This is ugly yes, but this is a very different experience than Google Glass. Glass is a tiny screen in the top right of your peripheral vision, which requires a conscious effort to glance up and view.
These are complete overlays on top of your complete field of vision. Google Glass can't do real AR, but these can.
And in a couple of years, they'll be slimmer and more pretty. I'm not a fan of the way the battery and touch sensor are handled, though. I don't really think there was another way to do it, though.
Of course it's ugly, its a prototype. Have you ever seen prototypes of the original iPhone and Google glass? Any developer knows you make something functional then you make it practical. If you look at the tech behind the product, it looks promising and I will definitely be watching this product evolve.
So everyone's commenting about it's ugliness. Definitely the first thing I noticed too.
But then this bulkiness reminded me of something... yes... ski goggles and similar athletic corrective lens accessories. Market size and practicality aside, the idea of having a HUD show me some stats while skiing/snowboarding down a mountain seems pretty awesome to me.
I'd be interested in this for AR gaming if it were fully stereoscopic and fast, but I doubt it. AR gaming glasses could get away with being that ugly, but you'd have higher processing needs.
A look at the specs: 419x138px monochrome green display.. so they basically attached a COG lcd display to glass frames? This actually doesn't seem to hard to hack with off the shelf components...
Someone correct me if I'm mistaken, but I believe it's a lot more complicated then that. Your eye can't focus on a transparent display so close to the eye, so the display light must be highly converged, while incoming light is undisturbed. I'd guess they're instead reflecting light coming from a small projector on the glass with a special coting that reflects only a narrow bandwidth around the green laser light (otherwise transmissivity couldn't be so high).
Yeah, it's fugly, but in typical Sony fashion, i.e.
Exec: "Google Glass is the future. We must own the future. Make a Google Glass Killer".
Engineer: "Well, Google has spent years miniaturizing the required tech to make it into a fashion accessory people can accept. It will take us years as well".
Exec: "You have 6 months"
For those thinking about getting Google Glass but who were holding out for something that makes them look way more dorky.
Typical of most Sony consumer electronics products post-2000 or so it is kind of amazing in a narrow technical way but completely drops the ball in every other way. In this case, by making you look like the stereotypical "nerd" comedy relief one might see on a tv show or in a bad movie.
These are complete overlays on top of your complete field of vision. Google Glass can't do real AR, but these can.
Ugly, but pretty neat to me!