Re: Star Trek did it again: Predicting a Real World Innovation -The Vi
Yeah, I suppose it could be something along those lines. But, again, the video and article aren't very clear on what it is the user is seeing. I think it says the image he's getting is only a handful of pixels which isn't very much to go with when forming a coherent image. 5x5 pixels is the most you would need to coherently form letters in a very, very crude and basic "font."
I wish the articles and videos had made it more clear, maybe with a rendered image, of what it is the user is seeing. But I didn't get the impression he's entirely getting a good enough look at the world to distinguish much past light/darkness inorder to be able to navigate. And that *could* be used to perhaps form letters but may requiring a special kind of reading device that'd make images he can see. (I.E. he couldn't just pick up any book and read it, he'd need perhaps a Kindle with a special program on it providing a typeface he can see.)
Again, the technology here is certainly remarkable and is a thunderous first-step on the road to artificial eyes and/or restoring sight to people who are blind or have severely disabled vision. I mean, the first prosthetic for blind people certainly wasn't going to instantly give people 4K UHD vision with graphical overlays they can use to check their e-mail and get weather reports.
But I think saying this device is giving this man anything close to the prosthetics in The Bionic Man/TNG or his "sight" back is overstating things. It's giving him something, but something he still has to interpret into something useful in order to navigate and he still likely needs other aids (cane, dog, another person) in order to be able to completely navigate safely and to interact with the world.
Still, a remarkable device and it'll be fascinating to see what it provides in 5, 10 or even 15 years.