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Microcap & Penny Stocks : ProNetLink...PNLK...Click here to enter

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To: BrightFuture who wrote (10097)2/15/1999 11:37:00 PM
From: allen v.w.  Read Replies (3) of 40688
 
Someday soon companies will do import/export where ever they are by using PNLK and wearable computers.

Most wired man on the planet

Toronto professor wears his computer and receives e-mail through his glasses.
By Jonathan Oatis, Reuters

Got a laptop? A cellphone? A PalmPilot? Think you're wired?
Forget about it. For my money, Steve Mann -- a Toronto professor who wears his computer wrapped around his body and can receive e-mail on the run via special glasses that function as his computer screen -- is the most wired man on the planet.

Mann, a University of Toronto professor, offers glimpses of the future at his Web sites: The International Wearable Computing WWW Site, Prof. Steve Mann bio page and WearComp-related papers.




Have an opinion on this story? Add your comments to the bottom of this page.



"Some things look crazy now, but will make sense in about 20 years," Mann said in a telephone interview.

The 36-year-old inventor -- dubbed "Web Man Walking'' by The National Enquirer -- believes wearable computers, or ''WearComps,'' are in our future and offer many benefits, including personal security, greater connectedness with others, and the ability to screen out advertising.

His Web sites offer pictures of Mann and others in full digital regalia. There's even a do-it-yourself section for people who want to build their own WearComp.

You will be assimilated
Mann -- whose original rigs gave him the look of the part-human, part-machine Borg of "Star Trek'' fame -- has refined his equipment to the point where you can't tell he's packing a computer. He calls his current setup an ''UnderwearComp'' because it's hidden under his street clothes. The helmet-like gear he used to wear on his head has given way to what looks like a pair of ordinary sunglasses.











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Some of the best pictures on the site resulted from a course Mann gave last fall in which he turned 12 students into ''photoborgs.'' The students used wearable computers to take pictures "as a group of artists working together to paint in virtual space.''

Scroll down the Wearcam home page for a nice group shot of Mann and his photoborgs. The link beneath will take you to the beautiful pictures of the university's Convocation Hall that resulted from the photoborg collaboration. (Note: some of the pictures are BIG and will take a long time to download.)

"I think that this is first (course of its kind),'' said Mann. "It seems that it's still kind of out there.''

It all started as a teen
Mann was a teen-age cyborg. While in high school, he created a rig to control photographic flash lamps he says was the world's first wearable computer.

He first gained media attention as a computer-wearing grad student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's famed Media Lab.

From 1994 to 1996, while at the Media Lab, he wore his computer almost all the time, transmitting pictures of what he was looking at any given moment to the Internet and receiving thousands of e-mail messages a day.

"I ran that for a couple of years and after that about 30,000 voices in my head kind of drove me crazy,'' leading him to stop relaying pictures to the Net, said Mann. "It worked out well in the early days of the Internet.''

Gaining recognition
Mann said his field has gained credibility, especially since a 1996 conference on wearable computing he organized for the Institute Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE).

"This was more than 20 years after I invented it. ... It wasn't news, but the world was sort of becoming aware of it,'' he said. "In some sense, I think it marked the point where it wasn't just Steve running around with a camera anymore.''

Indeed, wearable computers are now used by companies and government agencies, enabling workers to take their computers with them and keep their hands free. One manufacturer, Xybernaut Corp., donated some of its cool-looking devices for use by Mann's "photoborgs.''

Mann, whose other inventions include an "eyetap camera'' that transmits images of what he sees, said he wants to license his technology to manufacturers in North America and abroad, especially Japan. "I'm working on a large number of new inventions,'' he said.

Want to be a cyborg?
Want to be a do-it-yourself cyborg? Go to the Wearcam page for complete instructions on how to build your own wearable computer. But be careful. Mann warns would-be borgs to beware of faulty wiring, as well as the potential dangers of long-term exposure to radio energy, eye damage, brain damage from long-term use of wearable computers, reduced attention span, and flashbacks, to name a few.

Warnings aside, Mann says wearable computers offer many benefits. A device that relays pictures of what the user is looking at could, for example, function as a personal security device and could help reduce crime.

Wearable computers could also help connect people, said Mann, such as family members.

Mann is leery of advertising and sees WearComps as a way to screen ads out, should we wish. The devices could be programmed to show users more pleasing images in place of ad. For a dramatic illustration, Mann shows how a WearComp would replace a condom ad hanging over a urinal with a more pleasing image (I won't give away the punchline.).

"The ads are getting more and more invasive, like above the urinal where you can't avoid it," Mann said. "... The hope is that the (computer) glasses can give us a little bit of peace and quiet and a little bit of solitude from all this information."
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