Leo Lewis
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You know the feeling. Call it a senior moment, absent-mindedness or a sign of what a busy active brain you have. We’ve all asked ourselves that irritating question: “Where on earth did I leave my car keys?”
Now a team of Japanese scientists claim to have come up with the answer. And the secretive artificial intelligence project codenamed Smart Goggle does not stop at elusive keys. With Yasuo Kuniyoshi’s invention balanced on your nose, nothing – be it the remote control, mobile phone or iPod – should ever go missing again.
Simply tell the glasses what you are looking for and it will play into your eye a video of the last few seconds you saw that item.
Built on to the glasses is a tiny camera which makes a constant record of everything the wearer sees: the tiny display inside the glasses identifies what is being scanned and a small readout instantly announces what the computer thinks the object probably is. For some things that look different from a range of angles, however, the glasses offer only a “best guess” – they are better at identifying a guitar and a chair than a coathanger or battery.
The hardware itself is not extraordinary: what has taken Professor Kuniyoshi several years to perfect is the computer algorithm that allows the goggles to know immediately what they are seeing. It is, he says, a problem that has always vexed the fields of robotics and artificial intelligence.
But working in a team with Tatsuya Harada, one of Japan’s masters of the science of “fuzzy logic”, Mr Kuniyoshi believes he has cracked the problem. Behind the goggles is possibly the world’s most advanced object recognition software and a computer that can learn the identity of new objects within seconds.
So if the user wanders round the house for about an hour telling the goggles the name of everything from that coathanger to the kitchen sink, they will remember. Then if, at some point in the future, you ask them where you last saw a particular item, they will play the appropriate footage.
Professor Kuniyoshi has even greater ambitions for his software, ambitions that owe a lot to the visual display of the Terminator of science fiction. He describes his goggles as the ultimate connection between the real world and the cyber world and believes that they could eventually be loaded with vast quantities of data from the internet.
With that database installed, the glasses might actually know much more about what the wearer is seeing than the wearer himself – species of animal, technical specifications of vehicles and electronics, or even the identity of people. In a demonstration, the professor showed how the user might, for example, gaze at a selection of unknown flowers and the glasses would say which were begonias, which were ferns and which were pansies.
Although the experimental model, shown exclusively to The Times yesterday, is still too bulky for daily use, the team at the Tokyo University School of Information Science and Technology are confident that it can soon be miniaturised. It could even, they suggest, be small enough to look little different from a normal pair of glasses.
But unfortunately, of course, there is one irritating question they would not be able to answer: “Now where did I put my glasses?”
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My Grandad was apparently well-known for wandering around the house looking for his glasses. They were usually to be found on top of his head.
Our problem is that we have so many remote controls in teh living room that we can never find the right one. Before anyone says "Buy a combined remote" it would be too complicated to have a single remote for that many devices. But we can always find at least one or two of them, even if they are the wrong ones. So if someone invented remotes that knew where the missing remotes were, THEN I'd be interested.
Paul Hulbert, Yate, UK
Googles, definately! hèhè brilliant!
But what I'm missing here are the obvious military applications, if this guy were in desperate need of funds would that not be the easiest way? Unless offcourse the real brilliance here is that the required computing power for recognition is now so low that apache-gunships aren't the only ones with this technology anymore. Smart stingers for everyone!? oops..
Tim, Utrecht, The Netherlands
The only way to know where your glasses are, is to keep them on all the time and put them by your bed when you sleep. Of course it would be ideal if they were flexible enough to sleep in! Perhaps then it could recall your dreams.
Keith, Freising, Germany
There are various applications for this technology that he is not alluding to. If they can develop such an advanced system they should be clever enough to think of many. Also, I can imagine that the engineers don't sleep at night dreaming about what all they could do with this thing.
Mentioning all the possible applications will only invite competitors.
Willie, Windhoek,
mark, you cant possibly be serious. read the article again. who would buy a pair of glasses able to provide them with data on whatever they are seeing? ...no, seriously?
michael, manchester, uk
Obviously this guy is desparately trying to raise funding for his project.
I suppose if i start saving now, I could spend tens-of-thousands on a commercial version of this. It would be an experience to listen it to me telling me what that it doesn't know what a coathanger is but that thing in your hand is a guitar.
Instead, I will:
a) put my car keys on my corner table where i always leave them
b) leave the remote control on the coffee table
If i was interested in knowing what the types of flowers were, I would take up gardening as a hobby and take pride in identifying them myself. I certainly wouldn't get a pair of jumped-up glasses to tell me that I'm looking at a daffadil in an annoying GPS voice.
Hats off if the image recognition is a good as they claim, thats certainly no small feat..... but I suggest he applies it to a real problem, not an imaginary one.
Ian, Manchester, UK
Who (seriously) buys this technojunk? And how much will it cost? We are constantly inundated with these "humans are idiots" inventions. This is exactly the sort of thing that would be booted out of Dragons Den contemptuously. Not only that, you'd look a right chump wearning 'em!
mark carlyon, Coventry, West Midlands
If the goggles have a search engine built in, does that make them googles?
Phil Culmer, Southend on Sea, UK