This document provides an overview of future technology trends and gadgets, including PureView imaging technology which allows for lossless zoom and improved video autofocus, Google Glass which displays information hands-free via voice commands, applications like Circle of 6 and Google Drive, Corning Gorilla Glass which is durable cover glass for devices, and Ultra HD or 8K television displays with very high resolution.
4. PureView Pro imaging specifications:
• 41Mpix sensor with pixel oversampling
• Lossless zoom: 3x for stills, 4x for full HD
1080p video
• Improved video autofocus
• More processing power
• Cropping
• Long focal length
• Effective zoom settings.
6. • Project Glass products display information in
a smartphone-like format hands-free, and can
interact with the Internet via natural
languagevoice commands. The eyewear's
functionality and minimalist appearance
(aluminium strip with 2 nose pads) has been
compared to Steve Mann'sEyeTap, and uses
Google's Android operating system.
• High-tech spectacles featuring a revolutionary
digital interface that enable its wearers to not
only view the world through Google's eyes but
also automatically photograph all that they see.
7. 3. Some Important Applications
• Circle of 6
• bSafe
• StaySafe
• Life 360
• Siri
• Google Drive
• Google Goggles
• Instagram
• True Caller
8. 4. CORNING GORILLA GLASS
• Engineered for a combination of thinness, lightness,
and damage-resistance, it is used primarily as the cover
glass for portable electronic devices including mobile
phones, portable media players, laptop computer
displays, and some television screens.
• Gorilla Glass by 2010 had been used in approximately
20 percent of mobile handsets worldwide, about 200
million units.The second generation, called "Gorilla
Glass 2", was introduced in 2012. On October 24, 2012,
Corning announced that over one billion mobile
devices used Gorilla Glass
9. 5. Ultra high definition
• Ultra high definition is also known as Ultra HD,
UHD, and UHDTV. In Japan, 8K UHDTV will be
known as Super Hi-Vision since Hi-Vision was the
term used in Japan for HDTV. Companies had
previously only used the term 4K at the 2012
International CES but that had changed to Ultra
HD during the 2013 International CES. The Ultra
HD term is an umbrella term that was selected by
the Consumer Electronics Association after
extensive consumer research.