You Tell Us: Video Glasses for the Spy in All
of Us
By Willie D Jones
First Published January 2008
Image: Lumus
|
Admit it. You’ve always wanted a pair of spy glasses
like the ones Ethan Hunt of the Mission:
Impossible movies uses to covertly scan the
dossier on a master criminal who has to be stopped at
all costs. Though your uses for such a device—checking
e-mail, enjoying a movie or video game, or even
reviewing sensitive company documents containing
personal information—aren’t activities in which life and
death hang in the balance, a new, ultrathin head-up
display will let you view your Microsoft Word documents
or situation comedies the way a spy would: as an image
that appears to be a 60-inch TV screen situated three
meters away.
Lumus-Optical, a Rehovot, Israel–based company that
specializes in wearable displays, has developed a pair
of eyeglasses that look like ordinary designer eyewear
but have postage-stamp-size projectors mounted right
where the arms meet the outside edges of the
3-millimeter-thick lenses. Lumus says the wearable
display—for which it has yet to set a commercial release
date or provide pricing information—can get away with
such a compact arrangement while providing a 70-degree
field of view because of the company’s patented
Light-Guide Optical Element, or LOE, technology (the
best conventional optics require 16-mm-thick lenses in
order to deliver a 20-degree field of view).
Images from the LCD or LED projectors on the display’s
arms are beamed onto a series of partially reflecting
angled facets within the lenses, which act as light
guides. The guides then deliver the images to a set of
proprietary flat, transparent optical substrates also
embedded in the lenses. These substrates’ partial
reflectivity allows the display’s wearer to alternate
instantly between watching the image set into the lenses
and paying attention to the real world.
Two problems: the
company literature describing the video
eyeglasses says they can be powered by an ac power
supply or two AA batteries. But pictures of a beautiful
fashion model sporting the product don’t give any
indication of where the batteries would slide into the
slender frames. And it’s difficult to express just how
nutty it would be to tether a display meant for
on-the-go use to a power outlet. Any battery tiny enough
to fit inside or onto the glasses’ Micro-Display Pods
without protruding isn’t a battery that would run the
device for very long. And how can you market a device as
a way to view movies when it doesn’t include earphones?
If the Impossible Missions Force delivered Ethan Hunt’s
assignment on a pair of these video glasses, how would
he know how long he had to dispose of them before they self-destructed?