First, put on your Memory Glasses that "have a tiny television screen embedded into one of the lenses and are hooked up to a PDA. The PDA can be programmed to send messages or images to the screen. Each prompt is geared to jog the wearer's memory--whether it is an image of a soccer ball, the day's calendar or the name of the guy who just said hello. And all of these messages are flashed before the eye at 1/180 of a second, so the wearer isn't even conscious that they have been sent." [Source]
Next, check that "to do" list in your Memory Glasses--you'll see them there just out of the corner of your eye. It reminds you to "Use my Camera Glasses today." [You'd have forgotten if you hadn't had your Memory Glasses.] Yes, you'll have to change glasses, but it's worth it, since your Camera Glasses will help you capture all the important moments of your life, thanks to HP.
"Casual capture is HP's term for a method of taking snapshots that involves a minimum of effort on the part of the photographer. Ideally, the consumer could don an always-on, wearable camera, visit an event such as a party, and afterwards find that the camera had automatically selected and cropped the most memorable images. Researchers admit that this is probably an impossible goal, but are working on a more limited, and possibly more realistic, version of the technology. But for now, the method involves a device that would continuously record images; and when something memorable happens, the user would make an indication of some kind, by saying a word or pressing a button. The camera technology would then zoom in and, using complex pattern-recognition technology, select what appeared to be the best images, and appropriately adjust and crop them." [Source]
Then, when you're feeling overwhelmed with all the video and all the choices, it may just be time for your Drinking Glasses. These glasses have a microchip and a coil in the base of each glass that interacts with a coating on the surface of the vessel to work out how full it is and then signal this information to a base station. When you're at the bottom, the waitrons [but not the spouce] come running.
As far as I'm concerned, these may be the only glasses I'll ever need.


















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