() Smart contact lenses—essentially flexible displays packed with augmented reality tech—are sci-fi fodder as ubiquitous as the flying car. And like the flying car, the idea of AR-powered supervision is always on the cusp of going mainstream.
Mojo Vision, a startup out of Saratoga, California, is the latest company that thinks it’s figured out what companies like Google, Sony, and Magic Leap haven’t. The company calls its breakthrough Mojo Lens.
“Invisible Computing”
Mojo Vision has a pretty lofty idea of what it wants to accomplish through its AR smart contacts. The Mojo Lens prototype can supposedly provide real-time contrast and lighting enhancements as well as zoom, like on a smartphone camera, that will help people struggling with low vision, a gradual loss of sight that cannot be reversed.
According to a press release that the company put out this week, the underlying concept is something called “invisible computing,” which Mojo says is a platform for instantaneous, hands-free info that will “allow people to interact with each other more freely and genuinely.”
Apart from providing a potential evolution for vision prostheses, Mojo says its contact lenses will help industrial workers access real-time information, which can increase productivity or compliance far better than a vision-blocking headset. Mojo Lens would also be an asset for emergency responders, like firefighter shields that can display information about temperatures or what parts of a building are behind curtains of flames.
Fast Company describes one Mojo Lens mockup as allowing a firefighter to see “situational things while they’re holding an axe or a hose or some other piece of equipment, and they don’t have time to pull out their phone.”
Mojo Vision says it has created the “smallest and densest dynamic display ever made,” which includes a 14,000 pixel-per-inch display with eye-tracking, image stabilization, and a custom wireless radio. The display needs all those pixels because it’s directly laid onto your eyeball.
A current prototype—shown off at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas earlier this month—includes a display right at the center of the lens, positioned directly before the pupil. The screen is so tiny that the eye can barely see it. Most of its light is focused on a small portion of the retina at the back of the eye, called the fovea.
This small depression is where our eyesight is sharpest, so it helps to define details of the objects right in front of us. The fovea takes up just about four to five percent of the retina’s overall area, but contains most of its nerve endings. So, it makes sense that Mojo wants to shoot a display directly into this portion of the retina. The high number of photoreceptors means the lenses require less power and less light to transmit images.
Questions Remain
Practically speaking, we’re waiting to see how they’ll engineer the thing: where will the power source be? Will the electronics hurt the eyes? Will the electrical components be visible through the lens?
Right now, according to a report in IEEE Spectrum, a small external battery pack provides power to the contact lenses and handles sensor data that is then sent to the display. Not exactly “invisible computing,” but it’s a start.
“We’re really confident about this working,” Steve Sinclair, vice president of product and marketing, told Fast Company. He previously spent seven years at Apple doing product planning for the iPhone. “We’re seeing all the pieces coming together into a product that does everything we want it to do.”
Mojo Lens is still under development and will require FDA approval before going to market, since contacts are technically considered medical devices. Luckily, Mojo Vision is part of the Breakthrough Device Program, a voluntary FDA program meant to provide safe access to medical devices that can treat or reverse debilitating diseases or conditions.
As far as cost goes, we have no idea what to expect because Mojo hasn’t released any figures to that end, but the lenses are still in a research and development phase. For medical applications, it’s possible that health care plans could step in and make up some of the costs for people who cannot fully see.
A Growing AR Field
In 2020, it feels like every company is trying to figure how to integrate AR into our daily lives. There’s Intel’s Vaunt glasses, the Vuzix M100, the Magic Leap One, and Apple’s own hardware ambitious for AR—and that’s just the headgear.
On the software side of things, companies are equally hungry. Google is already hard at work on an augmented reality and is already embedding into the Android operating system.
Smaller outfits like UtilityAR, a startup based in Dublin, Ireland, creates AR software to help engineers and technical workers to complete complex tasks. The software links the glasses up to internet-connected equipment to display real-time info on maintenance issues.
For now, it’s too early to tell if Mojo Lens will finally deliver the future that sci-fi promised. After all, we’re still waiting for that flying car.
About The Author
Courtney Linder is Senior News Editor at Popular Mechanics and before that she was the technology reporter at her hometown newspaper, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. She graduated from the University of Pittsburgh, where she studied English and economics. She’s way too into vinyl, her black cat, and defending team Android.
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