Five Potential Healthcare Applications For Google Glass
Last week I had the opportunity to test Google Glass.
It’s basically an Android smartphone (without the cellular transmitter) capable of running Android apps, built into a pair of glasses. The small prism “screen” displays video at half HD resolution. The sound features use bone conduction, so only the wearer can hear audio output. It has a motion sensitive accelerometer for gestural commands. It has a microphone to support voice commands. The right temple is a touch pad. It has WiFi and Bluetooth. Battery power lasts about a day per charge.
Of course, there have been parodies of the user experience but I believe that clinicians can successfully use Google Glass to improve quality, safety, and efficiency in a manner that is less bothersome to the patients than a clinician staring at a keyboard.
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