I tried smart glasses with a built-in display, and they made my Meta Ray-Bans feel outdated
Briefly

I tried smart glasses with a built-in display, and they made my Meta Ray-Bans feel outdated
"The are the latest to enter what has been a bustling market of AI wearables in 2025, and they're full of promise. Besides having the now-expected benefits of smart glasses, such as hands-free photo and video capturing, you can also tap into (or call on) Rokid's ChatGPT-powered voice assistant to answer queries, navigate the UI for you, or process visual information for you through its 12MP sensor."
"Sure, the Meta Ray-Bans can run multimodal operations too, but not as well as the Rokid Glasses, based on my 24 hours of testing them so far. And the latter pair has a special trick up its sleeve: Micro LED waveguide displays, an advancement that suggests that real innovation in smart glasses might not be what you hear but what you see."
Rokid Glasses will launch via Kickstarter with a $599 retail price and integrate Micro LED waveguide displays for improved visual output. The glasses offer hands-free photo and video capture and a ChatGPT-powered voice assistant that can answer queries, navigate the interface, and process visual information using a 12MP sensor. The design mimics conventional optical frames for discreet wear. The 12MP camera performance is underwhelming, and many features require a stable internet connection to function. The product aims to outpace existing multimodal smart glasses by prioritizing display technology and AI-driven interactions.
Read at ZDNET
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