Google Glass
San Francisco-based Augmedix, which has developed a Google Glass clinical documentation offering for physicians raised $16 million in a round co-led by existing investors Emergence Capital and DCM Ventures.
Sony has developed, not a pair of smart glasses, but a device that attaches to any piece of eyewear to make it smart.
Two and a half years after Google Glass was first announced, its hype train may have lost some steam.
At Partners HealthCare's Connected Health Symposium last week, Beth Israel Deaconess CIO and SVP Dr.
Austin, Texas-based Pristine, maker of a video streaming Google Glass product for healthcare, raised $5.
A new pilot study from Stanford University shows that Google Glass can help surgeons monitor patients' vital signs more closely during surgery, potentially helping them to prevent more complications.
Google Glass startup Wearable Intelligence, which, among other things, outfits Google Glass devices for use in hospitals, has raised just under $8 million, according to a report in Fortune.
Stanford University Medical Center's Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery has started using Google Glass in its resident training program.
According to a recent report from ON World, in the next fives years an estimated 700 million wearable technology devices will ship worldwide, which will make for a $47.
San Francisco-based Augmedix, one of several startups developing Google Glass software and modifications for hospital use cases, has raised $7.