Where to buy lumus glasses




















Ultra sleek optics fit any design profile or usage scenario, from consumer to industrial. Technology Overview. Karl Guttag: In every major factor including being transparent, resolution, color uniformity, and brightness Lumus seems to win by a wide margin.

Lumus in the News. First name. Last name. While the Maximus above clearly looks better than HoloLens 2, you can still clearly see the color uniformity and brightness start to fall off at the corners of the Maximus image. Welding googles, hard hats, safety glasses etc.. People should view AR in the same light… as a tool, not a fashion accessories for dickbags to try and look cool at the coffee shop.

I like to use such devices for playing games and watching movies and enjoying entertainment in general. What has become of this? Another company unveiled their own display at the time, LetinAR. More importantly the low resolution display is somehow going into a 4mm thick lens, with 7 small pinhole mirrors, for a FOV of 20 degrees per eye with objects in focus from 25cm to infinity a virtual retinal display.

I would like to see Karl talk more about this kind of display in comparison to what Lumus are doing. These things might be valuable as tools for some pros, but people who want to just play with virtual cats need something MUCH closer to natural FoV of normal glasses to even bother with these things as free toys, let alone actually pay for them.

We are probably a decade away form that. Fashion-Usability-Practicality in that order. How much the army put in microsoft Holocrap already? Ahaha Looks like they bought some xbox1 the price of the ps5 now…. No cameras, no onboard SOC.. All they shown now is a display. The Maximus is only a prototype to show off the Lumus display tech. It will be interesting to see what products will adopt the Lumus display in the near future. Looks very interesting… Also Karl is usually very critic… if he likes this, it means it is really a soild product!

Put up for surprise pre-order at Google IO today - though not expected to ship until early next year - the search giant demands a hefty sum for those wanting to augment their reality early.

Cutting edge costs, sure, but there's the potential for significantly more affordable options that could be here just as soon as Google Glass is. Wearable displays are going to change the mobile market, not to mention gaming, and usher augmented reality into the mainstream. At least, they will if display specialists Lumus have anything to do with it: the company has already shown us its p twin-display wearable prototype back at CES , and SlashGear caught up with the company again today to see arguably an even more impressive version, the OE Lower resolution, true, but smaller, lower-power and easier to disguise in the average pair of glasses: this could be the way you consumer your Twitter, Facebook, email, GPS and more on the move in just a couple of years time.

Read on for our first-impressions. This week the folks at Lumus have revealed their newest technology embodied in any number of projected 3D display eyewear. Whilst running around CES like mad chickens with our heads cut off just weeks ago, we made it our mission to find only the most radically awesome designs and projects on the floor, one of them being the Lumus optical engine. What Lumus is showing off today is a very similar engine made to work not only in glasses, but in motorcycle helmets, visors, and all manner of odd face-friendly devices and objects.

Technology made by the Lumus group has been applied to a pair of glasses shown at CES , and today we're getting our first chance to take a peek at a demo unit. These glasses are not a consumer product, instead being shown off here as a demonstration piece of equipment so that the Lumus technology can be picked up by a manufacturer and made into a real deal for-sale piece of equipment.



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