With Project Glass Google envisions an augmented reality setup that would allow you to check the weather, see your email, SMS, and other notifications, check your calendar, etc. all from a simple and intuitive interface that stays out of the way when you don’t need it. Google threw together a proof-of-concept video for Project Glass which you can see right here:
Today Google launched a public Google+ page for Project Glass, saying that they wanted to share their work on the project in order to receive feedback.
It’s important to note that all of this is proof of concept. The software may not even exist yet, and if it does, it definitely isn’t as polished as you saw in the video. The hardware is almost certainly still in the prototype stage, and any of the photos that Google has released thus far are very likely non-functional design prototypes.
Even so, with Google now looking to get into the world of augmented reality, interest is going to spike.
I wrote just yesterday that augmented reality had yet to prove itself. If Google can deliver on this vision it could be just what AR needs to become a serious and useful technology. It could also provide the impetus to get both hardware and software development moving at full steam.
So far, no other company that I have seen has released a full AR package. We’ve seen HMD hardware and we’ve seen smartphone apps as AR software, but Google’s Project Glass is the first time that both of these aspects are being designed together and oriented toward mainstream consumers. The New York Times reports that people familiar with the project say that the final price of Google Glass will be around the price of current smartphones (though it’s unclear whether or not they were talking about subsidized or unsubsidized smartphones).
I’ll be carefully tracking the Glass project from Google and while I hope to see further developments, I warn that we should all recognize that this is highly experimental and conceptual at this stage. Reports that Google could be shipping Glass by the end of the year are probably not accurate.