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The Latest Wearing Your Computer
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Web, take photographs or video, ask for directions, send and receive e-mails, voicemails, texts and other Web-based data. The display appears in the upper right corner of the wearer’s field of view, thus allowing the user to remain digitally connected without staring at a smartphone or tablet. While some are aghast at this intimate level of computer engagement, pundits who have experienced Google Glass call it revolutionary, with the potential to be as transformative as the smartphone. Like it or not, the future just keeps arriving, laden with technology that used to be little more than special effects in movies like “The Terminator” or “Minority Report.” Wearable computers come in eyeglasses, ski goggles, wristwatches, wristbands, smart badges, clothing with imbedded microchips, and clip-on cameras. The implication is clear: These sensor-laden devices (SLDs) are set to drive the next phase of growth
in computing and will likely transform how consumers live and work, not unlike the smartphone and the tablet have done over the past decade. Sarah Rotman Epps, who tracks wearable computing for Forrester Research, said the inquiries about wearables from Forrester’s client corporations – which include large banks, credit card companies and retailers – had “accelerated significantly” in recent months. “This is definitely top of mind,” Rotman Epps said. “Executives in every industry have seen the pattern before. A new type of technology comes out and totally disrupts their business. They want to stay ahead of where the technology is going. And this has the potential to disrupt media, retail, finance, everything. So it’s not too early for executives from every industry to start paying attention to this.” Attention is indeed being paid, and when Google Glass hits the market,
Device-Free Management : 13 Google Glass sold out even before the first pair was shipped.
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b r i e f i n g s o n t a l e n t + LEA D E R S H I P
C LO C K W I S E : CO R B I S ; J E N N I F E R DA R M O U R
y the end of 2013, the next product to shake up the technology world will hit the market. Google Glass, a lightweight, durable pair of stylish eyeglasses with a tiny imbedded computer, is set to go on sale. It is already setting off the kind of industry buzz that preceded the iPhone and iPad. Completely voice-activated, Google Glass is the latest and sexiest example of wearable computers, a potentially life-changing category that is quickly gaining momentum. Using Google Glass, a consumer is able to search the