
"If you really, really want to try AR smart glasses like right now, I have some advice. Are you ready? Here it is you should wait. AR smart glasses might technically be a thing in the here and now, but if there's one thing that using the $1,100 RayNeo X3 Pro taught me, it's that the here and now may be enticing, but it can also be one, big, huge, Android-filled headache."
"The screen on these smart glasses really is something. It's bright, it has dimension, and it's sharp. Specifically, the RayNeo X3 Pro has a 640 x 480 dual-lens color micro LED display with 6,000 nits of peak brightness. That brightness tops even the Meta Ray-Ban Display, which maxes out at 5,000 nits, and I can say, having tried both, that the RayNeo X3 Pro appears much sharper. Colors also appear a lot more vibrant."
AR smart glasses like the RayNeo X3 Pro deliver a striking visual experience with a 640 x 480 dual-lens color micro-LED display and 6,000 nits peak brightness, producing sharp, dimensional, and vibrant images. The display outshines devices such as the Meta Ray-Ban Display, which peaks at 5,000 nits. RayNeo positions the X3 Pro toward full-on AR use cases including movies, games, navigation, translation, music, calling, and notifications. However, the platform faces significant limitations in native apps, user interface polish, and an Android-centric software experience that can create usability headaches and hinder the device's broader appeal.
Read at gizmodo.com
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