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My First 48 Hours Wearing Google Glass Here are some initial impressions of Google's much-anticipated computerized glasses.

By Taylor Hatmaker

entrepreneur daily

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

This is the first in a four-part weekly series as I test Google Glass for personal and business uses.

My First 48 Hours Wearing Google Glass
Writer Taylor Hatmaker testing Glass while driving.
image credit: Taylor Hatmaker

I was one of the lucky individuals who were invited to be among the first 1,000 non-Google employees to pre-order Google Glass -- Google's much-anticipated computerized glasses. They can take pictures and video, give you directions when traveling and even translate foreign languages. With Glass, Google is aiming to disrupt mobile technology and go beyond just smartphones and tablets.

I received my pair of Glass on Friday morning and wore them through Sunday afternoon, taking them off only to sleep. While it's too early to say whether Glass is set for mainstream adoption, here are my early impressions:

Out of the box: Light and easy to start using.
I first saw Google Glass demonstrated at this past summer's Google's I/O conference. This is my first experience handling and wearing the device. The first surprise out of the box was how light Glass is. It weighs about as much as a standard pair of sunglasses.

Putting it on, I didn't have the luxury of a Google Glass guide to sculpt the bendable titanium frame to fit, so it took about 15 minutes of fiddling to have it sit correctly on my face. The Glass display sits above the right eye and can be adjusted via a pivoting arm. It wasn't long before I forgot it was even there.

The experience looking into Google's custom Glass interface is like having a tiny TV overlay above your eye. You can easily make eye contact with others. To check the Glass display, you glance upward.

The screen can be activated via an upward head nod or by tapping the right side of the device. To get around the interface, it's all tapping and swiping with one finger (down, forward, back) on the side surface of Glass. Many actions also incorporate voice controls starting with "OK Glass" to do things like search Google or dictate texts.

Out and about: The social reaction.
I acclimated to Glass within about 20 minutes of having it on, though it took a little longer to get the Android companion app to pair properly to Glass. Once I was connected to my smartphone's mobile network, I headed out into the world. Over the 48 hours, I did everything from grocery shopping to driving my car to a cook-out.

People I encountered were as apprehensive as they were curious. Walking down the street in a busy shopping district, people stopped me to ask if I had that crazy Google product they'd read about and seen on TV. I live in Portland, Ore., which has a thriving tech and startup scene, so most people around me seemed to know exactly what they were but not what to do near them.

Related: From Battery to Camera to Wi-Fi: Tech Specs Released for Google Glass

That said, as much as Glass might be socially disruptive, it's also surprisingly socially unobtrusive. I was skeptical, but after wearing Glass regularly I found myself checking my Nexus 4 smartphone less and less. I could use Glass to receive social media updates and receive emails, so I felt at ease knowing that the information most important to me would appear literally right before my eyes.

My First 48 Hours Wearing Google Glass
A picture taken with Glass while picnicking.
image credit: Taylor Hatmaker

Favorite features so far:

  • Texting. Sending a short, spoken text message is fast, fluid and altogether less cumbersome with Google Glass than a handheld device.
  • Taking photos. Snapping a picture instantly from your eye's perspective makes for unique photographic opportunities. Friends and cats are more candid than ever.
  • Getting directions. I thought turn-by-turn navigation would be more dangerous with Glass since I'd be driving with something in my field of vision. In practice, I took my eyes off the road much less than if I were using an external GPS or smartphone.

Criticisms and annoyances:

  • Battery life. I wore down my Glass battery in about three hours of heavy use. While that was an intensive scenario, Glass's stamina leaves something to be desired.
  • Data. My photos back up to a Google+ private Instant Upload album via bluetooth tethering, not just over Wi-Fi. As a shutterbug, if I can't disable that, it's going to eat up my data plan in less than a week.
  • Privacy. A glance at Google's terms of service for Glass brings up thoughts of "Big Brother." Knowing that Google can track my device to prevent me from unloading it on eBay -- for now, Google won't allow early users to share or sell the Glass devices -- creeps me out. Not to mention that recording video and taking photos of people without their consent is amazingly easy.

Initial takeaway: This is the beginning of something cool.
So far, I'm pleasantly surprised. As more developers dream up fun and useful apps, the platform should only improve. Notwithstanding its limitations -- for example, you can't properly browse a webpage yet since most web searches only yield a few lines of text -- the first iteration of Google Glass is refined, if a little socially precocious.

What really matters is what happens as the device is used by more people. Opening the Glass platform to more developers and creative minds should yield innovations well beyond what Glass offers today -- and that's the part I'm looking forward to most.

Related: VC Heavyweights to Fund Tech Startups Creating Google Glass Apps

Taylor Hatmaker is a technology writer based in Portland, Ore.

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