Google offered no time frame for completing and shipping this project. We won't know how they really work until the prototype leaves the lab. Again, this is Google's illustration of the prototype view. In one segment, we see a point-of-view image of the translation at work. The prototype lets wearers look directly at the speaker, so the words are overlayed on top of them. What is clear, though is that no one is, as they had to with Google Glass, glancing upward to see an oddly-placed, tiny screen. Granted, we're seeing an overlay of this in the video and not what the woman is actually seeing. The young woman dons the black, horn-rim-style glasses and immediately sees what the researcher is saying, transcribed in yellow English letters on a screen. Her mother understands her but can't respond to her in English. In the video, a young woman explains how her mother speaks Mandarin and she speaks English. The prototype lenses (thankfully, Google did not call them "Google Glass 3") uses Google's advancements in translation and transcription to deliver translated words "in your line of sight," explained Pichai. The Google Translation Glasses POV as depicted by Google (Image credit: Future)
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