Here’s a crazy thing. I stumbled across this update about Tobii and Prophesee, right? They’re both tech whizzes in eye-tracking and vision systems. So, get this—now they’re teaming up to level up AR and VR headsets and smart glasses with this wild, event-based tech. Honestly, it sounds like something out of a sci-fi flick.
Here’s the scoop: Prophesee basically creates these cameras that function like human eyes. I know, right? Instead of snapping everything, they only focus on changes—movements, light shifts. It’s like they’re picky photographers. And apparently, it’s super efficient and compact. I can see this being handy for, like, self-driving cars and other futuristic stuff, but the real twist? Tobii’s jumping in to bring this tech into our wearable world with headsets and glasses.
So, why is this maddeningly genius? They’re merging Prophesee’s sensors with Tobii’s eye-tracking wizardry to cook up something “ultra-fast and power-efficient.” Fancy talk, sure, but basically, it means your smart glasses won’t die on you halfway through your zombie game or whatever. I wonder, do folks even realize how much brain juice—err, power—is saved this way?
And here’s a fun factoid. Luca Verre, maestro at Prophesee, basically said something like, “Hey, this tech is perfect for today’s gadget-crazy nuttiness.” He didn’t say it quite like that, but you get me. It’s about making wearables smarter without sucking too much juice.
Emma Bauer from Tobii threw in her two cents, too. She was all about how challenging it is to squeeze eye-tracking into something as lightweight as regular glasses. Talk about a techie puzzle, huh? And to add some final sprinkles, partnering up lets Tobii use a mix of their camera tech plus these new sensors. Like, more options are never a bad thing, right?
It’s a neat reminder of how tech just keeps leaping ahead. Those Tobii folks have gotten their eyes (pun maybe intended?) into big names—PlayStation VR 2 and HTC headsets, just to name a few. Makes you wonder what’s next. Flying VR glasses, maybe? Okay, kidding. Or am I?