Wearable tech
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Smart Glasses: The Future of Computing
Meta is expanding its wearable tech vision with the Meta Ray-Ban Display smart glasses, priced at $799. Featuring in-lens displays controlled by hand gestures, these glasses allow for video recording and message sending. This visual upgrade to the previous audio-only model aims for more natural computer interaction. Early Meta Ray-Ban glasses have seen sales success, with EssilorLuxottica reporting increased revenues. However, Meta faces competition, as Google partners with Warby Parker on AI glasses, Snap plans new AR glasses, and Apple explores its own entry into the smart glasses market.
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Meta and Ray-Ban Launch $799 Smart Glasses Featuring Display
At Meta Connect, Mark Zuckerberg introduced the Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses ($799), consumer-ready smart glasses with integrated displays controlled by hand gestures via a neural wristband. This marks Meta’s expansion into augmented reality, bridging the gap between audio-only glasses and experimental AR glasses. Alongside, Meta also unveiled the Oakley Meta Vanguard smart glasses ($499) for athletes, and the Ray-Ban Meta (Gen 2) with improved battery and camera. The event also announced Horizon TV for streaming content on Meta Quest VR headsets.
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Xpeng Executive Bashes Huawei Smart Glasses: “Half a Year, Blown Speakers, Constant Replacements, Wasted Time on Repairs and Complaints”
A public dispute has emerged between an Xpeng executive and a tech company concerning the durability of its smart glasses. The Xpeng executive corroborated user complaints on social media about audio distortion and repeated malfunctions, criticizing after-sales service. The glasses, launched in September 2023, aim for daily integration with features like notifications, but face scrutiny over their build quality.