I'd love to see this combined with a thermal camera, so you could see in the dark or even with your eyes closed. It would also be useful to see hot and cold spots for firemen, hvac people, and people inspecting oil refineries and things like that.
MrWhostheboss has a video where one of the things he talked about was some kind of lens that converts infrared light into visible light as it reaches your eye.
My thing is as a contact wearer. How long are these supposed to last? Most contacts are daily, bi-weekly or monthly. So cost to longevity kinda worries me about the future of this kinda product. As much as I would like to have something like this in the future.
@@claldayas These contacts need not be necessarily to correct vision. Just as Google Glasses weren't created as corrective lenses until much later. Maybe later as the technology gets better and costs come down these types of contact lenses may incorporate vision correction too?!
I'm someone who has an eye condition called keratoconus and I need to wear big lenses like this (Scleral lenses). It's exciting to see this tech as I'm 41 and have a number of years wearing these lenses everyday. That said, when it comes to lenses its really important for the eye to get oxygen so the lens needs to be as permeable as possible and to also be as light as possible so its stays in place. Looks cool though
Just had to reply, also have keratoconus, never met someone else with it before. Scleral lenses sadly don’t work for me, I had a intact placed in my right eye and it interferes with it.
I've been following Mojo lens for a while now and they also keep bringing up the oxygen issue as the key challenge, very interesting how this is the biggest challenge in this crazy tech.
I also have Keratoconus diagnosed about 11years ago and have never met anyone else with the condition. I have to wear smaller than normal hard plastic contact lenses. That looks like an awful lot of equipment to have in your eye. I can’t wait to see this technology in 10/15 years.
@@rationaleuler7199 I was 17, I had worn glasses most of my life and was going for contact lenses so went to a supermarket optician - he thought I was faking not being able to see because he just could not get me to see adequately. I went to a proper optician who scanned my eyes and found the Keratoconus and my local hospital has looked after and supplied my lenses ever since. I always had one bad eye as a child but never had my eyes scanned. I do wonder how long i had it. Have you been offered any longer term solutions or improvements to the condition?
The technology is fascinating and I am happy someone is working on it, but the company making it likely knows nothing about designing and fitting contact lenses, let alone scleral lenses (which these will likely have to be). The lenses will need to be custom made for each person, costing something around 1.5-3k for just the fitting and that wouldn’t account the lenses, let alone the medical challenges. Visually however, scleral lenses give some of the best eyesight you can get (high powers too) even multifocal so if you need bifocals then they can correct for your reading power as well…but then again the pixels will likely cause major glare and halos in your eyesight 😟 again happy someone is working on it but I fear it is a long ways away as well as out of most peoples price range. Most tech companies vastly underestimate how complicated the eyes really are.
Honestly that's why I want to get a special degree on optical physics, master on contacts, and phd in anterior segment, I have a "licensing" I guess (it's the equivalent to bachelor's in optometry at the USA), so that I can help and work with the development of this technology. I'm familiar with scleral lenses as I have a pair prescript as a result of being the testing patient for my professor at his master class besides being in several talks and works
I agree was thinking of that it will be just like when people started using wireless ear buds and they talking to themselves and tapping they're side face 😂😂😂
I've been so excited for this to become a thing since Google Glass, which proceeded to completely flop. Also I would totally want to wear it with all of the tech just be fully shown
Actually, Google Glass was not a complete flop. The product pivoted and is successfully used today in industrial and commercial use (as opposed to consumer use)
That's exactly the kind of thing I'm after in smart glasses and stuff, not projecting 3d graphics unto the real world. Some text with some information would be enough. I'd like to see the date, time, maybe some notifications, directions, currently playing media, etc.
I wonder if they could use a bank of tiny solar cells (and perhaps one small battery), considering you would usually use this in a lit environment. It's kind of crazy they can make all this small enough to fit into a contact lens.
I'm curious if it works as good when worn on the eye - I feel like there is a difference of seeing a display when it's on your eye's surface vs when it's at a distance, even if it's only half an inch. But wow, this is amazingly good already! Putting it directly on the eye should also increase the fov significantly, then make the display resolution higher and we are in the future!
Imagine someone punching you in the eye with this in, and all the tiny parts embedding itself in your eyes. Not all those parts are soft. Electricity on a wet surface is something too.
This is awesome, my question is will there ever be a contact lens that could possibly help people with peripheral vision issues. I myself am a disabled veteran with peripheral vision impairment. If this ever does come into play, I would jump on this.
@@RosaParksShoe you don't need surgery for sclera lenses. I have them because I have an eye disease which make regular contacts not suitable for me. They're actually really nice to wear and fit better than normal contacts.
I remember the monochrome and amber screen days. We gotta start somewhere. I love it! Let me be the first to coin the phrase....."Augmented Assist" - Ed Moore It would also be a tad more immersive if there was a headphone sync/audio sfx to go along with the visuals. Looking forward to the future.
when I was a kid, my parents were telling me to keep a safe distance between where i'm sitting and the tv. can't imagine what they would say if they saw this
He didn’t talk about comfort. That thing looks like a monster compared to a soft contact lens. Seems like they still have a ways to go on miniaturization until this is a practical product.
Yes, as an optometry student, I can see so many problems with this design. It will most likely be a scleral gas permeable contact lens, which is normally very large and does increase comfort. But I would not want this to heat up my cornea or deprive it of oxygen
I cant wait to try them, can you imagine having a really powerful zoom!?, so as to be able to see close up a mile away? And control them with the mind?
This is amazing, a few years back i had a similar idea with the short range RF and a neckband, i have drawings somewhere that look like one of the early models with the coil and little screen. Seems like i missed out on an opportunity, I then figured ahh its not possible, glad to see someone decided it is :)
Augmented and virtual reality is going to be the next big step in technology. Its going to be insane. I used to have a sony watchman in the late 80s - small black and white tv - the size of a brick
I recently was using a wacom tablet with a stylus for a number of days to complete a project. The tissue of my inner thumb, which is where I was making the most contact with the stylus, became inexplicably numb (like I could stick a sewing needle right into in and not feel it at all) by the end of the effort. I had been holding the stylus with a relaxed hand and so I knew the numbness wasn't caused by over-gripping. I've never had it happen with pencils/pens despite having spent x1000 more hours using standard pencils/pens. I stopped using the wacom tablet and stylus fearing the implications of the numbness. I looked into the wacom technology and found that RF field emitted by the stylus and tablet were the most likely culprit as to how the symptom came about (there really is NO other explanation). I really can't stress enough how dicey and risky it is to place a RF device like this contact lens right up against the tissue of one's eye. Despite complying with FCC safety limits, the use of a contact lens with RF functionality, like the wacom tablet, can have nasty consequences.
As a contact lens wearer, hard glass contact lenses like the ones in this video are the absolute worst, even with soft comfortable contact lenses you'll feel your eye uncomfortable after some hours because your eye needs lubrication and it needs oxygen to pass through your eyes too (yeah bet you never heard of that if you never considered contact lenses) which the glass totally blocks making it far more uncomfortable and ultimately unhealthy for your eyes cause it makes scar tissue to grow on your eye blocking your vision over the years if you use them every day
In all probability, in the future it will be an operation and/or crispr adoption maybe? 🤔 For now we are in early concept stages. I used to wear contact lenses too and as far as my personal experience goes, what you're saying is absolutely true!
What they don't tell you is that it is possible to use metalenses to direct light at specific neurons. Therefore, if a person has received optogenetic gene therapy, the metalenses can be used for neuromodulation / brain-computer interface with no need for brain implant. That includes the ability to introduce false memories or deletion of real memories, behavioral control, etc.
Hate to tell ya, but the government can see and hear you anywhere you go. Even your phone acts as a two way microphone. If people think government agencies aren't listening in, they are very mistaken.
@@dystopiaisutopia Oh, they certainly do learn. Your habits, your every conversation, your thoughts, etc. All can be used against you in a court of law...blah blah blah..
I will consider their 2040 model or when human eyes become replaceable like underwear. Also, it must be able to measure individual power levels like in dragon balls. Don't want my eyes to get hacked 😟
Why in the world would I ever want to cover up those rad circuits? If anything I'd want the rest of the empty space (that won't be in front of the pupil) to be filled up with a like pattern.
I can't imagine this will ever get thin enough to be in a contact lens. Batteries, processors, transmitters, accelerometers, display.. so much to fit in. The thickest existing lenses are 0.18mm at the centre with slimmer ones being 0.08mm and they all taper to an even thinner edge.
Processors are actually really thin but sit on a relatively thick backing. If we are able to lift chips off their backing theres a good amount of potental to thin things down more. I think a partnership with a silicon fab would allow them to make some really big strides forward
They could have the lens just be a display but the brains and everything else is out into a pocket device or something that uses Bluetooth or wireless connection data transfer, and they could add a hand held control pad that lets you navigate the display in your eye, as if your controlling a mouse on a computer screen
So, anyone have some description of the optics behind this working? How is it that the image ends up being in focus despite the display being on the eye? I think for the glasses I saw it said that it works by making columnated light? Is it the same here? I get that like, the details are proprietary, but I would imagine that the details which are proprietary are like, the parts that are too specific for me to understand with the tiny amount of background info I already have, and that a kind of description could be given which would both be informative to me and not reveal anything proprietary.
Hello there can i ask something? Im a low vision person cith catarract n both eyes occular degeneration and cornea transplants. Many problems… do you believe they can give hope for us people? Thank you from Cyprus 🇨🇾🇨🇾✅🌈🌻
What's going to be interesting about this is the fact that your body can power this. Your body produces enough energy to power something like this. the only problem is harnessing that energy. Once you do that, you produce unlimited energy for small tech like AR lense.
Jpl makes us wear these but you can tell stronger eye lens tugs eye esp at night? Bright lights make eye look infinite when gazed upon but frequency disrupts esp when night drive in pasadena canyons
Definitely excited can't wait just concerned about the government or others tracking individuals or seeing what yousee through the lens .. BIG BROTHER IS watching 👀
I think i would prefer to wear something like this with the ships showing out instead of covered by some fake iris or whatever Also, this thing is at the same time terrific and terrifying, i'm excited for a future with something like this but mad about all the new ways big corps will find, to impose their stupid adds in our life
Reminds of the TV show "BRAVE NEW WORLD" on HBO where everyone was wearing an AI AR contact lens. Maybe if one develops a contact lens of living tissue made one's own DNA, that allows for airflow and repair to the eye, this could work in the long run (without outright creating scar tissue and eye irritation). I guess we are not there quite yet. Love the effort though! 😉
If they are watching this. You can have a smaller battery if you match them with glasses that wirelessly charge. People can then have prescriptions and keep a full charge all day. The glasses of course would charge in a case that has an even large charge capasity. ;O)-
I'd love to see this combined with a thermal camera, so you could see in the dark or even with your eyes closed. It would also be useful to see hot and cold spots for firemen, hvac people, and people inspecting oil refineries and things like that.
MrWhostheboss has a video where one of the things he talked about was some kind of lens that converts infrared light into visible light as it reaches your eye.
Imagine you can use you computer without a computer
You’ll only see your own eyelids heat shielding everything
@@HB-cg4jv the cameras could be in glasses, or mounted on a helmet.
As a contact lens wearer, this both intrigues and frightens me
Why? Sounds amazing lol
My thing is as a contact wearer. How long are these supposed to last? Most contacts are daily, bi-weekly or monthly. So cost to longevity kinda worries me about the future of this kinda product. As much as I would like to have something like this in the future.
Same
@@claldayas These contacts need not be necessarily to correct vision. Just as Google Glasses weren't created as corrective lenses until much later.
Maybe later as the technology gets better and costs come down these types of contact lenses may incorporate vision correction too?!
@Its me or whatever the technology is internal to the lens. You’d take care of them much like you would any reusable contact lens I would imagine.
Kinda neat having a HUD (heads up display) similar to iron man.
with just the green color, reminded me more of terminator, lol
I'm someone who has an eye condition called keratoconus and I need to wear big lenses like this (Scleral lenses). It's exciting to see this tech as I'm 41 and have a number of years wearing these lenses everyday. That said, when it comes to lenses its really important for the eye to get oxygen so the lens needs to be as permeable as possible and to also be as light as possible so its stays in place. Looks cool though
Just had to reply, also have keratoconus, never met someone else with it before. Scleral lenses sadly don’t work for me, I had a intact placed in my right eye and it interferes with it.
I've been following Mojo lens for a while now and they also keep bringing up the oxygen issue as the key challenge, very interesting how this is the biggest challenge in this crazy tech.
I also have Keratoconus diagnosed about 11years ago and have never met anyone else with the condition. I have to wear smaller than normal hard plastic contact lenses. That looks like an awful lot of equipment to have in your eye. I can’t wait to see this technology in 10/15 years.
@@MrJordanwain Out of curosity, how old were you when it got to a noticeable point? Got diagnosed at 13, had 20/300 in one eye.
@@rationaleuler7199 I was 17, I had worn glasses most of my life and was going for contact lenses so went to a supermarket optician - he thought I was faking not being able to see because he just could not get me to see adequately. I went to a proper optician who scanned my eyes and found the Keratoconus and my local hospital has looked after and supplied my lenses ever since. I always had one bad eye as a child but never had my eyes scanned. I do wonder how long i had it. Have you been offered any longer term solutions or improvements to the condition?
The technology is fascinating and I am happy someone is working on it, but the company making it likely knows nothing about designing and fitting contact lenses, let alone scleral lenses (which these will likely have to be). The lenses will need to be custom made for each person, costing something around 1.5-3k for just the fitting and that wouldn’t account the lenses, let alone the medical challenges. Visually however, scleral lenses give some of the best eyesight you can get (high powers too) even multifocal so if you need bifocals then they can correct for your reading power as well…but then again the pixels will likely cause major glare and halos in your eyesight 😟 again happy someone is working on it but I fear it is a long ways away as well as out of most peoples price range. Most tech companies vastly underestimate how complicated the eyes really are.
i was just going to say "well someone has their NCLE"...then i saw your name lol :)
Just be glad they aren't planning to replace eyes with a device! Lol
Honestly that's why I want to get a special degree on optical physics, master on contacts, and phd in anterior segment, I have a "licensing" I guess (it's the equivalent to bachelor's in optometry at the USA), so that I can help and work with the development of this technology. I'm familiar with scleral lenses as I have a pair prescript as a result of being the testing patient for my professor at his master class besides being in several talks and works
Quiero unos
They have several optometrists working with them so I'm sure they are aware of these things
Very interesting, but *no way I'm sticking a device with a Lithium-ion battery in my eye.*
Then don't
@@Ciana_Baby keep scrolling little kid
Pretty sure it doesn't have a battery in it....
How about real-time solar power (any light)
@@orionishi6737 It has to have a battery. How are the electronics going to work. How is the display going to … display anything?
We are going to have some weird conversations in public, “stop staring at me creep” “excuse me, i am just going through my tweets” 😂😂😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
" I see that you went to Starbucks yesterday and ordered a large frappuccino "
@@MOE13576 meanwhile there will be a pop up “end of season sales, upto 30% offer on clothings”
Lmfaoooo
I agree was thinking of that it will be just like when people started using wireless ear buds and they talking to themselves and tapping they're side face 😂😂😂
I've been so excited for this to become a thing since Google Glass, which proceeded to completely flop.
Also I would totally want to wear it with all of the tech just be fully shown
Same here. Color contacts are easy to spot, and I would much rather have circuitry showing.
Actually, Google Glass was not a complete flop. The product pivoted and is successfully used today in industrial and commercial use (as opposed to consumer use)
@@gr8tbigtreehugger oh I did not know that, I still don't have one though
What about people that are blind in one eye or two eye’s??
@@AdrenalineCereal I don't understand the question what about people who are blind this isn't a piece of technology for them they're blind
That's exactly the kind of thing I'm after in smart glasses and stuff, not projecting 3d graphics unto the real world.
Some text with some information would be enough.
I'd like to see the date, time, maybe some notifications, directions, currently playing media, etc.
the next departure for your train
im trying to watch the hub in class with nobody noticing
I wonder if they could use a bank of tiny solar cells (and perhaps one small battery), considering you would usually use this in a lit environment. It's kind of crazy they can make all this small enough to fit into a contact lens.
Yes very smart every time you wanna charge it just stare at the sun, and your eyes will be just fine 😂
@@ef7496 Or you'll have heat vision.
@@mywifesboyfriend5558 😂😂
@@ef7496 They shouldn't draw too much power, so ambient lighting should be able to make it draw the milliwats it needs to work
@@ef7496 company isn't that stupid, unlike you
I'm curious if it works as good when worn on the eye - I feel like there is a difference of seeing a display when it's on your eye's surface vs when it's at a distance, even if it's only half an inch.
But wow, this is amazingly good already! Putting it directly on the eye should also increase the fov significantly, then make the display resolution higher and we are in the future!
One word: power
Imagine one day this lens gotten mainstream, and you were seeing ads after ads.
Wow subtitles of real life speech would be amazing
That’s a great idea that would be awesome
Imagine a battery fire in your eye... 😱
Yup, it’s a no for me.
Imagine someone punching you in the eye with this in, and all the tiny parts embedding itself in your eyes.
Not all those parts are soft.
Electricity on a wet surface is something too.
@@mr.griffe9202 they might sent it to NCAP😂
Imagine you shutting tf up
That’s horrible. But the other thing that makes this not work is that electronics output heat.
This is awesome, my question is will there ever be a contact lens that could possibly help people with peripheral vision issues. I myself am a disabled veteran with peripheral vision impairment. If this ever does come into play, I would jump on this.
That was fantastic! Contact lens technology has so much potential!
I'd love to see surgery to have this implemented.
@@RosaParksShoe you don't need surgery for sclera lenses. I have them because I have an eye disease which make regular contacts not suitable for me. They're actually really nice to wear and fit better than normal contacts.
I remember the monochrome and amber screen days. We gotta start somewhere. I love it! Let me be the first to coin the phrase....."Augmented Assist" - Ed Moore
It would also be a tad more immersive if there was a headphone sync/audio sfx to go along with the visuals. Looking forward to the future.
I wonder how the image can be so clear when we hold it so close to our eye?
when I was a kid, my parents were telling me to keep a safe distance between where i'm sitting and the tv. can't imagine what they would say if they saw this
@@HomerAndRoe pretty sure the focus point is quite important
Pretty sure we live in a different century now lmao
My hope is that you’ll be able to have the display on all the time instead of having to look for everything.
Nah
@@MOE13576 why?
@@MOE13576 future hater
@@MekaniQ "display on all the time" there you go
@@MOE13576 ah ok
This is so intriguing.Even less than a decade ago this was only Sci-fi concept.
I’m super comfortable with contacts, been wearing them for almost 25 years. If they need a trial I’d be perfect.
Overheating contact lens... exploding contact lens... Yea. This is a hard pass for me. At best, I'd probably go with a glasses version.
Yikes
Imagine someone hacks them and causes a malfunction purposely causing it to overheat and melt your eyeball lol.
Mojo Vision: this is cool lenses
Agent FBI: Yes, i know🙂😉
He didn’t talk about comfort. That thing looks like a monster compared to a soft contact lens. Seems like they still have a ways to go on miniaturization until this is a practical product.
Yes, as an optometry student, I can see so many problems with this design. It will most likely be a scleral gas permeable contact lens, which is normally very large and does increase comfort. But I would not want this to heat up my cornea or deprive it of oxygen
My only issue is even though it might be comfortable on the eye will it allow oxygen to the cornea?
seems to have potential
I cant wait to try them, can you imagine having a really powerful zoom!?, so as to be able to see close up a mile away? And control them with the mind?
I can only imagine the number of traffic accidents people will have with that thing
Imagine wearing this and all of sudden you start seeing the Matrix digital rain.
All very interesting, but I'd just like a contact lens that can correct my vision - or perhaps allow me to zoom in. That'd be cool.
Just imagine the high prevalence of eye infections with this.
I am 43 and I 100% ready to use tech to enhance myself.
Tech is moving so fast but we desperately need a new generation of battery technology.
Will it also turn you into a brooding vigilante with a penchant for Nirvana while cringily calling yourself "Vengeance"?
Hahhaahahaha
We can only hope😂
That's only if you buy the matching dark eye makeup.
Love the soundwave action figure hiding in thr background. He should be transformed to be more 'deceptive'
Imagine in school, a teacher writes a question on the board and ur contact lenses answers it for u
This is amazing, a few years back i had a similar idea with the short range RF and a neckband, i have drawings somewhere that look like one of the early models with the coil and little screen. Seems like i missed out on an opportunity, I then figured ahh its not possible, glad to see someone decided it is :)
Augmented and virtual reality is going to be the next big step in technology.
Its going to be insane.
I used to have a sony watchman in the late 80s - small black and white tv - the size of a brick
The Batman has this tech and he's been using it. 😅
I recently was using a wacom tablet with a stylus for a number of days to complete a project. The tissue of my inner thumb, which is where I was making the most contact with the stylus, became inexplicably numb (like I could stick a sewing needle right into in and not feel it at all) by the end of the effort. I had been holding the stylus with a relaxed hand and so I knew the numbness wasn't caused by over-gripping. I've never had it happen with pencils/pens despite having spent x1000 more hours using standard pencils/pens. I stopped using the wacom tablet and stylus fearing the implications of the numbness. I looked into the wacom technology and found that RF field emitted by the stylus and tablet were the most likely culprit as to how the symptom came about (there really is NO other explanation).
I really can't stress enough how dicey and risky it is to place a RF device like this contact lens right up against the tissue of one's eye.
Despite complying with FCC safety limits, the use of a contact lens with RF functionality, like the wacom tablet, can have nasty consequences.
As a contact lens wearer, hard glass contact lenses like the ones in this video are the absolute worst, even with soft comfortable contact lenses you'll feel your eye uncomfortable after some hours because your eye needs lubrication and it needs oxygen to pass through your eyes too (yeah bet you never heard of that if you never considered contact lenses) which the glass totally blocks making it far more uncomfortable and ultimately unhealthy for your eyes cause it makes scar tissue to grow on your eye blocking your vision over the years if you use them every day
In all probability, in the future it will be an operation and/or crispr adoption maybe? 🤔 For now we are in early concept stages. I used to wear contact lenses too and as far as my personal experience goes, what you're saying is absolutely true!
I wear contact lenses too, and I only feel discomfort after 12-15 hours
I wonder if it could be powered from heat from your eye, and the friction of blinking? Friction electricity in the form of a nanogenerator.
I’ve already worn something ever so vaguely similar in my eye, I’d love to be able to test their products
How about using the tech lenses to replace heavy prescription eyeglasses first ?👍
I salute the first person to actually wear that :D
What they don't tell you is that it is possible to use metalenses to direct light at specific neurons. Therefore, if a person has received optogenetic gene therapy, the metalenses can be used for neuromodulation / brain-computer interface with no need for brain implant. That includes the ability to introduce false memories or deletion of real memories, behavioral control, etc.
Interesting but I dont think I would want a 5g transmitter on my eyeball.
5g will be long obsolete by the time this tech hits market.
It doesn't have a 5g transmitter. Probably never will. Its just an accessory...like a smart watch. Its basically just a tiny computer monitor.
@@orionishi6737 how do you think it sends data back to the primary processor?
Stop it boomer!
Vageta would be so impressed
I hope this comes out soon…
I have a important test in a few weeks…
Imagine rubbing your eyes and the lens gets stuck inside and you feel the heat... Or fall asleep with them on...
Have recording on them would be great
Pov truly!
Didn't our parents teach us not to sit too close to the tv
with google maps together will be awesome. You can drive and you can see the road with virtual signs and Turns
The ultimate big brother device, to see what the public sees.
Damn your right...holy shi
Exactly what it is
Hate to tell ya, but the government can see and hear you anywhere you go. Even your phone acts as a two way microphone. If people think government agencies aren't listening in, they are very mistaken.
@@mywifesboyfriend5558 I don't care. They might learn something watching me.
@@dystopiaisutopia Oh, they certainly do learn. Your habits, your every conversation, your thoughts, etc. All can be used against you in a court of law...blah blah blah..
I will consider their 2040 model or when human eyes become replaceable like underwear. Also, it must be able to measure individual power levels like in dragon balls. Don't want my eyes to get hacked 😟
Legit misread in a dragons balls
Why in the world would I ever want to cover up those rad circuits? If anything I'd want the rest of the empty space (that won't be in front of the pupil) to be filled up with a like pattern.
It's so cyberpunk
i love this.. elon should buy them already :D
I think to lessen down the bulk, they should embed the electronics into a clear sclera contact lens
I can't imagine this will ever get thin enough to be in a contact lens. Batteries, processors, transmitters, accelerometers, display.. so much to fit in. The thickest existing lenses are 0.18mm at the centre with slimmer ones being 0.08mm and they all taper to an even thinner edge.
Processors are actually really thin but sit on a relatively thick backing. If we are able to lift chips off their backing theres a good amount of potental to thin things down more. I think a partnership with a silicon fab would allow them to make some really big strides forward
This is terrifying and amazing at the same time idk what to think
They could have the lens just be a display but the brains and everything else is out into a pocket device or something that uses Bluetooth or wireless connection data transfer, and they could add a hand held control pad that lets you navigate the display in your eye, as if your controlling a mouse on a computer screen
Imo normal contact lenses still suck in comfort. I bet putting electronics into them will make them definitely not more comfy
So, anyone have some description of the optics behind this working? How is it that the image ends up being in focus despite the display being on the eye?
I think for the glasses I saw it said that it works by making columnated light? Is it the same here?
I get that like, the details are proprietary, but I would imagine that the details which are proprietary are like, the parts that are too specific for me to understand with the tiny amount of background info I already have, and that a kind of description could be given which would both be informative to me and not reveal anything proprietary.
Hello there can i ask something? Im a low vision person cith catarract n both eyes occular degeneration and cornea transplants. Many problems… do you believe they can give hope for us people? Thank you from Cyprus 🇨🇾🇨🇾✅🌈🌻
♥ I want to wear them 😍 Release a prototype atleast 💕
Agreed I will be trail member if they need 😍
The teleprompter alone makes this a day one must buy. A translators feature would also be neat. 5g literally in my eye makes me worried though lol
It won't be using 5G it will be using something more like Bluetooth
Being able to power it is the only problem. Using maybe piezoelectric elements to keep it charged? Who knows but that's still very cool!!
Pokemon battles are going to be on a whole new level and experience
This definitely would need a solid state battery, so exited is to see this moving forward
What's going to be interesting about this is the fact that your body can power this. Your body produces enough energy to power something like this. the only problem is harnessing that energy. Once you do that, you produce unlimited energy for small tech like AR lense.
I wonder how many people going to get their eyes burned out or cancer in the eye before they perfect this.
How do they glue or tack them into the eye so they stay in how can i get them out
I would love this. Does it work with those with keratoconus? If so, sign me up!
0:51, funny how they stopped trying at 2019, and now they sell concepts for 2022 and onwards :D
Hey do you know if mojo lens can scan the text on page and show results about it?
A battery in my eyes?! No thx!
I want my pip-boy HUD yesterday
Jpl makes us wear these but you can tell stronger eye lens tugs eye esp at night? Bright lights make eye look infinite when gazed upon but frequency disrupts esp when night drive in pasadena canyons
Take my soul, and my body i want this now, i will go blind for science!
Definitely excited can't wait just concerned about the government or others tracking individuals or seeing what yousee through the lens .. BIG BROTHER IS watching 👀
I think i would prefer to wear something like this with the ships showing out instead of covered by some fake iris or whatever
Also, this thing is at the same time terrific and terrifying, i'm excited for a future with something like this but mad about all the new ways big corps will find, to impose their stupid adds in our life
Reminds of the TV show "BRAVE NEW WORLD" on HBO where everyone was wearing an AI AR contact lens. Maybe if one develops a contact lens of living tissue made one's own DNA, that allows for airflow and repair to the eye, this could work in the long run (without outright creating scar tissue and eye irritation). I guess we are not there quite yet. Love the effort though! 😉
If they are watching this. You can have a smaller battery if you match them with glasses that wirelessly charge. People can then have prescriptions and keep a full charge all day. The glasses of course would charge in a case that has an even large charge capasity. ;O)-
i believe something like VR, or smart glasses those are more possible to happen,
put all those thing in that size is so hard, and safty
For what condition are those lentes for?
Everything and for people who have no condition too!
This is so awesome but i'd rather wear it as glasses than lenses. Gosh what a time to be alive
This is eerily similar to the Futurama “ shut up and take my money” scene.
Military application would be freaking dope. Black ops 3 ember teaser lol
Where are they available now? Please reply
they stopped working on them
Are there trials/clinical trials I can sign up for?
Did he say one of the executive was "Steve Sinclair"? I know it's not Digital Extremes' Steve Sinclair, but it caught me off guard for a sec.
Explains some NASA stuff I've seen. Where astronaut appears to be grabbing things and moving things that only he could see.
What a beautiful DIAMOND he's observing!
I have eye cancer now, I wonder why 🤔
Watching Lizzo music videos will do that to ya.
bro you got to see the future you are so lucky
Hey nice video.
I am curious to know what is the voltage to power those contacts.
I know our phones are about 5v on average
Live Long and Prosper 🖖.
That's insanely cool
They’ve been working on this since 2013 and probably before. If they haven’t worn it, I doubt that it’ll ever hit the market