The latest example: A baseball cap with a video camera mounted on the brim.
Google was granted a patent for the headwear on February 28. According to the patent, Google's removable hat-mounted camera would be used for capturing photos and videos, which you can upload and stream directly to social media platforms. To do so, the camera will connect to a wearer's mobile device via an app.
Audio straight to your skull
Audio often accompanies video, and Google thought of that by vibrating the sound directly into your skull. To listen to a video's audio while wearing the hat, there's built-in technology to “create audio waves through the hat by bone conduction in the skull of the wearer“ (Google has used similar technology in Google Glass, its earlier effort at creating a wearable gadget).In the patent, Google also describes that the wearer would be able to record audio for videos with a built-in microphone.
Google's hat-camera is a similar concept to Snap's Spectacles, which can take photos and videos that are specifically tailored to the Snapchat app, like 10-second videos. Content from Spectacles is similarly transmitted directly to a user's mobile device through the Snapchat app. That said, Facebook began testing ways to let app developers build Facebook Live streaming capabilities into their apps. Google's hat-camera could take advantage of such a development.
Moving on from Google Glass
This isn't Google's first foray into video and photographic wearables. Google Glasses also had a camera that could connect to mobile devices. Google Glass, however, was a failed project largely due to its high $1,500 price tag and overly gadget-y design. Snap's Spectacles, on the other hand, are much cheaper at $130, and have a more stylish design.
The images in the patent don't paint Google's hat-camera as a very stylish device. It looks like a somewhat clunky camera attachment on the brim of a baseball cap. Still, it's only a patent for now, so there's no guarantee Google will ever move forward and build such a product. If Google was to go through with its development, we'd hope the hat-camera's design would be more attractive.
Another interesting use for the hat-camera described in the patent by Google is that it can be used in emergency situations.In an emergency, the hat-camera would activate the video camera and audio, and send the “geographic location and the video feed to the emergency situation server system“.
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