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Google posts video of recent Project Glass presentation, demo included

google glass presentationIf you’re heavily into Google Glass and are biting your nails to the quick in excited anticipation of the day you’ll be able to perch the futuristic device on the end of your schnozzle, you’ll be interested to know that Google has just posted a video (below) of the Project Glass presentation made at last month’s SXSW event in Austin, Texas.

The Web giant made the 50-minute video available on Thursday, explaining that it hoped it would “help developers and entrepreneurs start imagining what they could do on Glass.”

The Building New Experiences with Glass session, which took place on March 11, was conducted by Google developer advocate Timothy Jordan. The Glass ambassador begins by telling the audience that Project Glass “is about our relationship to technology – it’s about technology that’s there when you want it but out of the way when you don’t.” In other words, it’ll be a lot more convenient than a smartphone as you won’t have to waste time fumbling about in your bag looking for it.

To further explain the thinking behind Glass, Jordan also talks about a moment at a party the previous night when everyone held up their handsets and tablets to record a particular incident. “It was weird, it felt like they were watching these screens instead of the event….it feels like tech is getting in the way more than it needs to.” Essentially, as Jordan says, the point of Glass is to “give you access to the technology you love [without taking] you out of the moment.”

The session includes a live demonstration of the high-tech eyewear, information on the project’s Mirror API, a summary of what Glass developers have learned about the project over the last few months, and finally, some examples of Glass experiences developed more recently.

For anyone that wants to cut straight to the demo, you’ll find the first one at the 10:50 mark.

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Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
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