Memoto is a small wearable lifelogging camera, funded via crowd funding site Kickstarter.
The marvels of miniaturization have given us wearable cameras that cram high-definition video recording into a package barely larger than two packs of cards.
We're even talking about deploying wearable cameras so we can capture video beyond the fixed cameras of the cars.
The device, a wearable digital camera that can take hundreds of pictures without the user's having to click the shutter, is the SenseCam, not Sensecam.
Using a wearable camera and wearable display, he invited others to both see what he was looking at, over the Web, as well as send him live feeds or messages in real time.
These wearable cameras allow people to fight back against the surveillance industry.
Two makers of wearable cameras, GoPro and Contour, demonstrate products that connect the cameras to Wi-Fi networks for live broadcasting.
Tiny, wearable cameras, which can be tucked over an ear or worn in a headband, are entering the mainstream.
But a new generation of devices that cost around $200, some of them recording in high-definition, may move wearable cameras into the mainstream, offering a new dimension in first-person documentation.
Police officers and building inspectors, for example, may don wearable cameras to document their interactions and observations.