Smarter Vision

There are four modes to the Relúm?no app and glasses, each using image processing software to enhance vision. Regular mode helps to better define shapes by making outlines more visually prominent, reducing blurriness, while Color Invert mode is designed for reading text, inverting black-on-white text and enhancing contrast.

Partial vision mode is designed for those who have central or peripheral vision loss, filling in the blind spots in a user’s vision with image remapping. So, for example, those who experience tunnel vision get to see more of the world squeezed into that tunnel.

Finally, Display Color Filter mode works a lot like sunglasses, reducing the glare of certain colors and improving vision along the way. The Gear VR app was able to switch between modes based on head movements (looking down to read a book, for instance), but it’s not clear yet whether the new glasses have the same feature.

What the new device will certainly do is make Relúm?no easier to use outside – it’s probably not the best idea to walk around with a Gear VR strapped to your head, but these new glasses are the same shape and size as regular specs. Samsung says the new hardware helps people use Relúm?no “more comfortably and discreetly” than before.

As hardware shrinks and software gets smarter, this isn’t the only visual aid we’re seeing appear on the market, though without the might of a company like Samsung behind the initiative it’s hard to get anything through to consumers. The Relúm?no Glasses look to have enough to get there at some point.

Samsung’s Relúm?no glasses bring smarter vision for partially sighted people [New Atlas]

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