Google has used some of the most advanced computing technology, quantum chips in the D-Wave computer it has bought with NASA, to address one of the most basic issues in its Glass wearable: figuring ...
In today’s digital world, screens are everywhere. From laptops to smartphones, our eyes are constantly glued to devices. This has led to a rise in complaints like eye strain, dryness, and headaches.
Super-fast computers of the future will soon make use of manipulated glass, new research shows. Computer scientists from the University of Surrey, University of Southampton and Cambridge University ...
Whether you think of Google's face-computer, Glass, as the harbinger of the next wave of technology or not, it's difficult to ignore the $1,500 price tag for such a seemingly limited device. Competing ...
We've sure come a long way since frying ants with a magnifying glass. Researchers at the University of Southampton used nano-structures to create millimeter-sized "monolithic glass space-variant ...
[Photo: University of Southampton] What’s next for memory and flash storage? If University of Southampton researchers have any say in the matter, it might be…glass. The researchers have developed a ...
In one clip, a man asks Glass to translate an English phrase to Thai, while another displays the status of an upcoming flight. Google Glass – a thin, glasses-like visor with an eyepiece that sits on ...
A transparent computer processor has been printed on to a flat plate of glass by researchers at Sharp’s Japanese laboratory. Their success suggests ultra-thin computers and televisions could in future ...
January 3, 2013 Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google If you're not one of the lucky few to get in on Google's Project Glass, but you like the idea of a wearable ...