The third lecture in the Glass Class, Google Glass programming course. Taught by Mark Billinghurst on February 17th 2014. This lecture provides an overview of the Google Glass user experience.
11. THE GLASS CLASS
User Experience
Truly Wearable Computing
Less than 46 ounces
Hands-free Information Access
Voice interaction, Ego-vision camera
Intuitive User Interface
Touch, Gesture, Speech, Head Motion
Access to all Google Services
Map, Search, Location, Messaging, Email, etc
22. THE GLASS CLASS
Medical Use Cases
Teaching
Remote education
Remote assistance
Surgery support
Hands free information
Connecting to patient record
23. THE GLASS CLASS
Medical Examples
Live stream patient data from accident site
Surgeon live streams surgery for training
Nurse scanning medication to confirm dose
Viewing patient data during exam
View patient vital information
Residents exam streamed to attending physician
Oncologist overlay MRI scan over a patient
Electronic patient record shared with caregiver
24. THE GLASS CLASS
Example – Vipaar Telemedicine
Vipaar + UAB - http://www.vipaar.com
Endoscopic view streamed remotely
Remote expert adds hands – viewed in Glass
26. THE GLASS CLASS
Last year Last week NowForever
The Now machine
Focus on location, contextual
and timely information, and
communication.
27. THE GLASS CLASS
1. Design For Glass
Simple, relevant information
Complement existing devices
28. THE GLASS CLASS
2. Don’t Get in the Way
Enhance, not replace, real world interaction
29. THE GLASS CLASS
3. Keep it Relevant
Information at the right time and place
30. THE GLASS CLASS
4. Avoid the Unexpected
Don’t send unexpected content at wrong times
Make it clear to users what your glassware does
31. THE GLASS CLASS
5. Build for People
Use imagery, voice interaction, natural gestures
Focus on fire and forget interaction model
32. THE GLASS CLASS
Micro
Interac0ons
The
posi0on
of
the
display
and
limited
input
ability
makes
longer
interac0ons
less
comfortable.
Using
it
shouldn’t
take
longer
than
taking
out
your
phone.