave. nreal remains a bit of a mystery but doesn’t quite look geo-aware yet, but maybe, just not sure. Maybe it does take mega-corp or a Rony Abovitz (Visionary and CEO of MagicLeap) with billions in funding to make this happen. Honestly, don’t look to me to instruct you on what solutions are available. The market has new entrants every day and once someone nails it, we will all be dropping in on some epic waves for a full ride. I’ll ride whatever board can give me the best ride for the current conditions.
Some may even question if AR enabled glasses will ever be a viable business after the early failures and slow adoption. The assumption that a massive wave of adoption will occur might even seem foolhardy. Of course, there are a lot of folks in my camp as well who all consider it a foregone conclusion that the wave is coming, and the glasses will be prolific. Consider a few of these thoughts.
According to the Vision Council of America, approximately 75% of adults use some sort of vision correction and about 64% of them wear eyeglasses (it’s on the Internet so it must be true). If an ergonomic and affordable value-add can be offered to the wearers of those glasses, it seems there is a huge audience already primed for adoption.
On many/most construction job sites, safety glasses are already mandated. Who would reject the additional value-add of an AR hyperlinked jobsite once the economics work and access to valuable data is easily and readily available?
Another argument to support adoption of glasses by the masses is to consider another form of reality augmentation that required a like-kind adoption curve. We’ve relegated “Augmented Reality” to the visual context. What about our “audio reality?” We’ve been augmenting our audio reality with devices since Edison. Remember the Walkman? Who thought the world would accept such a thing? And yet ear buds, beats and office headsets are all now just part of our daily attire.
Yeah, we surely need some killer apps but if that’s all that stands in the way, let’s innovate!