 I'm here with Hayden Ethridge in the EchoSense network glasses. Now this thing looks crazy. What are we looking at here? Well, we built a camera into sunglasses, and the sunglasses have an audio and video cord that attaches to a specially built HTC cell phone, along with an HTC charger. There's a video camera in the glasses, right? Yes, it is. What it allows us to do is it'll stream live video and audio anywhere in the world to a computer, and the person who is monitoring the computer can give voice commands to the wearer in real time anywhere in the world. So the problem it solves is I'm walking down the street in San Francisco, and I'm lost, and I can have you look and figure out where I am? Absolutely. You can do it through video. If you're on the corner of 5th and Main, I'll be able to see that by the person looking at the street signs. I'll also be able to see it on the Google Maps that's displayed on the monitor screen. So couldn't you do that with Find Friends or something like that? Couldn't my cell phone just tell you where I am? You could. That runs our secret sauce is it streams live video over cellular data or cellular networks or Wi-Fi. So how does that help the non-wearer tell the wearer where they are? How does it help the non-wearer? Well, it pops up. The non-wearer is at the video screen, and they can see through Google mapping their exact GPS coordinates, as well as see where they are through the video. OK, so they can tell there's a bunch of flowers in front of that tree or something like that, too? Oh, you bet. We had one gentleman in Florida. He went outside at night to find the paper, and his wife described to him it was during Christmas time, described a snowman that was next door that was all lit up. And he said, what am I looking at? And she described exactly what he was looking at. Oh, that's really cool. I'm starting to get it. We've received that type of feedback from so many people that are blind or visually impaired. So it's not about being lost. It's about describing the world to them. Exactly. It's not about just mobility. It's about orientation, too. Take a person at home that can't see and they're alone. They want to know whether they can grab chicken noodle soup or tomato soup off of the pantry. Well, with the glasses, someone else that's not there with them can tell them exactly what soup they're grabbing. Oh, wow. That is crazy cool. OK, so I've talked to you to let me put these glasses on. All right, here we go. He says there's a little delay to turning them on. Yeah, let me get these fired up real quick. So he's firing up an app on the HTC phone, and he said that this is a specially designed phone and the cases of battery charger and also, or it's a battery, and it's also giving us the live streaming. That's correct. We're going to have to set this down here, Steve. Let me get these set up. OK. So he's plugging the adapter in for the video and audio adapter from the glasses. Do you need audio or just video? We'll do just video just to make it easier for this purpose. Video. OK, he just yelled video into the device. So it's talking to me. Yes. I can barely hear it, though. Now, what I'll do is the video should be starting and should be showing up here shortly. OK, so we're waiting for a video to show up on the computer screen that shows the GPS coordinates on a map, and it's going to have video streaming coming up on the display as well. OK, so now I've got the glasses on, and what are we supposed to be looking at on the screen over here? Well, right now it's streaming live. Here's the video that's streaming live. I have also made a telephone call to you, so you're going to be able to hear, talk, and see through the glasses. See meaning someone's going to be able to monitor you from this screen remotely. So if you walk around. So what we see on the screen is what I'm saying. So right now I'm looking at Hayden, and on the screen it shows Hayden. So somebody could tell me, that is Hayden Ethridge. Say hello, Hayden, right? Say hello, Hayden. That's exactly right. And I could be in Dallas or Florida or wherever. So it's wherever there's an internet. Yeah, it looks like about a one second delay from when I move. So I'm looking at Steve, our cameraman here. So Steve, can you see yourself in the video there? Why, there I am. I rarely get to be in front of the camera. So you were saying you can also talk to me, right? It is. Yes, yes, we can. I've got you on the phone. Let me scoot back to the interference if you'll hold this. And now we can talk. That ear tube, it's really loud in here. So that ear tube, if you can't hear out of the ear tube, put it like you're a secret service agent. There you go. So now with the headset in, I do look like a secret agent here. Now you can tell me that I'm talking to Hayden, so that I know who to say hi to. Yes, this is Hayden Ethridge, absolutely. Is that what you want to hear? No, if I'm at a party and I walk up to somebody, you can tell me, you're sitting in Dallas. You can tell me who I'm talking to. Exactly, I could do that from 2,000 miles away from the comfort of my home computer, absolutely. OK, this is getting really meta because Hayden's on the phone and he's talking to me in my ear, but I'm looking with video at Hayden and around in circles. I don't know what we're doing here. All right, Hayden, I think I get the whole idea here. We're going to go ahead and finish this off. Stay in the frame. Stay in the frame. You get out of the video there. So how much does this device cost? It costs $2,995 retail. That's what we've kicked it off at this month. And that includes the glasses that you see, the smartphone that was specially built for us from HTC, along with the EchoSense 1S charger that will allow 10 hours of straight streaming. All right, great. So this again is called the EchoSense Network Glasses and where would somebody find them? You can go to floordereading.com is our distributor's website, or you can go to echo-sense.com and also find it there. Great, thank you very much, Hayden. I appreciate the time. Thank you so much.