Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. Photography
  5. Social Media
  6. News

A doctor donned Snapchat’s Spectacles to record a surgical procedure

Add as a preferred source on Google

With Google Glass no longer around for gadget-loving surgeons to record POV procedures, Snapchat’s camera-equipped Spectacles are starting to gain some attention in the medical field instead.

Take surgeon Shafi Ahmed. Keen to share a routine hernia op with his students but aware that having a large crowd of people in the operating theater probably wasn’t a good idea, the London-based doc chose instead to don a pair of the recently launched $130 specs to record the operation.

Recommended Videos

Uploaded automatically to Snapchat, and later put on YouTube, the video (below) shows the procedure from start to finish, with Ahmed explaining his handiwork as he proceeds.

You may be wondering how he was able to make the video when the specs only record in 10-second bursts. Well, it turns out this actually aids the flow of the video, breaking it into segments, with Ahmed offering a short explanation at the start of each new clip. “It’s like you’re presenting a recipe, you’re training people in a structured way,” he told Time. And with Ahmed’s hands understandably busy during the operation, an assistant kindly pressed the button 0n the specs to begin each recording.

The British surgeon, who works at the London Independent Hospital, told Time he’s always been interested in how wearables can be used in the clinical workspace for both practice and education.

More than 200 medical students watched the tutorial in the 24 hours after the video landed on Ahmed’s Snapchat account, with thousands more people heading to YouTube to watch it.

We assume the patient granted Ahmed permission to record the video, though we’d like to have seen his reaction when the surgeon pulled the fancy-looking shades from his pocket and explained that he wanted to wear them while he worked.

Ahmed clearly loves his tech. Earlier this year he used a 360-degree camera rig  fixed above the operating table to capture the entirety of a cancer operation, capturing it in 4K and live-streaming it globally in VR.

Interested in watching Ahmed’s surgery as seen through Snapchat’s Spectacles? You can check it out below, though if you’re a little squeamish it’s probably best you skip back to DT’s homepage instead.

Snapchat Spectacles Surgery 9/12/2016 London Independent Hospital
Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Your Galaxy Watch can now warn you before you faint
Your wrist might know you're about to faint before your brain does.
Wristwatch, Arm, Body Part

Fainting might seem like a dramatic but harmless event, but the real danger lies in what happens next. A sudden fall can result in fractures, concussions, and other serious injuries. It is especially harmful for elderly people and can cause some serious head trauma and mobility issues.

Samsung's latest research could change that. The company has completed a joint clinical study with Chung-Ang University Gwangmyeong Hospital in Korea, successfully validating that the Galaxy Watch 6 can predict vasovagal syncope (VVS) before it happens. 

Read more
Dreame wants to kit you out with a smartphone, a smart ring, and a rocket-powered sports car
The home appliance brand recently showcased its first phones, three AI smart rings, and a vehicle that hits 60 mph in under a second.
Machine, Spoke, Wheel

Dreame Technology, best known for its robot vacuums and other smart home products, has its sights set on becoming your phone maker, wearable brand, and car company. At its DREAME NEXT event in San Francisco last week, the company unveiled two smartphones, three smart rings, and a rocket-powered sports car, pushing into categories it has never competed in before.

Dreame's first smartphones are built around modular hardware

Read more
Samsung’s next smart ring is running late, but you’ll appreciate the planned upgrades
Galaxy Ring 2 with a better battery life isn't coming this year
Someone wearing the Samsung Galaxy Ring.

Samsung’s next smart ring may not show up as soon as expected. The Galaxy Ring 2 is expected to skip a 2026 release window, but rumors are pointing to notable upgrades that people actually care about.

According to a new report from ETNews, Samsung is now adjusting the Galaxy Ring 2 launch timing to early 2027 or later. While the wearable was previously expected to appear sometime in the second half of this year, possibly around a Galaxy Unpacked event, the timeline is now considered uncertain.

Read more