July 10, 2014
Google Glass has been hacked with the goal that it might be controlled by brainwaves.
By joining together the shrewd glasses with an electroencephalography (EEG) headset, the product makes it conceivable to take a picture without moving a muscle.
London-based start-up This Place said the tech could be used in high-weight without hands circumstances -, for example, throughout surgery.
It has discharged the Mindrdr programming for nothing with the expectation that designers will adjust it for different employments.
Google made it clear that it doesn't help the application.
"Google Glass cannot read your mind," a representative told the BBC.
"This particular application seems to work through a separate piece of kit which you attach to Glass.
"We have not reviewed, nor approved, the app so it won't be available in the Glass app store."
Google dispatched Glass in the UK a month ago.
The representative included: "Of course, we are always interested in hearing about new applications of Glass and we've already seen some great research from a variety of medical fields from surgery to Parkinson's."
Fixation concentration
An EEG headset could be utilized to measure when certain parts of the mind demonstrate a more prominent level of action.
For this situation, the Mindrdr programming screens when the wearer takes part in elevated amounts of focus.
Inside Google Glass' "screen" - a little window that shows up in the corner of the wearer's correct eye - a white even line is indicated.
As a client focuses, the white line ascends the screen. When it achieves the top, a picture is taken utilizing Glass' inbuilt Polaroid.
Google Glass has been hacked with the goal that it might be controlled by brainwaves.
By joining together the shrewd glasses with an electroencephalography (EEG) headset, the product makes it conceivable to take a picture without moving a muscle.
London-based start-up This Place said the tech could be used in high-weight without hands circumstances -, for example, throughout surgery.
It has discharged the Mindrdr programming for nothing with the expectation that designers will adjust it for different employments.
Google made it clear that it doesn't help the application.
"Google Glass cannot read your mind," a representative told the BBC.
"This particular application seems to work through a separate piece of kit which you attach to Glass.
"We have not reviewed, nor approved, the app so it won't be available in the Glass app store."
Google dispatched Glass in the UK a month ago.
The representative included: "Of course, we are always interested in hearing about new applications of Glass and we've already seen some great research from a variety of medical fields from surgery to Parkinson's."
Fixation concentration
An EEG headset could be utilized to measure when certain parts of the mind demonstrate a more prominent level of action.
For this situation, the Mindrdr programming screens when the wearer takes part in elevated amounts of focus.
Inside Google Glass' "screen" - a little window that shows up in the corner of the wearer's correct eye - a white even line is indicated.
As a client focuses, the white line ascends the screen. When it achieves the top, a picture is taken utilizing Glass' inbuilt Polaroid.
read more at BBc.co.uk