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Sunglasses are cool and fun and I'm told they're even practical in certain parts of the world. However, the big problem is that if you are talking to someone who is wearing sunglasses, you can't see their eyes. And therefore, you can't see a lot of their expression.
Until now. Simply attach a
pair of plastic eyeballs sticking up from the frame of the sunglasses. The shades will include sensors that can visually detect movement in the muscles around the eyes and convert these movements into emotions (surprise, smiling, frowning, eyes closing out of boredom). The sunglasses will then control the eyeballs, making them pop open, leap up, frown, or close their eyelids and fall limply down your cheeks.
Those who insist on using sunglasses to hide their expression (e.g. policemen, security guards) could hack the microcontroller in the shades to generate random emotions.
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Annotation:
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//hack the microcontroller in the shades to generate random emotions// "Drop the gun! You're under arrest!<wink-wink>" |
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Two-way cameras with LCD displays? The wearer sees a darkened version of the outdoors, everyone else sees the wearer's eyes... |
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"Do all policemen make that expression just before doing strip-searches?" |
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A lot of people wear sunglasses to hide their expressions. i.e. poker players |
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How about a pocket-sized controller that lets you tell them what to show? If you can organize the emotions on a linear spectrum, it can just be a little slide or a thumbwheel. (+) |
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You can't organize all emotions on one linear spectrum. |
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No, of course you couldn't organize all emotions that way, but you'd have to cut down the number the eyes could display just to make it controllable. How about this: a thumbwheel that adjusts from "happy" <---> "sad", and then you can push the wheel sideways in one direction for "surprised" and the other direction for "angry." |
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