It looks like Google's one-day Glass sale has turned into an everyday sale. The company's controversial face computer is now for sale to anyone willing to fork over $1,500.

Google announced the move on the product's Google+ page, saying that while Glass is still in "beta," the company was ready to open the product up to a wider audience. That "wider audience" still only means people in the US—Google hasn't gotten the product approved by the regulatory bodies in other countries.

Buyer beware, though—Google Glass first started shipping in April 2013, which makes it over a year old. Google says the Glass Explorer Edition will be available for "as long as we have it on hand," which almost makes it sound like a clearance sale. Google also says in the post that it will continue to improve software and hardware, and at over a year old, it's hard to imagine a major hardware revision won't be coming down the pike soon. Since launch, there has been a very minor swap out program that enabled Glass to work with proprietary headphones, but that upgrade didn't improve the hardware a single bit.

Glass still uses an ancient SoC made by Texas Instruments, which isn't even a player in the market anymore—the device is basically a very tiny Galaxy Nexus.

Google closes by again mentioning a coming consumer release, which the original timetable pegged for some time this year. Those plans are, of course, subject to change, but if the timeline holds true, these units will be obsolete pretty quickly.