That first impression
screams "sleek, geek hardware"—the titanium band that wearers have to
get used to hovering at their eyebrows and others will to get used to
seeing on people.
I was initiated into the
Glass Explorers program in Los Angeles, several hours away and decades beyond
San Antonio on the tech implementers scale. I was glad to have a long a day in
Los Angeles wearing Glass and adjusting to the stares and comments so I could
practice how to respond back home. Based on what could hardly be called
conclusive experience, these are the reactions I got during my first 24 hours with
Glass.
Vicarious fan
The security guard at the
hotel where I stayed immediately engaged in conversation. Clearly, he knew what he
was seeing and had opinions already.
"Is that Google Glass?"
"Yes. You know about it?!"
"I think you look like a cyborg. That's really cool."
"Some people might say it's too geeky. I'm glad you think it's cool."
"We have to keep up with what’s in the future. Before long we'll have chips implanted it us."
At that point, the
receptionist at the hotel desk out gave him a most curious look. They carried
on a conversation about how dogs already get chips, as I slipped away.
Elbow nudger
It's one thing to spot
Google Glass in the wild and go forward silently. It's apparently another to
want to whisper to someone else so you can share your sighting. At a trendy
vegetarian restaurant, servers carried on one-to-one conversations with me
without calling attention to the slate gadget under my bangs. I talked with the
women at the next table who came with their dogs. Dogs are always a
conversation starter and apparently more interesting than my Google Glass.
Yet, a couple of tables
over, I could see several people nudging each other and whispering as they
looked at me.
At the airport gate area as
I was leaving California, one woman stared just a little longer than
normal. Next, she turned her back to say something privately to the man with
her. Then he stared. Were they thinking, "What on earth is that?" Or
were they saying, "Can you believe that ol' lady has Glass?"
Acknowledger
I must have walked toward a
thousand people along the sidewalk or in the airport. It's amazing how few make
eye contact at all. Those who did either didn't notice anything on my face or
didn't care. I have to say, though, that in any other circumstance I wouldn't
be trying to make eye contact with everyone I walked past either. Those people
who do notice sometimes acknowledged it: "Like your Glass!" Maybe
they want to make the point that they know what it is.
Maybe they work for Google.