Back in 2011, James Brooks Miller and Richard Carl Gossweiler III had filed a patent on behalf of Google. Now, according to Gizmodo, the patent has finally been approved. The patent is for Google’s own attempt at making a smart watch, much in the vein of Sony’s SmartWatch. Going by the description of the device on the patent filing, it would sport two screens, one at the top, and one that you get when you flip open the top.
Google's SmartWatch patent gets approved
Back in April, Google had unveiled its web-based digital project – Project Glass. The experimental 'augmented reality' glasses - from the same team that is developing self-driven cars - can snap photos, initiate video chats and display directions at the sound of a user's voice. The prototype digital glasses, unveiled on the company's Google+ social network on Wednesday, are still being tweaked and tested, and are not available in stores yet. "We're sharing this information now because we want to start a conversation and learn from your valuable input," Google wrote in a post on a Google+ page devoted to Project Glass.
Google Chief Executive Larry Page has cut down on many of the projects and products underway at the company since taking the reins a year ago. But he has defended Google's commitment to working on "speculative" projects that could one day turn into "billion-dollar businesses," though he has stressed the company isn't "betting the farm" on such efforts.
The glasses could provide a way for Google to more closely entwine its advertising-supported online services, including Web searches, maps and email, into people's daily lives. The glasses also could help Google match some of the buzz that rival Apple Inc has generated with its latest iPhone and the built-in Siri digital assistant, which takes spoken commands to do such tasks as schedule calendar appointments and get weather forecasts.
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