Though most of the attention surrounding the race to commercialize connected eyewear has focused on Google Glass, a lesser known player has been quietly toiling away. At CES this week, Washington-based company Innovega will be showcasing its first fully-functioning prototypes of iOptik, an augmented reality system which projects a heads-up display onto contact lenses.
We first learned of Innovega's vision for augmented reality back in 2012 when the company received a contract from DARPA to develop the iOptik prototype for the battlefield. Though it was clear that the technology could serve many uses outside of the military, the company's progress in gearing it towards mainstream applications has caught our attention once again.
Before we get too excited, the iOptik system does not offer a solution for potential stigma attached to the less-than-discreet Google Glass, as it too requires a pair of glasses to function. Acting as a micro-display, the glasses project a picture onto the contact lens, which works as a filter to separate the real-world from the digital environment and then interlaces them into the one image.
According to the company, the technology enables users to focus on objects right in front of their eyes and in the distance simultaneously, offering an alternative solution to traditional near-eye displays which create the illusion of an object in the distance so as not to hinder regular vision.
Embedded in the contact lenses are micro-components that enable the user to focus on near-eye images. Light projected by the display (glasses) passes through the center of the pupil and then works with the eye's regular optics to focus the display on the retina, while light from the real-life environment reaches the retina via an outer filter. This creates two separate images on the retina which are then superimposed to create one integrated image, or augmented reality.
At present, iOptik is not for sale as it still requires clearance from the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) in the US. Innovega CEO Stephen Wiley told CNET that this application may come in late 2014 or early 2015, with the company already in talks with potential business partners to look at refining the product for the consumer market.
"We've talked to all of them, from Oakleys to the Lenovos and Electronic Arts," he said. "One sees it as electronic sunglasses. Another sees it as what comes after the tablet."
You can get an idea of Innovega's vision for iOptik and the future of augmented reality in the video below.
Source: Innovega
What is the resolution?
How does it achieve head/eye tracking to correctly overlay visuals?
Too many unanswered questions for this to be a trusted article or even a trusted company, nothing was answered and nothing was ACTUALLY demonstrated.
Bryan is right that once these technologies are joined up and speaking to our car radar/IR cameras etc they have the potential to improve safety - from the simple like shifting sat-nav directions and in-car dials onto the field of view, reducing the need to look anywhere but on the road ahead to the advanced like giving warning of accidents ahead, flagging up of obstacles and hazards at night etc.
Would like to see a bit more about their proposed interface to these devices - certainly one is NOT going to go poking or clicking their eyeball!