 Here is the first time I'm using the Blade 3000. I can see a screen right here. Oh, that's cool. And does it look like I have smart glasses? Aye, aye, aye. This is amazing. This is so cool. Here you go. Wait, wait, wait. You can both be. So, who are you? That's fantastic. So, this is the latest music. The most advanced ever. You can see the, how does it work? Well, you know, it's a pair of glasses. How does glasses work? If you want more detail than that, I would assume. Well, there's a screen, it's like a... Yeah, so there's a massive little tiny projector right here. This thing puts out a great big image out in space. The image comes down through here, and then it goes into a thing that we call a wave guide. You can kind of see it light up a little bit right there. The light comes in, it spreads down through, and then comes out into an eye box. And literally, instead of projecting up onto the wall, it projects up into space in front of you. That's so cool. And this guy's running a quad-core ARM-based processor, Android 5.0, Gyro's accelerometers, magnetic field set. This is a phone minus cellular service. Where's the processor? It's over here. Right there. So, what CPU do you use? It's a Marvell processor. Marvell? Yeah. So, it's a 64-bit. I have no idea about that level of detail, and I'm not sure how much... But it runs Android, and you can, there's a battery on the other side here. There's the battery end processor are on this side. And what's on the other side? There's batteries back here also. This is display engines and a bunch of other cool stuff. There's haptic sensors in this. When you're walking down the street, if there's a Pokemon Go character to your right, the little haptic sensor over here tells you to look that way. When you look and turn your head, right out in front of you folks, the Pokemon Go character. Directional information, answer your phone. This is the beginnings of leaving your phone in your pocket. I was doing the music videos maybe five years ago. All kinds of models coming out. And they were... You have a model also that looks like you have something external, right? Yeah, these are enterprise industrial products. And these are already very successful for a specific market, right? It's really starting to crank up an enterprise. Warehouse picking, field service applications. Which one is this one? This is the M300. Enterprise smart glasses. So, what's the micro display technology? Is it a... Is it a topium? No, it's DLP. DLP. Texas Instruments. There's a small DLP projector. It's a .2 inch. It's a .2 inch wide VGA. Wide VGA, that's so awesome. This is the coolest use... It's got an 8 megapixel camera in the front here too. I can't even see a camera anywhere. It's in there. Don't worry, it's in there. We don't hide it on purpose. And in fact, there's even a little illuminator in there so that if you're recording, just like this guy it's on, so you know. Just like Snapchat with their glasses, think about that. But they can... They still look a little out there, Snapchat glasses, but they're cool, okay? These guys are not just a pair of cameras with glasses. This is everything you'd find in a phone but cellular. 1080p video, 8 megapixel camera, but you can see the... It's not cellular. But you can Bluetooth to your phone. Or Wi-Fi. Wi-Fi or Bluetooth pair to your phone. iOS or Android. And does James Bond even have something like this exclusive Woosick's consumer product? These are James Bond-esque. Even he doesn't have it, right? No, no, not yet. Like, like, like... Basically glasses, that's it. Yes, this is the future of computing. I mean, HoloLens and some of these other companies' products are cool, but they're giant tour de force beasts. This thing people would wear. It has the look and feel of a conventional pair of Oakley glasses. If you can just try it again. Can you hold my camera? Yep, certainly. Okay, sure. Yep. Go on. So, well, I see a globe right here. It's very clear. And do I have an interaction UI? Or is it just voice? On your right temple, there's a touch pad right there. Yep. Back and forth, up down, it uses voice also. Voice commands. And I can't tell you this. You zoom back just to tag here. Yeah, okay, good. So it's actually very clear. And it's designed so that when your phone's in your pocket, you don't have to take it out anymore. How many times are you carrying all this stuff or you're walking down the street and your phone's on your face buried in your phone? You don't have to do that anymore with these glasses on. And is there focus pulling or how does it work? Is it unlimited focus? Is it laser? It's focused at infinity. But if you have glasses, if you have reading glasses, or excuse me, if you have distance vision glasses, you can get your script filled. So these become your glasses. And when they're off, the image completely disappears. When they're on, because we're using a DLP with all that high contrast, it's cutouts in front of you. This is so cool. So is there enough battery life too? You can charge it with a, you can have a power bank and charge it longer. How long is battery? There's micro USB slot connection on this. How long do you think the battery will last? If you're watching movies, let's say, which is not terribly difficult, you can watch a full length movie on this thing if you want to. If you're using it the way you might use a watch, this is an all day device. They answer the phone, do those kinds of things. If you're chasing Pokemon Go characters in New York City running down the street, you probably got an hour and a half worth of runtime. So you should plug in. You can also, right now, there's a flash slot so you can put in more memory if you want to. And we are looking at having wireless charging on the glasses so that you don't have to plug them in. So 199, I'm drinking 409, how much can we, I hope for, you know, it's all about mass production, right? Yeah. Are you gonna get there? How are you gonna get there? We have big partners already. Yes. In fact, we just announced a great relationship with our friends at Toshiba. There's a bunch of, who's whose list of partners that are using our products? Big companies. Big companies, they even kind of like BarQ and stuff. Like some big partner, really. No acquisitions. No acquisitions. We're a public company. We're on the, Music's is on the Nasdaq. And it's one of the only companies that's a pure play in this business. There are companies down in Florida that have four billion dollar valuations that are trying to make a pair of glasses. Are you talking about ODG or something else? No, we're talking about Magic Leap. Okay, Magic Leap? Yes. But there's some big stuff happening and Microsoft delayed their products. It doesn't really come out. They say 2019 wait for it. Yeah, they're gonna wait till 20, because they're trying to, I think, deal with form factor issues more than anything else. This is augmented. We're not talking about a side screen. It's basically nearly augmented, right? This is about location aware content. It's connecting the web to the real world. I'm the first guy to say this is not about watching dinosaurs walk down the street. This is about putting the glasses on, having your phone in your pocket, connected information, the web to the real world, but it is not about the dinosaurs and stuff like that. It's about the GPS. It's about the Yelp reviews as you walk past a restaurant. And you look a lot cooler in those than you do in this. And you had another for the third one also? At the booth? That was, Yeah. 3,000. Down on the end. And that one over there? What does that one do? So, very similar to the M300. You have the M3000. Same concept, industrial enterprise device, full featured, but with a see-through wave guide. Similar to the blade that you were just wearing. Nice. So where's your company based? Rochester, New York. And how many engineers do you have to make this happen? Make this work? In house, there's about 25 engineers. And they're at every discipline you can imagine. Even one of them has a nuclear physics degree, but he's mostly doing optics. We don't figure that. Yeah, he's mostly optics-related kind of guys. So, optics, hardware, software, mechanical, electrical engineering guys, it's quite an amazing crew of folks. If you want to know how to make wearable technology, these guys have been doing it longer than any company on the planet. And there's about 60 total employees that views X50, some odd kind of a thing around the world. And this is so cool. So, hopefully Google is at Mobile World Congress and comes up and says, hey, how about, let's get this cuckoo glass thing come back and help you make better software, UI, everything, they should invest a billion in this, right? Yeah, you would think that that would be the case. That would be sure. It makes a lot of sense to me. You know, they're, yeah, we'll see. I'd sit down at the table for a billion dollars. How much is it going to be, do you think? Price to the market, this will be less than 500 bucks. Less than 500? Yes. 2017? In 2018, it'll be less than 500 bucks. When do we have to wait? It's going to start, at the end of this year, they'll start shipping. They'll be premium price to begin with. We have a bunch of enterprise partners that in effect, probably there'll be a $500 version that maybe some features change and stuff on a bit. And then there's a $1,000 version that's pointed more to B to C kinds of applications. The ecosystem of applications has to come on board enough so the mass is to purchase in high volume. Yeah, but you'll even need a few killer apps. Yes, exactly. Like one or two perfect apps. Navigation. And then something, and then you're in. Navigation. Playing golf. Golf course. Yeah. Simple things, karaoke. Pokemon Go. Pokemon Go might work. All right. Cool.