Monday, October 10, 2011

Bits and Bytes

        One of the biggest upsides and marketing strengths The Glass of Tomorrow has is visual interface. It’s clearly appealing to the modern eye-- the eye that is trained to view, manipulate, and eventually project images that it sees. The Glass of Tomorrow incorporates all of the media we have today, be it audio, video, or photos-- and the quality of these multimedia files is at the forefront of the idea of The Glass. In this blog, I'll discuss the importance of image, video, and audio quality with respect bits and bytes.
       Photo and video files are the first important thing we need to look at. The majority of domestic users (i.e. homemakers, children, and families in general) will immediately use The Glass of Tomorrow as a decorative and image-viewing source. This might come from the ability to have photo and scrapbook albums as a type of “screensaver” or even as far as editing photos taken with your personal devices. It will be able to have the RAM for whatever imaging the user needs and will be able to have updates that allow a user to correctly suit his or her needs when it comes to photos. This works for video files and streaming as well-- considering we’ve moved from a still-image world to a video-based technological society, The Glass will be based around video and the user. Whatever the byte value, The Glass can handle it.
      Audio files are another important topic. The Glass of Tomorrow has the capability to be used as an audio device as well-- not just television and talk, but the ability to access digital music libraries at the touch of, well, glass. These files will all be formatted into WAV files to ensure the best audio quality available, and if a user has mp3 files saved on a digital library, The Glass can sync those files automatically into WAV-- all behind the scenes. The audio is top of the line, just like the rest of the product.
      Quality is the base of the system, especially when it comes to the quality of the three most important multimedia. Audio, video, and imaging all tie together in The Glass as the basis of it’s extremely likable and easy-to-use visual interface

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