
"When Meta first announced its display-enabled smart glasses last year, it teased a handwriting feature that allows users to send messages by tracing letters with their hands. Now, the company is starting to roll it out, with people enrolled in its early access program getting it first, I got a chance to try the feature at CES and it made me want to start wearing my Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses more often."
"Sitting at a table wearing the Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses and neural band, I was able to quickly write a message just by drawing the letters on the table in front of me. It wasn't perfect - it misread a capital "I" as an "H" - but it was surprsingly intuitive. I was able to quickly trace out a short sentence and even correct a typo."
Meta is rolling out a handwriting input feature for its Ray-Ban Display smart glasses, allowing users to send messages by tracing letters with their hands. The feature reduces reliance on voice dictation and preset replies by enabling custom, discreet responses using a neural band. Hand-drawn letters appear as text on the glasses' display, with swipe gestures for space and deletion to correct mistakes. The handwriting recognition is intuitive but imperfect, occasionally misreading characters. Meta also added a teleprompter that accepts up to 16,000 characters and displays text on individual cards that users manually swipe through for control.
Read at Engadget
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