Close Menu
Voxa News

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Women at the helm: an all-female sailing weekend on the Norfolk Broads | Norfolk holidays

    August 3, 2025

    Canadian Open: Victoria Mboko stuns Coco Gauff to reach quarter-finals in Montreal

    August 3, 2025

    Amazon earnings key takeaways: AI, cloud growth, tariffs

    August 3, 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Voxa News
    Trending
    • Women at the helm: an all-female sailing weekend on the Norfolk Broads | Norfolk holidays
    • Canadian Open: Victoria Mboko stuns Coco Gauff to reach quarter-finals in Montreal
    • Amazon earnings key takeaways: AI, cloud growth, tariffs
    • Critical Role Adds Brennan Lee Mulligan as Campaign 4 Game Master
    • 2025 WWE SummerSlam card: Matches, schedule, start time, rumors as John Cena vs. Cody Rhodes main events
    • Body found in collapsed Chile mine as search continues for trapped miners | Chile
    • Stourbridge MP investigated over late filing of overseas trip
    • Revealed: Yorkshire Water boss was paid extra £1.3m via offshore parent firm | Water industry
    Sunday, August 3
    • Home
    • Business
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Sports
    • Travel
    • World
    • Entertainment
    • Technology
    Voxa News
    Home»Technology»‘Autofocus’ specs promise sharp vision, near or far
    Technology

    ‘Autofocus’ specs promise sharp vision, near or far

    By Olivia CarterJuly 11, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read0 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Telegram Tumblr Email
    'Autofocus' specs promise sharp vision, near or far
    "People don't want to look like cyborgs," says Niko Eiden
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


    Chris Baraniuk

    Technology Reporter

    IXI

    “People don’t want to look like cyborgs,” says Niko Eiden

    They look like an ordinary pair of glasses – but these are tech-packed specs.

    On a Zoom call, Niko Eiden, chief executive and co-founder of Finnish eyewear firm IXI, holds up the frames with lenses containing liquid crystals, meaning their vision-correcting properties can change on the fly.

    This one pair could correct the vision of someone who normally uses totally different pairs of glasses for seeing near or far.

    “These liquid crystals… we can rotate them with an electrical field,” explains Mr Eiden.

    “It’s totally, freely tuneable.” The position of those crystals affects the passage of light through the lenses. A built-in eye-tracker allows the glasses to respond to whatever correction the wearer needs at a given moment.

    However, tech-laden eyewear has a troubled history – take Google’s ill-fated “Glass” smart glasses.

    Consumer acceptability is key, acknowledges Mr Eiden. Most people don’t want to look like cyborgs: “We need to make our products actually look like existing eyewear.”

    IXI

    IXI glasses have lenses that can be manipulated with an electric field

    The market for eyewear tech is likely to grow.

    Presbyopia, an age-related condition that makes it harder to focus on things close to you, is projected to become more common over time as the world’s population ages. And myopia, or short-sightedness, is also on the rise.

    Spectacles have remained largely the same for decades. Bifocal lenses – in which a lens is split into two regions, usually for either near- or far-sightedness – require the wearer to direct their vision through the relevant region, depending on what they want to look at, in order to see clearly.

    Varifocals do a similar job but the transitions are much smoother.

    In contrast, auto-focus lenses promise to adjust part or all of the lens spontaneously, and even accommodate the wearer’s changing eyesight over time.

    “The first lenses that we produced were horrible,” admits Mr Eiden, candidly.

    Those early prototypes were “hazy”, he says, and with the lens quality noticeably poor at its edges.

    But newer versions have proved promising in tests, says Mr Eiden. Participants in the company’s trials have been asked, for example, to read something on a page, then look at an object in the distance, to see whether the glasses respond smoothly to the transition.

    Mr Eiden says that the eye tracking device within the spectacles cannot determine exactly what a wearer is looking at, though certain activities such as reading are in principle detectable because of the nature of eye movements associated with them.

    Since such glasses respond so closely to the wearer’s eye behaviour, it’s important the frames fit well, says Emilia Helin, product director.

    IXI’s frames are adjustable but not to a great degree, given the delicate electronics inside, she explains: “We have some flexibility but not full flexibility.” That’s why IXI hopes to ensure that the small range of frames it has designed would suit a wide variety of faces.

    The small battery secreted inside IXI’s autofocus frames should last for two days, says Mr Eiden, adding that it’s possible to recharge the specs overnight while the wearer is asleep.

    But he won’t be drawn on a launch date, which he intends to reveal later this year. As for cost, I ask whether £1,000 might be the sort of price tag he has in mind. He merely says, “I’m smiling when you say it but I won’t confirm.”

    Getty Images

    Autofocus lenses could help people who struggle with varifocals or bifocals

    Autofocus lenses could help people who struggle with varifocals or bifocals, says Paramdeep Bilkhu, clinical adviser at the College of Optometrists.

    However, he adds, “There is insufficient evidence to state whether they perform as well as traditional options and whether they can be used for safety critical tasks such as driving.”

    Chi-Ho To, an optometry researcher, at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University has a similar concern – what if the vision correction went wrong or was delayed slightly while he was, say, performing surgery on someone?

    “But I think in terms of general use having something that allows autofocusing is a good idea,” he adds.

    Mr Eiden notes that the first version of his company’s lenses will not alter the entire lens area. “One can always glance over the dynamic area,” he says. If wholly self-adjusting lenses emerge then safety will become “a much more serious business”, he adds.

    In 2013, UK firm Adlens released glasses that allowed wearers to manually change the optical power of the lenses via a small dial on the frames. These lenses contained a fluid-filled membrane, which when compressed in response to dial adjustments would alter its curvature.

    Adlens’ current chief executive Rob Stevens says the specs sold for $1,250 (£920) in the US and were “well received by consumers” but not so much by opticians, which he says “strangled sales”.

    Since then, technology has moved on and the concept of lenses that refocus themselves automatically, without manual interventions, has emerged.

    Like IXI and other companies, Adlens is working on glasses that do this. However, Mr Stevens declines to confirm a launch date.

    Joshua Silver, an Oxford University physicist, founded Adlens but no longer works for the company.

    He came up with the idea of fluid-filled adjustable lenses back in 1985 and developed glasses that could be tuned to the wearer’s needs and then permanently set to that prescription.

    Such lenses have enabled roughly 100,000 people in 20 countries to access vision correcting technology. Prof Silver is currently seeking investment for a venture called Vision, which would further rollout these glasses.

    As for more expensive, electronics-filled auto-focus specs, he questions whether they will have broad appeal: “Wouldn’t [people] just go and buy reading glasses, which would more or less do the same thing for them?”

    Hong Kong Polytechnic University

    Prof Chi-Ho To has developed a lens which slows short-sightedness

    Other specs tech is even slowing down the progression of eye conditions such as myopia, beyond just correcting for them.

    Prof To has developed glasses lenses that have a honeycomb-like ring in them. Light passing through the centre of the ring, focused as normal, reaches the wearer’s retina and allows them to see clearly.

    However, light passing through the ring itself is defocused slightly meaning that the peripheral retina gets a slightly blurred image.

    This appears to slow improper eyeball growth in children, which Prof To says cuts the rate of short-sightedness progression by 60%. Glasses with this technology are now in use in more than 30 countries, he adds.

    British firm SightGlass has a slightly different approach – glasses that gently reduce the contrast of someone’s vision to similarly affect eye growth and myopia progression.

    While autofocus glasses and other high-tech solutions may have promise, Prof To has an even bigger goal: glasses that don’t just slow down myopia but actually reverse it slightly – a tantalising prospect that could improve the vision of potentially billions of people.

    “There is growing evidence that you can do it,” teases Prof To.

    More Technology of Business

    Autofocus promise sharp specs vision
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Olivia Carter
    • Website

    Olivia Carter is a staff writer at Verda Post, covering human interest stories, lifestyle features, and community news. Her storytelling captures the voices and issues that shape everyday life.

    Related Posts

    Amazon earnings key takeaways: AI, cloud growth, tariffs

    August 3, 2025

    Aamir Khan: India’s movie legend on a cut-price mission to save Bollywood | Bollywood

    August 3, 2025

    NASA’s latest mission to the ISS features a bacterial experiment

    August 3, 2025

    Tim Cook reportedly tells employees Apple ‘must’ win in AI

    August 3, 2025

    Trump Promised to ‘Drill, Baby, Drill.’ The New Rigs Are Nowhere to Be Found

    August 3, 2025

    From scrappy experiment to Wall Street’s invisible backbone

    August 3, 2025
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Medium Rectangle Ad
    Top Posts

    27 NFL draft picks remain unsigned, including 26 second-rounders and Bengals’ Shemar Stewart

    July 17, 20251 Views

    Eight healthy babies born after IVF using DNA from three people | Science

    July 17, 20251 Views

    Massive Attack announce alliance of musicians speaking out over Gaza | Kneecap

    July 17, 20251 Views
    Don't Miss

    Women at the helm: an all-female sailing weekend on the Norfolk Broads | Norfolk holidays

    August 3, 2025

    Our yacht was in its element. With sunshine gleaming off the chestnut spars and a north-northeasterly fattening the…

    Canadian Open: Victoria Mboko stuns Coco Gauff to reach quarter-finals in Montreal

    August 3, 2025

    Amazon earnings key takeaways: AI, cloud growth, tariffs

    August 3, 2025

    Critical Role Adds Brennan Lee Mulligan as Campaign 4 Game Master

    August 3, 2025
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews
    Medium Rectangle Ad
    Most Popular

    27 NFL draft picks remain unsigned, including 26 second-rounders and Bengals’ Shemar Stewart

    July 17, 20251 Views

    Eight healthy babies born after IVF using DNA from three people | Science

    July 17, 20251 Views

    Massive Attack announce alliance of musicians speaking out over Gaza | Kneecap

    July 17, 20251 Views
    Our Picks

    As a carer, I’m not special – but sometimes I need to be reminded how important my role is | Natasha Sholl

    June 27, 2025

    Anna Wintour steps back as US Vogue’s editor-in-chief

    June 27, 2025

    Elon Musk reportedly fired a key Tesla executive following another month of flagging sales

    June 27, 2025
    Recent Posts
    • Women at the helm: an all-female sailing weekend on the Norfolk Broads | Norfolk holidays
    • Canadian Open: Victoria Mboko stuns Coco Gauff to reach quarter-finals in Montreal
    • Amazon earnings key takeaways: AI, cloud growth, tariffs
    • Critical Role Adds Brennan Lee Mulligan as Campaign 4 Game Master
    • 2025 WWE SummerSlam card: Matches, schedule, start time, rumors as John Cena vs. Cody Rhodes main events
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    2025 Voxa News. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.