So, Envision is doing this survey. It says to choose my country. I can't type U N to search ahead to United States. I can't hit the End key to move any nearer to it. So I closed the tab. I do not have time for AT companies that can't test any outgoing communications, or media, or surveys, or whatever, for accessibility.
@vicgrinberg I just talked about Venus/phosphine in my astrobiology class a couple days ago and said there were no Venus missions planned, I'll have to talk about this today, thanks!
As always you need something which either stands out of the noise floor or can be filtered by some model.
Whether the environment, instruments or signals contribute to the noise does not really matter that much, as long you can model the noise to some extend 😉
I think there was a quite nice paper on that topic about 10yrs ago, but not sure whether I can dig it out again.
@RedMeepleRyan I just went with the standard titanium frames, honestly. During my trial they suited me just fine. I don't really plan to put lenzes on them.
@fireborn I'm kinda pissed at the moment though. The glasses still cost $3500 in Canada and the webpage said $2400. Apparently it was using USD and that's just... unreasonable.
There was a paper pinned on the wall in the lift at work today. I tapped my #Envision glasses to detect text on the paper. Turned out to be a concert ad, in Estonian. Since the Envision glasses do have GPT4, I told them to translate it into english, which they did. Asked the glasses for details about the venue and it described where the concert takes place, however was unable to tell me the address, since it wasn’t featured on the ad. Felt quite empowering. I know I can do most of those things via different apps on my phone, but it feels somewhat magical to just do it all by tapping and talking to your glasses.