When he was nine years old, Toronto film-maker Rob Spence  received a severe injury to his right eye in a shotgun accident. After a  period of hiding the aftermath under an eyepatch, six years ago he had  the eye replaced with a prosthesis.
Being a visual artist, however, he  had an idea - instead of just an unseeing artificial eye, he wanted one  that could capture images of what he was looking at, and wirelessly  transmit them to an external recording device. He himself wouldn't be  able to see through the eye, but the footage obtained from it could take  film-making to new levels. It's been a few years since Spence began his  Eyeborg Project, but he has just announced that the eye is now  functioning.
Spence's artificial eye contains a tiny video camera, a battery and  transmitter, and sends an understandably somewhat grainy live picture  from that camera to a small handheld monitor - from there, it could be  recorded. There aren't yet many details available on exactly how the  camera works or was made, but Rob has promised on his blog that such  information should be posted soon.
San Francisco artist Tanya Marie Vlach  has a very similar project underway - she lost her left eye in a car  accident, and is now working on replacing it with a camera eye, that  will play a part in a variety of art works.
In the meantime, Spence has presented a short documentary on the  current state of high-tech prostheses, which includes footage of his eye  in action.
Video game company Square Enix commissioned him to produce  the piece to promote its Deus Ex: Human Revolution game, which features a character with a camera eye.
The Eyeborg Project documentary can be viewed below, but be warned, there are gory parts.
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