Monday 16 December 2013

Google Glass competitors: What are they and how do they compare?

23:02

Google Glass competitors: What are they and how do they compare?
All eyes are on Google Glass right now, but the search engine giant's expensive and beta-only wearable isn't going to be the last of its kind. In fact, it's not even the first of its kind.
Yes, there are several Google Glass competitors out there with strikingly similar head-mounted technology, all encouraging a more immersive digital lifestyle without the need to constantly look down at a phone's screen.

A few are less expensive than Glass and one has already launched, beating Google to the expected 2014 consumer product roll-out of its currently invite-only project.
These smaller companies may not have the name recognition of Google or access to all of your data, but their head-mounted ideas deserve just as much face time.

1. Vuzix Smart Glasses M100:

Price: $999.99 (about £611/AU$1,116)Release Date: Available Now

Claiming to be the "world's first commercially available Smart Glasses," theVuzix Smart Glasses M100 had a staring contest with Google Glass and didn't blink in delivering on time.

Google Glass competition
Ready to be put on the job
The currently available Google Glass rival ironically runs an Android-based operating system and is compatible with thousands of its apps, according to Vuzix.
Furthermore, its monocular display over one eye and five megapixel camera with the ability to record HD video match what Google's Explorer Edition wearable is capable of right now.
There are a bunch of 3-axis sensors on-board too: gyro, accelerometer and a compass, making it suitable for its target audience of "industrial, medical, retail and prosumer applications."


It's also significantly cheaper than the $1,500 (about £917/AU$1,675) Google Glass and new orders, in gray or white, are available to ship within two to four weeks.
Before ordering, you should down the downsides, like the obvious fact that this small Rochester, New York company is going up against the Mountain View, Calif. internet titan.
The M100 also it has an older USB mini B port, a smaller 4GB of flash storage (vs Glass' 16GB) and no fancy touch screen. We don't like that much either, especially in our futuristic tech.

2. Optinvent Ora-S AR:

Price: $949 or £699 (about AU$1,059)Release Date: March 2014The Optinvent Ora-S AR glasses are interesting because they promise full frames shades with "True AR," as the company likes to call it.

Google Glass competition
Like Red Bull, it'll give you wings!
This is achieved by combining augmented reality with a dashboard mode in which images can be centered in a user's line of sight or in their peripheral vision for "info snacking." Sounds tasty.

Not as delicious sounding is the fact that the two settings are changed manually by adjusting the wing-like lever that juts out of the side of these Android-based glasses.
The trade-off is that the bulky Ora-S features a larger 4:3 screen with a 24-degree field of view vs Google Glass' 14 degree FOV. The only spec shortfall is in the camera. Optinvent opted for a less revolutionary VGA snapper.

The developer version of the two-mode Optinvent Ora-S AR eyewear is expected to go on sale in March and be less expensive than what Google Glass Explorers are paying right now.

3. Recon Jet:

Price: $599 (about £368/AU$669)Release Date: Spring 2014

Recon Instruments makes its Recon Jet glasses sound promising because it's fashioning them as sports eyewear - it's not trying to sell the wearable as an awkward, new digital lifestyle.

Google Glass competition
Might even be able to beat a juiced Lance Armstrong
The polarized lenses have an high-resolution display with IR Gaze detection facing your right eye and an HD camera pointing outward.

There's an optical touchpad next to the camera and inside there's a 1GHz dual-core CPU surrounded by antennas and sensors like GPS.

This results in a host of performance metrics: speed/pace, distance, duration and ascent/descent. Optional external antennas can add so that the dashboard gauges one's heart rate, power and cadence.

Best of all, these stats are joined by caller ID and SMS alerts in your periphery, negating the temptation to take your phone out of your biker short shorts every time it beeps or buzzes.
All of this sounds promising for athletes, whether they're cycling or playing volleyball, especially when holding a cell phone isn't part of the game.

The Recon Jet shades can be ordered now in black or white for a bargain $599 (about £368/AU$669) with delivery expected in spring 2014.

4. GlassUp:

Price: Starting at $299 (about £184/AU$334)Release Date: June 2014

The crowd-funded GlassUp finished just shy of its funding goal, but that's okay because the startup went with Indiegogo instead of Kickstarter and still received most of the money it needed.

Google Glass competition
Are you down to wear GlassUp?
The eyeglasses are designed for real-time information, alerting wearers of incoming emails, texts, tweets and Facebook updates.

Interestingly, they're read-only bifocals, with the startup being a little more realistic than some of its ahead-of-their-time competition.

"They are read only," admits GlassUp on its website. "We believe it would be messy to try and manage the messages: to respond to a message you'll have to go back to your mobile, as usual."

The prototypes aren't multimedia-centric either, giving basic text and icon information through its 320 × 240 resolution display.

Its maps app is illustrated using text and arrows for turn-by-turn directions, for example, and a TripAdvisor travel app features up to five review stars when standing in front of a hotel.

GlassUp is a little further off than its competitors with a release date set for June 2014. It's up for pre-order right now and can even be purchased in Bitcoin.

5. Epiphany Eyewear:

Price: Starting at $299 (about £184/AU$334)Release Date: 2014

Epiphany Eyewear describes its Google Glass alternative as "great designer glasses that happen to contain an incredibly powerful social computer."

Google Glass competition
Epiphany looks socially acceptable to wear
These normal-looking shades put style ahead of electronics, hiding an HD camera with a wide-angle field of view in the lenses. It's said to be wider than any smartphone camera out right now.

Epiphany is uniquely social, too. While there's no dramatic visual overlay on these spectacles, they're able to live stream video posts to Facebook through its own YouGen.TV video platform.

The Los Angeles-based company already has a number of beta testers uploading point-of-view videos, from boxing on Muscle Beach to shotgunning a beer at the office.
There's no dramatic visual overlay in this version of the spectacles, but Epiphany's chic frames are compatible with prescription lenses and available for pre-order right now at an equally attractive price.

6. Telepathy One:

Price: UnknownRelease Date: UnknownThe Telepathy One is a trippy little headband that emphasizes its tagline "Wear Your Love."

Google Glass competition
Let others see your present while looking like the future
As you might have guessed, this means the device is designed to broadcast what you see and hear to a close friend or family member who isn't physically close.

In addition to an integrated camera, the Telepathy One includes a micro-projection display on a frame that is worn the opposite way of Google Glass.

Glass runs from ear to to ear with its bridge resting on your nose. Telepathy One runs along the back of your head, opening up your field of view with only the micro-projection in the periphery.

There's no specific release date or pricing attached to this small startup's "intimate" take on wearables, but the team is actively tweaking the user interface to match what Google Glass has achieved in its Explorer program

Through the looking Glass:

The differences between the Google Glass tech specs and the internals of its competitors are subtle. All of them feature hands-free cameras and most have video overlays to augment reality.
But the intentions of these Google Glass alternatives vary; some are meant for sports, others for lifestyle, and a few are destined to enhance social interactions.
There's still time to consider alternate choices from what the search engine leader has to offer but sadly, only so much room on one's face for such a wearable.

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This is Wasim Akhtar Admin of this blog. I am 25 year old from Pakistan, Professionally I am Blogger, SEO Expert, Web Developer, Web Designer and Freelancer. My Academic background related with business field because i am doing bachelor in commerce, before this i did diploma in commerce. In computer or Technology field i have lot of certificates,i got one certificate from Preston University in the field on I.T (Information Technology), I have Certificate of Web Designer/Designing and lot of others.

1 comments:

  1. There are a bunch of 3-axis sensors on-board too: gyro, accelerometer and a compass, making it suitable for its target audience of "industrial, medical, retail and prosumer applications."
    vumoo

    ReplyDelete

 

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