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Tag: Babak Parviz

  • Google Deals With Novartis To Further Develop Its Smart Contact Lenses

    Earlier this year, Google announced its smart contact lenses aimed at helping diabetics keep glucose levels under control. The company has now reportedly found a partner to to make them.

    Reuters is reporting that Google has struck a deal with Novartis to develop the contact lenses and better compete in the blood-sugar tracking market. But they’re not stopping there. According to the report, Novartis will also aim to treat presbyopia, a condition in which eye focus diminishes with age.

    Also as part of the deal, the report says, Novartis’ Alcon eyecare unit will continue to develop and commercialize Google’s contact lens technologies.

    The project’s co-founders Brian Otis and Babak Parviz had this to say about the project back in January:

    Over the years, many scientists have investigated various body fluids—such as tears—in the hopes of finding an easier way for people to track their glucose levels. But as you can imagine, tears are hard to collect and study. At Google[x], we wondered if miniaturized electronics—think: chips and sensors so small they look like bits of glitter, and an antenna thinner than a human hair—might be a way to crack the mystery of tear glucose and measure it with greater accuracy.

    We’re now testing a smart contact lens that’s built to measure glucose levels in tears using a tiny wireless chip and miniaturized glucose sensor that are embedded between two layers of soft contact lens material. We’re testing prototypes that can generate a reading once per second. We’re also investigating the potential for this to serve as an early warning for the wearer, so we’re exploring integrating tiny LED lights that could light up to indicate that glucose levels have crossed above or below certain thresholds. It’s still early days for this technology, but we’ve completed multiple clinical research studies which are helping to refine our prototype. We hope this could someday lead to a new way for people with diabetes to manage their disease.

    Parviz’s vision for what smart contact lenses can do stretches far beyond the applications mentioned above. He gave a talk a couple years ago about what the technology might one day be able to accomplish, and we’re talking some pretty cool, futuristic stuff. Ideas mentioned include: gaming, virtual reality, augmented reality, interfacing with mobile, supervision, night vision, and multi-focus.

    Keep in mind, Parviz is the main guy behind Google Glass. He also just happened to jump ships to Amazon.

    Terms of Google’s deal with Novartis were not disclosed.

    Image via Google

  • Google Glass Founder Is Heading to Amazon

    Babak Parviz, the guy who once headed up Google’s experimental wing Google X and gave us Google Glass, was jumped over to Amazon.

    Parviz made a bit of a cryptic announcement on Google+, simply posting the Amazon logo and saying “status: super excited.”

    If you take at look at his profile, however, Parviz confirms he has taken a position at Amazon.

    The optics whiz has this to say:

    “I dig making (really) small things, new computing and communication tools, high-tech with social impact, and biotech and usually hang out in the Silicon Valley or Seattle. Having worked at companies ranging from tiny start-ups to huge corporations and universities in Europe and the US, I have found each one to be fun in its own unique way. I founded and led a few efforts at Google (among them, Google Glass and Google Contact Lenses are public so far 🙂 prior to moving to Amazon and work on a few other things now…”

    It’s still unclear what Parviz will be working on at Amazon, but it’s a safe bet that it’ll have something to do with augmented reality.

    Parviz was responsible for both Google Glass and Google’s smart contact lenses effort.

    Parviz’s talent is in the tech, so it wasn’t that much of a surprise that he stepped aside in May and allowed fashion marketing whiz Ivy Ross to lead the Google Glass team. And as Google Glass Almanac points out, Parviz hasn’t really been super involved with Glass for some time now:

    As such, this move can be seen as a blow to Google Glass – a founder jumping ship – but more realistically it’s just an instance of moving on when the time was right.

    Image via Solve for X, YouTube

  • Google Glass Was Made For Search

    Google Glass Was Made For Search

    Babak Parviz, known as the creator of Google Glass, who led the project until Google replaced him with Ivy Ross recently, spoke at the Wearable Technologies Conference this week. He told attendees that Glass is only one answer to what the next mobile platform could be, following smartphones and tablets.

    Remember, this is the guy who talked about some pretty amazing ideas for contact lenses, and is already working on Google’s contact lens project for diabetics.

    CNET recaps some of the things he talked about. One noteworthy item is that search was a driving factor behind Google developing the device in the first place:

    One of the main drivers for developing the device was being able to find information almost instantaneously. A Google search will give someone a reasonable answer to almost any question in about 10 seconds, he said. The goal for Glass was to “significantly shorten that time.” “Can we make it three seconds? One second? A fraction of a second?” he said.

    It shouldn’t come as much of a surprise that search would be the main driver of this project, given that this is still how Google makes the bulk of its money.

    It’s still very early days for Glass, but those early parodies of the device’s concept video that showed viewers being overrun by ads isn’t sounding very far-fetched (if it ever was).

    Image via YouTube

  • Google Working On Voice Commands, Head Gestures & Phone Calls For Glass

    IEEE Spectrum ran a very interesting interview with Google Glass head Babak Parviz, who talked a little about some of the features Google has been working on for the highly anticipated device.

    We knew Google was essentially working on a way to see the world through your eyes. Sergey Brin posted a Google+ update last year talking about how Glass was automatically taking a picture every 10 seconds “without any distraction or disruption”. One could imagine how this combined with an Instant Upload-like feature would pretty much equate to letting Google see through your eyes.

    Parviz confirmed this mentality in the interview, saying, “Right now, we don’t have any devices that are specifically engineered to connect to others using images or video. So we wanted to have a device that would see the world through your eyes and allow you to share that view with other people.”

    He also said that the current version of Glass has a touchpad that lets you change things on the device (not sure how that would work with contacts), that Google has been experimenting with voice commands and head gestures for it, and that they’re working on getting it to accept phone calls. This is all stuff you would probably expect it to be capable of, but it’s nice to hear it actually being discussed.

    Parviz also indicated that Google will rely in part on developers to help figure out what the platform is really able to do (much as developers have done with smartphones and tablets).

    Despite the amusing parody videos to the contrary, Parviz says Google has no plans for advertising on the device “at the moment”. This shouldn’t really come as much of a surprise. Google doen’t really even have ads on Google+ yet. It’s probably wise to get people using it first. Still, one can only imagine that the ads would come in the potential apps – again, much as they do on smartphones and tablets.

    The plan is still for Google to ship Glass to developers early this year. It remains to be seen how long it will be before consumers can get their hands on it. Hopefully by then, Google will have the battery problem solved. According to Parviz, the hope is that they’ll be able to have one powerful enough to last a whole day, even with the use of powerful apps.

    Be sure to read the full interview. He had plenty more to say.