I sat down with Mark Zuckerberg to try Meta's impressive new Ray-Ban Display glasses
Briefly

I sat down with Mark Zuckerberg to try Meta's impressive new Ray-Ban Display glasses
"I run the company through text messages," he tells me recently."
"Mark is our number one heaviest user," Alex Himel, the company's head of wearables, confirms."
"You can have your hand by your side, behind your back, in your jacket pocket; it still works," Zuckerberg says."
Mark Zuckerberg frequently uses Meta's Ray-Ban Display glasses to send text messages and manages company communication through that channel. He types approximately 30 words per minute using the glasses' input method. Meta pairs a heads-up display with a neural wristband that detects signals from the arm's muscular nervous system to control the interface and enable typing via subtle gestures. The wristband functions without visual hand tracking and works even when the hand is at the user's side, behind the back, or in a jacket pocket. The display builds on previous heads-up efforts like Google Glass but adds the neural input method.
Read at The Verge
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]