Categories: Future Tech

Pictures With a Wink in Google Glass?

If you were thinking that seeing someone wearing Glass was awkward enough, imagine someone sheepishly winking at every interaction—in the middle of sentences, while you’re eating, driving down the road.

It’s not a nervous tick; I just have Glass. “

It will definitely lead to some odd exchanges—I’d love to hear the explanation from the person wearing Glass.

“I’m just taking pictures, don’t mind me.”

Will it change the way we perceive human behaviours?

A coy wink might be all it takes to snap a picture with Google Glass. A code found in the company’s Glass companion app for Android has revealed the wearable tech will have the ability to recognize when a user winks. Instead of telling it to snap a picture with your voice, simply wink and that’s it. It’s never been so easy to take a picture of your dog.

The user interface for Google’s forthcoming tech specs, aka Google Glass, may feature a two-fingered salute and a wink.

The source for this supposition is a Redditor by the name of Fodawim who says he or she has peered into the code of the Google Glass companion app and found the following text:

  • “BROWSER_TWO_FINGER_ZOOM”
  • “GUEST_MODE_TURNED_OFF”
  • “EYE_GESTURES_WINK_ENABLED”
  • “EYE_GESTURES_WINK_DISABLED”
  • “EYE_GESTURES_WINK_CALIBRATION_SUCCESS”
  • “EYE_GESTURES_WINK_CALIBRATION_FAILURE”
  • “EYE_GESTURES_WINK_TAKE_PHOTO”

Fodawin’s hypothesis is that Glass offers users the chance to zoom windows with a two-fingered gesture and take photos by winking.

There’s no telling if Fodawin’s analysis is correct, but the two finger zoom certainly sounds feasible if one revisits TED talk on the “Sixth Sense” interface developed by Pranav Mistry, a computer scientist who also devised a blink-driven interface for a robot.

Mistry has since joined Samsung, an entity hardly shy of lawyering up when it feels its intellectual property has been inappropriately appropriated. We’re drawing a long bow here, but might Glass be in legal strife before it even emerges?

People are just beginning to get their hands-on Google Glass, so it’s still unclear how the technology will change the landscape. The potential is there, but the execution has to match. That will ultimately determine whether or not the wider consumer market will scoop up the $1,500 technology when it hits mass market, some time early next year.

Akriti Chadda

Akriti is a student of Biomedical Engineering at VIT University, Vellore. She belongs to Jalandhar and is a fun loving Punjabi in the true sense. She is passionate about writing and tech-toys. She considers herself just another girl-next-door, who loves to read romantic novels, watch a nice movie with family and party with friends.

Recent Posts

Outbound & inbound: India attracts businesses from UK, China & US while expanding to Middle East

The Tech Panda takes a look at how India has been attracting foreign businesses from…

10 hours ago

UPI value & volume surpass records in March

India’s digital payments ecosystem achieved a record high in March, with UPI transactions reaching INR24.77…

11 hours ago

AI-powered digital twins, Cobots, agentic AI, physical AI & edge computing are enabling an anticipatory AI-first manufacturing ecosystem

Tata Consultancy Services (TCS) (BSE: 532540, NSE: TCS), ), a leader in IT services, consulting, and business…

11 hours ago

Misinformation & deepfakes help weaponize AI: Should AI be as open as the internet then?

The ability for AI to spread misinformation has been reaching hair-raising lengths, another and possibly…

2 days ago

What employees want: Not everyone feels ready to flow with AI at the workplace

Artificial Intelligence is everywhere now. It’s safe to say that organizations have either fully adopted…

5 days ago

Are business markets safe from Grok AI?

With the rise of advanced AI models such as Grok AI developed by Elon Musk's…

6 days ago