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Technical Limitations to Wearable Eyeglass Monitors? 9

fprintf asks: "What is the technical limitation that is holding up wearable eyeglass monitors? It would seem to me that we have had miniature color viewfinders on Camcorders for quite some time, and with LCDs getting ever cheaper, what am I missing? I know there is quite a bit of interest in head and finger mounted pointing devices, but to me getting rid of that big monitor and strapping on a headset w/ the possible 3D implications would be wonderful. How about a GUI on an OS that supports Width and Height, but also depth?" It would be interesting to know how far wearable display technology has progressed in the past couple of years. Replacing the traditional goggles with (something closer to) a pair of eyeglasses will be a pleasant milestone for those Wearable Computing community.
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Technical Limitations to Wearable Eyeglass Monitors?

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  • by Christopher Thomas ( 11717 ) on Friday March 30, 2001 @11:15AM (#326724)
    Short version: There's nothing fundamental, there just isn't enough demand to drive the price down (standard chicken-and-egg problem).

    Long version is that there are a few problems (mostly solvable):

    • Diffraction will limit your resolution.

      You're projecting the image through a very small aperture. This causes any ray passing through the aperture to "fuzz out" over a certain angular range (as determiend by the aperture size and the wavelength of the light used). The limit is still a few thousand pixels wide for a reasonable monitor size and distance, but it's still a limit.

    • Making small, hi-res LCDs is very expensive.

      One of the main problems with LCD manufacture is that it takes a very clean environment. The finer the resolution of the LCD, the cleaner a clean room you need, because smaller grains of dust will still interfere with manufacture. If you want to put a tiny 1280x1024 LCD into a pair of glasses, that LCD will be many times more expensive than a screen-sized 1280x1024 LCD. This is one of the reasons why glasses-based displays have poor resolution (coarser resolution means cheaper screens).

      This applies to most types of flat-panel display, not just LCDs.

    • Ergonomics and convenience.
      Head-mounted displays aren't horrible ergonomically, but they aren't wonderful either. In their current incarnation, they're clumsier to use than a stationary monitor, and they're harder to do work on due to the lower resolution. There really isn't much of a reason (at present) to use a wearable display instead of an ordinary flat-panel display with your notebook or desktop.

      The proponents of wearable computing argue that wearable computers (with displays) will be a new computing niche, but there doesn't seem to be enough demand (yet) to drive the prices down. This too is probably a convenience issue (would you really *want* to try to answer email while jogging, or in the press of rush-hour passengers while standing in a bus or train? If you're sitting down, you can use your laptop or palmtop.).



    I'll be the first to cheer when affordable, high-resolution wearable displays reach the market, but they'll have to fight pricier technology and mediocre demand to do it.
  • no one wants to look like an evil saiyan, well, taco might, and i sure wouldn't mind.

    others might object tho.
  • Building the optics to project the lcd image so that it appears to fill your field of view, and come from a distance of 5m is probably not too easy

    Nor is it cheap - it can be done, look into the LEEP optics set. I am not even sure if you can still buy these optics, but the company that made them (LEEP?) sold them in the early 90's or so (I probably have a bit of info on all this at my web site - hit the link), for a VERY large sum of money ($15K? Maybe it was less, I am sure it was over $10K, though). Mind you - this was just the glass optics - you still had to provide the imaging system, and distortion system (ie, the optics distorted the image in a certain manner, you had to set your imaging system to distort it in the opposite manner, either using software or hardware, so that the image looked correct when viewed through the optics). IIRC, one company that used the optics was FAKESpace, with their BOOM system.

    Also, I remember an article in an old copy (volume 14 no 3?) of Telepresence, and expensive academic publication/magazine put out by MIT press (managed to grab a couple at a local bookstore - nice mags) that had an artical detailing building your own optic system for an HMD...

    Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
  • Didn't some company create a set of glasses that actually uses low intensity lasers to paint the image directly onto your retina?
    ------------start sig--------------------
  • by eellis ( 112890 ) on Friday March 30, 2001 @09:22AM (#326728)
    Firstly, the weight issue is probably going to be tough.

    Secondly, it's well known that if you don't have the two displays accurately aligned with your eyes, this can cause eye strain and headaches (this is why an optician needs to measure the distance between your eyes).

    Finally, your eyes are most comfortable focussing at their "far point" - which should be at "infinity" - for most people, 5m or so is fine. Building the optics to project the lcd image so that it appears to fill your field of view, and come from a distance of 5m is probably not too easy (haven't really thought about it too much though). Again, any optics is going to add weight.

  • for most people, 5m or so is fine.

    Wow. I am sitting waaaaaaaaaaay too close to my monitor. I might need to upgrade to 21" to boot....

  • ... like burning out your retinas with overdoing the power is a negative thing too...


    "Titanic was 3hr and 17min long. They could have lost 3hr and 17min from that."
  • MicroOptical displays are in one lens only. The company says that glasses with displays in both lenses can be made, but that they don't plan to make them. I'd go a little nuts if I could only look at my monitor with my left eye... The "Invisible Monitor" model looks most like an ordinary pair of glasses, but is low-resolution (320x240) color.

I think there's a world market for about five computers. -- attr. Thomas J. Watson (Chairman of the Board, IBM), 1943

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