
"AI has evolved beyond chatbots and into smart glasses, with the goal of providing language processing models with the context of the real world from your point of view. The take that assistance to the next level with an in-lens color display and a neural wristband, enabling you to do most of what you can on your phone right from your eyes."
"Also: I tried the Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses, and they got me excited for the post-smartphone era The smart glasses are so daring and promising that, since their launch at Meta Connect last month, it has become nearly impossible to book the demo required before purchasing the glasses. However, I finally had the chance to try the pair and was impressed by its form factor, multimodal AI assistance, and a bonus unreleased feature."
"I was able to use the glasses for most tasks I'd typically use my phone for, including playing music, answering texts, taking photos, browsing social media, and even taking a video call. In every example, the experience was fairly seamless due to the combination of the in-lens display and the neural band. Despite the glasses appearing to be regular lenses from the outside, they feature an in-lens color display in your right eye."
Meta Ray-Ban Displays are advanced smart glasses that pair an in-lens color display with a neural wristband and a $799 price. The glasses project crisp, sharp visuals in the right eye while appearing like regular lenses externally. The combination of the display and the neural band enables music playback, text replies, photos, social browsing, and video calls, offering many phone functions hands-free. Demonstrations have been in high demand since launch, making booking demos difficult. Initial hands-on experiences show a polished form factor, seamless multimodal AI assistance, and an unreleased bonus feature, suggesting strong potential for post-smartphone wearable computing.
Read at ZDNET
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