Coming to a contact lens near you, watch movies on your contact lenses
While watching movies on your contact lenses isn’t yet available, researchers at the University Of Washington have a prototype device containing an electric circuit as well as red light-emitting diodes for a display.
Video-game companies could use the contact lenses to completely immerse players in a virtual world without restricting their range of motion. And for communications, people on the go could surf the Internet on a midair virtual display screen that only they would be able to see.
Check this out.
Contact lenses with circuits, lights a possible platform for superhuman vision

These Three Turkeys
As many of you know, or if you don’t know, this past month has been full of turkey adventure at our house. What began as four turkeys is now down to three but they are twice daily visitors. With a little encouragement from my loving Torley, I present to you the first installment of These Three Turkeys
T. Berners-Lee latest blog entry
Tim Berners-Lee wrote a good blog article about the current evolution we are witnessing with how we are using our connected technology. He explains how the Internet took us from seeing the cables to seeing our connected computers and how they were the source of importance and now have moved beyond that to the data being what is important. “Now, people are making another mental move. There is realization now, “It’s not the documents, it is the things they are about which are important”. Obvious, really.” From the blog entry.
I liked this point he made.
“There is a “Social Network Portability” community. Its not the Social Network Sites that are interesting — it is the Social Network itself. The Social Graph. The way I am connected, not the way my Web pages are connected.”
In his own words, “The word Web we normally use as short for World Wide Web. The WWW increases the power we have as users again. The realization was “It isn’t the computers, but the documents which are interesting”. Now you could browse around a sea of documents without having to worry about which computer they were stored on. Simpler, more powerful. Obvious, really.”
He goes on to explain how for some it will be scary to give up control of some data.
“The less inviting side of sharing is losing some control. Indeed, at each layer — Net, Web, or Graph — we have ceded some control for greater benefits.
People running Internet systems had to let their computer be used for forwarding other people’s packets, and connecting new applications they had no control over. People making web sites sometimes tried to legally prevent others from linking into the site, as they wanted complete control of the user experience, and they would not link out as they did not want people to escape. Until after a few months they realized how the web works. And the re-use kicked in. And the payoff started blowing people’s minds.
Letting your data connect to other people’s data is a bit about letting go in that sense. It is still not about giving to people data which they don’t have a right to. It is about letting it be connected to data from peer sites. It is about letting it be joined to data from other applications.
It is about getting excited about connections, rather than nervous.”




