Google will make a limited supply
of its controversial Internet-linked Glass eyewear available for
purchase in the United States beginning — and ending — on April 15.
Anyone in the United States with $1,500 to spend on Glass will be
able to join the ranks of “Explorers” who have gotten to test out the
devices prior to them hitting the market, the California-based Internet
titan
said Thursday in a post at Google+ social network.
“Our Explorers are moms, artists,
surgeons, rockers, and each new Explorer has brought a new perspective
that is making Glass better,” Google said in the post.
“But every day we get requests from those of you who haven’t found a way into the program yet, and we want your feedback too.”
On April 15, starting at 9 a.m.
Eastern, Google will commence what it billed as the biggest expansion of
the Explorer program to date by letting anyone in the U.S. buy the eyewear online here, noting that there would be a limited number of units available.
Selling the imageGoogle
in March said it is joining forces with the frame giant behind Ray-Ban
and other high-end brands to create and sell Glass Internet-linked
eyewear in the United States.
The partnership with Luxottica was portrayed as Google’s “biggest step yet into the emerging smart eyewear market.”
Luxottica brands include Oakley, Alain Mikli, Ray-Ban, and Vogue-Eyewear.
The first smart glasses by Luxottica for Google Glass will go on sale
in 2015, the head of the Italian eyewear group said Tuesday.
Google has been working to burnish the image of Glass, which has
triggered concerns about privacy, because the devices are capable of
capturing pictures and video.
Google recently sent out a release to debunk Glass myths including
that it invades privacy, distracts wearers, and is for
“technology-worshipping geeks.”
“If someone wants to secretly record you, there are much, much better
cameras out there than one you wear conspicuously on your face and that
lights up every time you give a voice command or press a button,”
Google said.
“If a company sought to design a secret spy device, they could do a better job than Glass.”
During the Explorer testing
phase, developers are creating apps for Google Glass, which can range
from getting weather reports to sharing videos to playing games.
Google in February gave the early adopters a bit of advice: Don’t be “Glassholes.”
It was the final suggestion in a
recommended code of conduct posted online for the software developers
and others taking part in the Explorer program.
Google appeared intent on
avoiding the kinds of caustic run-ins that have seen some Glass wearers
tossed from eateries, pubs, or other establishments due to concerns over
camera capabilities built into devices.
Glass connects to the Internet
using WiFi hotspots or, more typically, by being wirelessly tethered to
mobile phones. Pictures or video may be shared through the Google+
social network.
source;- https://www.yahoo.com
source;- https://www.yahoo.com
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