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Bionic Contact Lens May Lead to Overlay Displays
Posted by
Zonk
on Thu Jan 17, 2008 02:41 PM
from the i-can-has-that-now dept.
from the i-can-has-that-now dept.
pfman writes "A University of Washington researcher has developed a
contact lens including circuitry and a matrix of LEDs. Although not yet a working prototype, this may be a foundation for terminator/robocop style overlay displays in which computer graphics could be superimposed on your normal vision. 'Building the lenses was a challenge because materials that are safe for use in the body, such as the flexible organic materials used in contact lenses, are delicate. Manufacturing electrical circuits, however, involves inorganic materials, scorching temperatures and toxic chemicals. Researchers built the circuits from layers of metal only a few nanometers thick, about one thousandth the width of a human hair, and constructed light-emitting diodes one third of a millimeter across.'" Kotaku notes that this has some obvious gaming implications.
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Um, what? (Score:2, Insightful)
You only have receptor density for reading dead center in your eye. You can't put Terminator-style displays of to the side of your FOV, because you can only see motion and coarse detail off dead center.
Re:Um, what? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Um, what? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Um, what? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Um, what? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Um, what? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Where it's best to put the data depends on what kind of data it is. If it's something you only need to be peripherally aware of (graphics, rather than text, presumably), it could be quite good off to the side. Having overlays in the middle of
Re:Um, what? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Um, what? (Score:4, Informative)
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Focus (Score:2)
Do the Math (Score:4, Interesting)
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Go ahead, try it! You simply cannot focus that close to your eye.
Re:Do the Math (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Do the Math (Score:5, Insightful)
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Holography is required (Score:3, Informative)
You can't focus on something that close (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:You can't focus on something that close (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:You can't focus on something that close (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:You can't focus on something that close (Score:5, Interesting)
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Two Questions: (Score:4, Insightful)
Second: It's my understanding that human vision requires continuous eye motion to maintain visual perception. Try holding your eyeball still by (gently) applying finger pressure to it through your eyelid. You'll notice after a few seconds that your field vision slowly shrinks into nothing. If an image moves in perfect sync with your eyeball, isn't your brain likely to stop seeing it after a short time?
Re: (Score:2)
by the picture of the lens I would say wires.
There's little pads big enough to glue/solder wire to.
Doesn't sound too comfortable but the rabbit didn't complain...
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
RE: First: How are they envisioning powering a device like this?
by the picture of the lens I would say wires.
Yes, and judging from the picture: multiple wires. But why, really? Wouldn't a single wire be enough? Place a contact pad elsewhere on the body, or use a conductive housing for the device connected to that single wire, and have it touch the body directly. That way you'd have the wire, and use the body/eyeball as return path for an electric current. Then superimpose a high frequency signal for data transmission.
Other options:
Can't it be just on sunglasses? (Score:5, Insightful)
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They may be fine most of the time, but you still have the risk of possible infection or abrasion. They can avoid those problems entirely by using glasses or another form of media which doesn't directly touch your eyes. Don't get me wrong, this is a cool idea, but I'm not particularly hot about the idea of contact lenses (I don't wear/need glasses btw.), much less contact lenses that will hold an electrical charge.
I think this will be moot in the semi-near future anyway. With the work they're doing with d
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Speak for yourself! I'm waiting for the day I can plug my ear into the USB port of my computer and download pr0n straight to my brain.
yuck! (Score:4, Interesting)
While I have no expertise in the field, I've always assumed that we'd first see this with glasses. The classic HUD on aircraft is an image projected onto glass in the pilot's line of sight. I figured we'd see this when we either had a) some sort of transparent material with a tiny lcd grid so that wireframe graphics could be overlaid on the real world objects or b) VR goggles scaled down to the size of comfortable glasses with the world projected inside with the overlays on top.
The one other variant I could think of for a projector technology would be glasses with a tiny low-power laser tracking the retina and beaming photons into it.
Thinking about VR, though, it does make you wonder about the interrogation potential for completely controlling someone's environment. If you thought the Ministry was scary in 1984, just imagine the interrogator controlling your entire reality. There was actually a surprisingly good TNG episode where Riker was put through VR interrogation so that he would reveal something important. Each of those constructed realities seemed entirely convincing at first but as he started to find flaws, the reality would shatter and be replaced by something new. Scary.
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Well, I guess no super bionic capabilities for you!
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does it affect karma (Score:2)
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well.... (Score:2)
Don't rabbits have good eyes anyway? They seem to be eating carrots all the time.
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"Rainbows End" FTW! (Score:2)
Solar cells? (Score:2, Funny)
"Please stare into laser with remaining eye to recharge lens."
It's all fun and games... (Score:2)
circuits from layers of metal only a few nanometers thick
Hmm... A lens containing microscopic pieces of metal next to my cornea.
What could go wrong?
Blink? (Score:2)
Out of focus (Score:5, Insightful)
If it were an array of lasers with tight beams, then it could work, but you can't make small lasers produce tight beams(due to the diffraction limit) without additional optics that couldn't fit under the eyelid.
Assuming the researchers aren't total morons... (Score:3, Insightful)
One possibility would be that the display would use tiny lasers, to project very narrow beams of light at just a small group of receptors on the retina.
Different eye shapes/sizes would seem to make that difficult, but there's probably some way to do it, even if it means having to have "prescription" displays that match your eyes.
I can see it now.... the Goatse virus (Score:4, Funny)
Issues (Score:3, Interesting)
But maybe not. All it really has to do is put incredibly small pixels there to colour (or obscure) the light from a given point. As long as pixels don't overlap too much (when out of focus), it could work.
I will be interesting to see how this develops further.
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I don't look forward to the amount of burned and scared cleavage this new technology will bring.