Intel's "smart glasses" approach looks like the right one: no cameras, nonintrusive. https://www.theverge.com/2018/2/5/16966530/intel-vaunt-smart-glasses-announced-ar-video
Can we get a libre version of this in the works plz
@cwebber Damn. Retinal projection sounds like how it was always meant to be. I wonder if it is safe for the eyesight though.
As for cameras, I'd like it more as an option. Like, you can if you want to, but you certainly don't have to.
Also, what OS will it run? Will it be open enough to trust?
@drequivalent It says Windows, so it looks like it isn't open enough to trust. Maybe can be reinstalled but I doubt it.
Heck, I'd settle for a not particularly libre hardware design if it could run a libre OS, though I'd prefer a libre hardware design.
@drequivalent Also my suspicion is that we're going to *need* a libre hardware version of these in terms of "computing is becoming part of you more and more physically, and user freedom issues are no longer nerd rights but human rights"
@cwebber Of course, good augmentation should REQUIRE openness. Putting something you don't/can't trust in/on your body is generally a bad idea.
@drequivalent @cwebber People already have computers in their bodies: pace makers, defibrillators, insulin pumps, cochlear implants, and etc. Karen Sandler recently spoke again about the topic in relation to her defibrillator: https://sfconservancy.org/news/2018/feb/02/lca2018/
She and people like her are out on the forefront of this, but perhaps people interested in wearable and elective body modification tech could join them to help make progress on these issues? That would be cool.