Engadget - Summer in Paris -- you can't walk a block on Champs-Élysées without locking eyes with at least one camera-equipped tourist. But Steve Mann's shooter wasn't dangling from his shoulder and neck; it was mounted on his head, with a design strikingly similar to Google's Project Glass.
Suck My Trend - In this opinion piece, we take a look at whether or not Project Glass really is the future of Google.
Nice opinion article. I agree that at this stage it doesn't look any better than a glorified helmet-cam. However - just to play devils advocate - this was a I/O so it's likely they did the show for investors and to entice other programmers to make the apps that'll make Project Glass better. It's the infancy of this technology, Google just has to be the first one out of the gate with enough options that others can make the apps that'll make this a piece of technology worth having.
On a personal note as a technophile - I'll end up getting a pair of "smart glasses" but if Google wants my money they'll have to do better than Sony and Microsoft because you know they'll be coming out with their own models too.
Techcrunch : Over the last few years one could easily say that Google had lost their way. They were no longer known for search. Somehow they’d turned into a company that acquired a series of nonsensical entities, launched half baked products that eventually hit the dead pool or just got into some really weird shit.
Engadget - Now, we're not saying Google's elite are actually aliens managing human social affairs, but if you were our reader Ben who ran into a crew of Project Glass-equipped Googlers breaking for drinks at a Los Gatos wine bar, it might seem like a possibility. Beyond filing tons of paperwork, the team is clearly expanding quickly and most recently took part in the Google+ photographer's conference to show off what POV pictures and video (even if that's most of the functionality so far) could add to the world of photography.