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Google Glass: Apple Granted Patent for Head-Mounted Display

58 pointsby saket123almost 13 years ago

10 comments

_djo_almost 13 years ago
This is poor from Wired, there's nothing in this patent that would seem to represent a threat to Google Glass. After all, this is not in any way a patent on Head-Mounted Displays as a concept, as those have been in use in militaries since the 1980s, which Apple's patent references.<p>The patent actually refers to an apparently novel method of handling peripheral vision in stereoscopic HMDs, in order to remove the 'tunnel' or 'box' effect and increase the comfort of wearing HMDs for a long period of time. At present this is something which no existing stereoscopic HMD (or indeed, Google Glass) handles to my knowledge.<p>It's also worth noting that existing stereoscopic HMDs, while impressive, have been known to cause discomfort such as headaches in some people when worn for more than a few hours.<p>So there doesn't appear to be any link to Project Glass which, it should be noted, has also been patented by Google. This is just linkbait.
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m_eimanalmost 13 years ago
The actual problem that the patent is intended to solve, for those who'd rather comment than RTFA:<p>"A problem with HMDs, primarily HMDs that are not of the see-through kind, is that the image on the display in front of each eye fills the central but not the peripheral field of view of the user. Consequently, the visual experience is similar to looking into a box or tunnel having a small screen at a distance. Peripheral vision is good at detecting motion and as a result, occluded peripheral vision in HMDs can cause a user to experience motion sickness symptoms after some time. Thus, whereas existing HMDs may work well for their intended purposes for short periods of time, there is a continuing need for improved HMDs that provide enhanced long-time visual experience for the user."
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treelovinhippiealmost 13 years ago
This is very awesome. I think Apple has the capability of kickstarting the HUD market and taking it mainstream better than Google can. Hopefully Apple can produce a product that looks like regular sunglasses that the mainstream would consider wearing daily. The biggest problem with Google Glass is that only geeks will wear them and they'll never be considered 'cool' until they can miniaturize the tech to fit into normal frames.
Semaphoralmost 13 years ago
The fact that wired chose to link this to Google glass (which it only is in the way that they deal with video/pictures in a head-mounted-way) seems to confuse a lot of prople who CBA to read the article -.-
Tichyalmost 13 years ago
Maybe what Apple really is doing is secretly undermining patent law. Perhaps there is a master plan behind it, and one day, <i>bang</i>, Apple will revolutionize the patent industry and make it user friendly.
smogzeralmost 13 years ago
It's just one patent in a field that has been producing patents for a long time. Take the example of Microvision that is on the top 20 of patent receivers in America and has been doing HUD for the military for a long time. They also have done research for projection directly on the eye retina, i guess that's hard to top.
jeffoolalmost 13 years ago
No one can expect this to stand. A cursory glance at the Wiki gave me "In 2005, the Liteye HMD was introduced for ground combat troops as a rugged, waterproof lightweight display that clips into a standard US PVS-14 military helmet mount." That's actually on the field a year before Apple even applied for this patent.
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jarinalmost 13 years ago
I have hope both that Apple is secretly working on an amazing set of augmented reality glasses and that the patent will be somehow overturned.
rsanchez1almost 13 years ago
If Apple turns around and sues Google using this patent, I think it will be time to unplug completely and join the people in the mountains looking to escape EM radiation.<p>And really, they had to add CRT displays to the patent? Seriously Apple, CRT? Did Apple figure out a magical new way of getting "retina" resolution with a millimeter-long tube that can somehow feed the entire field-of-vision of the person wearing it? Come on.
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fpgeekalmost 13 years ago
It looks like Google should have spent a little less money on skydivers and a little more on lawyers :(