Skip to main content

Tobii Glasses 2 may improve eye tracking research methods

tobii glasses 2 may improve eye tracking research methods wearable shopper resea
Tobii Image used with permission by copyright holder

Google Glass and other smartglasses all suffer from the same problem: The average consumer thinks that smartglasses, like most wearables, are useless toys. Swedish company Tobii wants to attack this problem head on with research. Its new Tobii Glass 2 are intended for researchers, in hopes that collecting real-life gaze data will help improve eye tracking software, which in turn, will convince customers that smartglasses are worth wearing.

Tobii showed off its eye tracking software at CES a year ago. Since then, the company has been hard at work improving its software. Its first pair of smartglasses may not have looked too hot, but the eye tracking software used was top notch. Tobii Glasses 2 are much more simple, lightweight, and attractive than that first model, and they work better.

Recommended Videos

The glasses weigh just 45 grams and while they may not look as gorgeous as the new Google Glass frames, the Tobii glasses are fully functional. The glasses can capture gaze data in HD at 1080p. Researchers can even track the user’s eye movements in real time. The glasses feature a recording apparatus, which saves user gaze data to a memory card and links to the Tobii Glasses Controller Software for further analysis. 

The main idea behind the new Tobii glasses is to accurately record data, which can then be used to improve the eye tracking software for real life use. Tobii has a vision for the future of smartglasses that can be used by customers in the grocery store or at Best Buy, athletes practicing for a big competition, or drivers navigating a new route. Tobii also hopes that eye tracking software can be used in simulators, advertising, social research, and other unforeseen situations in the future. 

“Over the past four years, we have witnessed incredible new discoveries in shopper marketing, behavioral science and usability research that had not been possible before Tobii Glasses,” Barbara Barclay, general manager of Tobii North America said in a statement. “Tobii Glasses 2 offers a number of new features that will advance wearables significantly in all these fields but also open up a multitude of new research applications, providing a higher degree of ease of use, efficiency, flexibility and unobtrusiveness.”

Of course, since the Tobii glasses are intended for research only, hardware, and software packages cost a pretty penny, with prices ranging from $15,000 to $30,000. Tobii also offers a Premium Analytics package for $800 a month to supplement the basic packages. Even though Tobii Glasses 2 aren’t meant for the consumer, they might just change the way smartglasses  are used in the future.

Malarie Gokey
Former Digital Trends Contributor
As DT's Mobile Editor, Malarie runs the Mobile and Wearables sections, which cover smartphones, tablets, smartwatches, and…
How thin will the iPhone 17 Air be? A new report might have the answer
The Action button on the iPhone 16.

Since the first whispers of the Apple iPhone 17 Air floated across our desks, we've been on the hunt for more information. Just how exactly does the rumored ultra-thin iPhone fit into the company's existing lineup? Recent information suggests it might be a way to test the public reception of a slimmer phone before the launch of Apple's folding phone, and now we have an idea of exactly how thin the iPhone 17 Air is meant to be.

The iPhone 17 Air could be as slim as 5.5mm, according to a new report from Ming-Chi Kuo. Mark Gurman corroborates this theory in his Power On! newsletter, stating that the iPhone 17 Air is a step toward making the chassis as thin as possible. Even if the iPhone 17 Air is in no way related to the rumored foldable, though, it's still going to leave other devices in the dust. Right now, the iPhone 6 holds the record for Apple's thinnest model at 6.9mm, so the iPhone 17 Air will be a major reduction in size.

Read more
The latest iMessage phishing scam is easy to fall for. Here’s how to avoid it
A phishing text in the iMessage.

It’s a new year, but bad actors are still at it with an old trick repackaged for iPhone users. Bleeping Computer reports a rise in phishing attacks targeting iPhone users that involves tricking them into disabling built-in protections and clicking on malicious links.

In an increasing number of cases, text messages appear to come from fake delivery agents posing as service messages from the U.S. Postal Service (USPS). Two Digital Trends contributors have received such sham messages recently in North America.

Read more
Get the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 at up to $1,000 off with this offer
The open Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6.

The Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 is a beast of a phone with a steep price tag, but you can currently get it with an up to $1,000 discount from Samsung through its enhanced trade-in credit program. Trading in even the two-generations-old Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 4 will get you the maximum value, which would drop the price of the 256GB model of the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 from $1,900 all the way down to just $900. You're going to have to be quick though, as there's no telling how much time is remaining in this fantastic promotion from Samsung Galaxy deals.

Why you should buy the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6
Samsung's Galaxy Unpacked 2025 will take place on January 22, but if you'd rather have a foldable smartphone over a traditional device like the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S25, you won't regret going for the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6. With a rating of 4 stars out of 5 stars in our review and one of the top spots in our list of the best folding phones, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6 is a highly recommended purchase. Gone are the days of durability issues, as it features a fantastic design with an improved hinge, an IP48 resistance rating against water and dust, and Corning Gorilla Glass Victus 2 to protect its screen.

Read more