A successor to Google Glass is in the works — and this time it’s focused on language translation.
On Wednesday, Google debuted a new pair of smart glasses the company has been working on. The prototype product has been designed to transcribe, translate and then display what someone is speaking over the lenses, all in real-time.
“What we’re working on is technology that enables us to break down language barriers,” said Eddie Chun, Google director of product management, in a video about the prototype.
The device essentially uses Google Translate to churn out translated subtitles. Google also showed a deaf person could use the smart glasses as well to help them understand others who haven’t learned sign language.
The company debuted a video of the prototype at Google I/O while talking up its attempts to explore augmented reality devices. Google CEO Sundar Pichai described the technology as a new frontier in computing.
“These AR capabilities are already useful on phones and the magic will really come alive when you can use them in the real world without the technology getting in the way,” he wrote in a blog post.
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However, Google didn’t reveal much else about the product, including its name, the specs, or how the subtitles exactly look over the lenses. Instead, the video of the prototype merely provided a “simulated” point of view of the experience.
Still, the device signals Google has some big plans for the smart glasses space. The original Google Glass was officially introduced back in 2012 with much fanfare, but interest eventually fizzled out due to a myriad of issues, including its $1,500 high price. The company has since pivoted to selling a Google Glass product meant for enterprises.
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