Fidelity Market Monitor app brings stock alerts, news and fanciful financials to Google Glass

Fidelity Market Monitor app brings stock alerts, news and fanciful financials to Google Glass

You know, it makes sense: an app for the one percent, tailor-made for a $1,500 headset. Fidelity’s Market Monitor app for Google Glass might just be the most impressive program to debut for the device, particularly considering the class of individual who would take advantage. In the trading world, missing an alert or notification by even three seconds could be the difference between million and millions, with this app enabling Fidelity customers to request real-time stock quotes and receive alerts dealing with companies in their portfolio. In a concept video describing what’s possible (embedded just after the break), we even see a wearer snap a photo of a Google logo, and the app translates the photo into a stock quote for GOOG.

We’re guessing that it’s only a matter of time before every other financial institution follows suit, which will likely lead to each and every CNBC anchor wearing a set whilst on air. Also, we’re hearing from a “reliable source” that both Michael Douglas and Shia LaBeouf will be joined by Arnold Schwarzenegger in Wall Street: Glass on Glass on Glass.

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Source: Fidelity Labs (1), (2)

OK Glass, pew pew pew: developer creates alien shooter for Google Glass

OK Glass, pew pew pew developer creates alien shooter for Glass

Developers (or should we say “Explorers”) are coming up with all sorts of nifty ideas for Google Glass, and games are certainly getting their fair share of attention. Admittedly, we haven’t seen anything quite like Psyclops, an alien shooter that’s currently in the works by developer Sean McCracken. The premise of the game isn’t new — alien ships are attacking our home planet and it’s our sworn duty to protect Earth by blowing them up — but the method is: use Glass as your viewfinder, line the baddies up with the center of the display and hold for a moment to lock your position and fire. Sean thinks of the game as a “3D Space Invaders mixed with Missile Command,” which sounds like a perfect mashup. There’s no word on when fellow Glass users will be able to enjoy the title, but you’ll find video evidence of its existence below. Just don’t expect Lt. Commander Data to save you with his flashlight when you get hooked.

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Via: GigaOm

Source: Google Plus (Kenji Castro)

OpenGlass uses Google Glass to identify objects for the visually impaired (video)

OpenGlass uses Google Glass to help visually impared identify their world video

Dapper Vision’s OpenGlass project sees Google Glass’ camera as useful for more than just hands-free pictures — it’s a tool for interpreting the world around us. To show that potential, the two-person group has tested two of its Glass apps with visually impaired wearers. The first, Question-Answer, lets the poor-sighted ask both Mechanical Turk and Twitter for help in identifying objects. Memento, in turn, automatically recites notes when the user looks at a recognizable scene; it can warn users about dangerous equipment, for example. Dapper Vision tells us that the OpenGlass apps will stay in limited testing until Google lets developers offer Glassware to the general public, but the company isn’t sitting still in the meantime. It’s devising a way to reward Question-Answer contributors with BitCoins, and it will demonstrate new Glass-based augmented reality software next week.

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Source: OpenGlass

Google taps film students with Glass Creative Collective

Google taps film students with Glass Creative Collective

Glass hasn’t exactly been revered for its brilliant image quality, but that’s not stopping Google from making a push among budding filmmakers. The Glass Creative Collective, a partnership with film and design schools, is intended to familiarize students at a handful of institutions with the video-capture wearable. Several colleges, including the Rhode Island School of Design, UCLA and the University of Southern California are on board — students will reportedly begin exploring the device as a filmmaking tool beginning this fall. Glass could be a fit for documentary filmmaking, and for capturing point-of-view footage, of course, but performance limitations would likely prevent it from taking on a starring role in any production. We’re a bit skeptical that the Creative Collective will be a booming success, but Google’s promised to circle back with results once the program gets off the ground.

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Via: CNET

Source: Google Glass (Google+)

UK government considering fines for drivers wearing Google Glass

UK government considering fines for drivers wearing Google Glass

Wondering what West Virginia and Britain have in common? This. After hearing that a bill in WV would outlaw Google Glass for motorists in the state, a new report from Stuff suggests that the United Kingdom is considering something comparable. A Department for Transport spokesperson was quoted as saying the following:

“We are aware of the impending rollout of Google Glass and are in discussion with the Police to ensure that individuals do not use this technology while driving. It is important that drivers give their full attention to the road when they are behind the wheel and do not behave in a way that stops them from observing what is happening on the road.”

He went on to affirm that a range of penalties already exist in order to punish drivers who aren’t “paying proper attention to the road,” and while a law has yet to be passed targetting Glass specifically, it certainly sounds as if that type of modification is on the table. Silver lining? North Korea has yet to issue a similarly depressing condemnation of the headset.

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Via: Cult of Android

Source: Stuff

Google tells some Glass Explorers to invite a friend

Google tells some Glass Explorers to invite a friend

Mountain View’s kept itself as the gatekeeper for Google Glass with dev signups at I/O and a social media contest, but now it’s letting some users spread the wearable computing love. Google+ is lighting up with reports that Glass Explorers are receiving emails from Page and Co. allowing them to invite a friend to snag a device by joining the program. In order to be eligible, invitees must be a US resident, at least 18 years of age, and willing to pick up the hardware in San Francisco, New York or Los Angeles. Google’s told us that a “small subset of Explorers” have received the message in its continuing effort to expand the affair. Earlier today, the search giant announced that it cast a wider net for Explorers by enlisting five film schools to suss out how the contraption can be used for everything from character development to production. Head past the break for the full list of institutions.

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Via: The Next Web

Source: Marketing Land, Zagg

Mercedes-Benz imagines seamless door-to-door directions with Google Glass

Despite apps that let a few lucky Glass owners control their Nest thermostat or unlock that Tesla Model S, one of the futuristic headgear’s most practical applications is still just the default turn-by-turn directions that come courtesy of Google. The R&D department over at Mercedes-Benz realizes that as well, but wants to take it a step further. According to a report in the Silicon Valley Business Journal, the automotive company is working on a Google Glass project that combines both pedestrian and automotive directions to take a user literally from door to door. MBRDNA President and CEO Johann Jungwirth told the publication that he wants Glass to seamlessly transition between walking and in-car navigation. Of course, not everyone has access to the pricey wearable just yet, so the project won’t likely see real-world application any time soon. In the meantime, Mercedes does have a few more down-to-earth solutions for the gadgets you might already have.

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Source: Silicon Valley Business Journal

Google buys 6.3 percent stake in Google Glass display manufacturer Himax

Google buys 63 percent stake in Google Glass display manufacturer

If the name “Himax” prompted you to shrug, then you’re not alone, but it’s the latest company to receive a cash injection from Eric Schmidt’s checking account. The Taiwanese semiconductor firm is selling Google a 6.3 percent stake in Himax Display Technologies, a subsidiary that’s most famous for making the liquid-crystal on silicon chips used to drive Google Glass‘ head-mounted display. The cash will be used to expand capacity at the manufacturer, which already counts Intel as an investor — and if Google likes what it sees, the search giant has an option to buy a further 8.5 percent worth of stock within the next calendar year. It’s probably too early to hope that the project will help bring the price of future Glass headsets down, but we’re going to, so there.

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Via: Reuters

The origin of ‘OK, Glass,’ as told by Google’s Amanda Rosenberg

“OK, Glass.” It’s a phrase that’s become synonymous with Google’s trailblazing wearable tech, and with good reason. As the headset’s hotword, it must be uttered by the user (with varying levels of self-consciousness) to activate Glass’ menu. Amanda Rosenberg, the Product Marketing Manager for Project Glass, took to her Google+ page today to share both the phrase’s history and a few scrapped ideas. During dinner with Mat Balez, the Glass Project Manager, Rosenberg learned that the product required a simple, culturally resonant term that would let Glass know that it was go-time. Accompanied by what we can only assume was a choir of angels singing, Rosenberg realized that “OK, Glass” would be both functional and subtle enough to not embarrass users in public. It’s an interesting anecdote, which you can read in full at the source link, but we have to admit . . . we’re kind of sad “Go go, Glass” was never given a chance.

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Source: Amanda Rosenberg (Google+)

Google Glass may get Play Store access soon

Third-party apps have begun trickling out for Glass, but if Google expects thousands of add-ons to make their way to the public, it’s going to need a searchable database of available downloads. And that structure could very well come in the form of a Glass-optimized Play Store. Android and Me noticed a “Google Glass 1” entry pop up in the device field following Mountain View’s Play refresh that hit the web last night. It’s not possible to push apps directly to the wearable at the moment — the Glass option is not currently live — but it’s entirely possible that the device could be selectable in the near future. Take a closer look in the screenshot at the source link below.

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Source: Android and Me