Snapchat To Launch Sunglasses That Can Shoot Videos! Wow

Admin 26-Sep-2016 13:05:51 Inothernews

Snapchat To Launch Sunglasses That Can Shoot Videos! Wow


Vanishing message service Snapchat announced Saturday it will launch a line of video-catching sunglasses, a spin on Glass eyewear abandoned by Google more than a year ago. The California-based company, which also announced it is changing its name to Snap Inc., said in an online post that its Spectacles will be "available soon," with media reports pegging the price at $130 a pair. "We've been working for the past few years to develop a totally new type of camera," said the post by Team Snap. "Spectacles are sunglasses with an integrated video camera that makes it easy to create Memories." Snap earlier this year added a way to save images as "Memories," a shift for a service know for messages that disappear after being viewed. Spectacles were billed as having one of the smallest wireless cameras in the world, capable of capturing a day's worth of "Snaps" on a single charge. The sunglasses connect to Snap software wirelessly using Bluetooth or wifi connections.



Spectacles cameras take video from the perspective of wearers, boast a 115-degree field of view, and capture snippets of video intended for sharing at the service.

"Imagine one of your favorite memories," Snap said.

"What if you could go back and see that memory the way you experienced it? That?s why we built Spectacles."

Snap estimates it has more than 100 million users globally of the service for sending videos, images and text messages which vanish after being viewed. Some reports say it generates 10 billion video views per day.

Google in January of last year halted sales of its Internet-linked eyewear Glass, which became available in the United States in early 2014.

The technology titan put the brakes on an "explorer" program that let people interested in dabbling with Glass -- hotly anticipated by some, mocked by others -- buy eyewear for $1,500 apiece.

The Glass test program was later expanded to Britain, but no general consumer version was released.

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