Hands-On with Mojo Augmented Reality Contact Lens!

Hands-On with Mojo Augmented Reality Contact Lens!




We go eyes-on with the feature prototype of Mojo Lens, an in-development contact lens with an embedded augmented reality …

source

Recommended For You

About the Author: Adam Savage’s Tested

50 Comments

  1. 8:55. “The fda had checked it and assures its safe” and will not immediately cause eye meltdown or horrible diss ease. Diss ease, pain and such are subjective so its impossible to say. Fda assure it is 100% safe to use*

    *”use” is based on a single use period of no more than the time/process of initial fitment.
    Possible side effects lists have been found to be detrimental to the adoption of the new; halting progress and the normalization of a more orderous fewture and as such are required not to be disclosed do to anxiety/placebo based pre disease diss ease.

  2. Not all of us can wear contact lenses, how do you seek to help those of us without the capability to wear those?

  3. How much will they cost, how do you repair them when they are damaged (because throwing away electronics is moronic), what are these more practical then glasses?

    I get it for spies maybe but a contact lens is used to correct your vision, I'm hesitant to see this as anything actually practical, fun gimmick, neat way for kids to be distracted in class, but where does it get useful?

    I just don't see any circumstances where this thing makes sense other then. "You've got the money"

    Those lenses are MASSIVE they can't be safe to put in your eye. I'd rather see all this tech put into a normal pair of glasses so it'd be practical.

    Radio control is another reason to dislike these, I'd rather have a thin wire lead down the back of my shirt then transmit and be at risk of getting something I don't want pushed to my display.

  4. I have a ton of questions and comments, wish I could talk to someone to get them answered. Not sure what to think of it.

  5. Your eyes have muscles. The weight of this on your eye is going to cause so much strain…so many tension headaches. Your eyes will burn. Your eyelids will be raw. This will not work unless you fight threw the pain and wear it daily until you adapt.

  6. sounds super annoying to use, always in the centre of your vision is the biggest fail for me even though this guy seems to think its a plus :S
    awesome concept though. If you could do the opposite and just have info in your peripherals and even then only when activated I can see this being a day to day for some people

  7. Now, if only you could get these things to run on sugars, and power them with chlorophyll. I wouldn't feel comfortable having a traditional battery on cornea.

  8. This is just another device that will improve over the years therefore the cost is transferred to the consumer as they buy the next gen always hoping this time, it’ll work. All the while an actual working device exist and these companies keep getting richer and richer off the promise of a better device.

  9. wondering if the PCBs can be re engineered to be flexible, because any impact to the eye could shatter the hard parts and leave the user blinded.

  10. This sounds cool, but I would really love to hear more about how the consumer would use this, not just how it works. So basically how locked in/out are you from certain systems?
    Anyhow, I wonder if one day someone could come up with teeny tiny little solar cells or something like that, that would allow you to charge this while in your eye, while it is powered off. I know that "borrowing" energy your body naturally makes would be idiotic for many reasons, hence why I did not say that.

  11. Has anyone seen the Outer limits episode called "Stream of Consciousness"? It came out in the early 90s I think. I highly recommend watching it if you can find it. This plus Elon Musk's current endeavors really hit home with that story.

  12. It wondernif it works with your eyes closed. Imagine people thinking your sleeping and you are watching Netflix or live stream from a camera to see what people are doing while they think you are asleep.

  13. This is amazing, the battery seems like an issue. I remember some phone flash lights from the 90's powered by radio signals. Seems like glasses that emit a short radio signal to power the contact lenses would be a great solution.

    I'd love to hear what anybody thinks about this idea.

Comments are closed.