Maker Nabs A 3D Model Of Marcus Aurelius With Google Glass

20130623_114501_496_preview_featured

In what looks to be a first for the technology, designer and engineer Todd Blatt took 30 pictures of a bust of Marcus Aurelius with Google Glass and created a downloadable 3D model that you can grab and print.

Blatt writes:

I just walked around the work, repeating, “ok glass, take a picture” over and over, 30 shots in total. No real care in aiming the shot. I just looked at it and that’s it. Then I manually uploaded the photos from Google Autobackup to 123D Catch on my computer and proceeded as normal with the regular scanning/123d process.

Obviously Blatt had some prior experience with the gear and the tools required to build a 3D model but it’s fascinating that, in a few minutes, he was able to render a physical object digitally and then reprint it. These methods aren’t foolproof, but they’re very nearly so.

What does this mean for the future? Well, almost anything can be copied now, from a car to a tourist’s trinket. It also means that nothing is “safe” anymore – all it takes for IP theft of object designs to happen is a few winks with a good enough camera. Look for this to also affect the uptake of glass in the corporate world. If I were a designer I definitely wouldn’t want some weirdo coming in and snapping my objects with Glass.

You can also buy a copy of the bust here, which should give museums pause if they’re worried about losing gift shop business.

Google Glass Worn At NBA Draft By Magic’s Victor Oladipo

The Orlando Magic’s Victor Oladipo sported a pair of Google Glass during last night’s NBA Draft.

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Steve Wozniak talks in-car tech, Google Glass, and the new Mac Pro

During Ford’s Trend Conference at the company’s headquarters in Dearborn, Michigan, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak sat in during a panel about driving distractions in vehicles and what solutions we could see in the future to limit these distractions in the car. Are touchscreens in the dashboard really the way to go? Do wearables like Google

Read The Full Story

Google Glass Used To Live-Stream An Operation

Google Glass has been used by a doctor to live-stream an operation.

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Porn App Returns to Google Glass Minus the Porn

Porn App Returns to Google Glass Minus the Porn

The only thing that might be sadder than a porn app for Google Glass is a porn app for Google Glass that doesn’t actually have any porn. Remember how "Tits and Glass" got banned? Yeah, it’s back, but this time without the titular attractions. But don’t worry: that pun isn’t going anywhere.

Read more…

    

Google Glass competitor Recon Jet arrives with Tour De France pre-launch pricing

There’s nothing like a good tie-in with a major sporting event to get your product off the ground. That’s exactly what the folks at Recon are doing with the Recon Jet, a display and computer attached to a pair of sporting glasses (aka a heads-up display) – one we got to see up close and

Read The Full Story

Glasses That Stop Google Glass Facial Recognition Created

A group of researchers based at the National Institute of Informatics in Japan have created glasses lined with 11 near-infrared LEDs that are capable of protecting the user from facial recognition feature of Google Glass.

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Google Glass May Become The Next iPhone [Analyst]

Analyst Sarah Rotman Epps of Forrester Research thinks that Google Glass will become the next iPhone, that it is only a matter of time before the entire world is consumed by it.

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Google Receives Request For Glass Privacy Details From 6 Countries

Privacy commissioners from Canada, Israel, Switzerland, Australia, New Zealand and Mexico have asked Google exactly what it will do with the data collected by Glass.

Like It , +1 , Tweet It , Pin It Original content from Ubergizmo.

    

Ten international privacy authorities—spanning Australia, Canada, Switzerland, Israel and more—have

Ten international privacy authorities—spanning Australia, Canada, Switzerland, Israel and more—have sent a letter to Google asking for it to address privacy concerns over Glass. A letter; yeah, that’ll work.

Read more…