Meta Ray-Ban Display Review: Is This the Future We Really Want?
Briefly

Meta Ray-Ban Display Review: Is This the Future We Really Want?
"My first reaction when I put on Meta's $800 Ray-Ban Display was excitement. As frivolous as it may seem to have yet another screen in your life, there's something that happens when you basically glue a display to your eyeball. You transform from a person with glasses to, like, a spy, or a cyborga cyborg spy! Yeah, that's it. Ghost in the Shell fans will get it."
"A big, bright, full-color screenthe one thing people always wanted to know about when I showed them my deflatingly screenless Ray-Ban Meta AI glasses. That little dose of magic is even further heightened by Meta's Neural Band, a small wristband that, when slipped over your hand, reads the electrical signals in your arm, allowing you to navigate the Meta Ray-Ban Display with a series of finger pinches and thumb swipes."
The Meta Ray-Ban Display pairs an $800 full-color microdisplay with a Neural Band wrist sensor that translates electrical signals into pinch and swipe inputs. The display creates a dramatic, spy-like sensation by gluing a screen to the eye and delivering bright, immersive visuals. The Neural Band enables natural gesture navigation that echoes the magic of other spatial computing systems like Apple's Vision Pro. The hardware impresses but faces limitations due to a sparse app ecosystem. Novel inputs and visible screens reinvigorate excitement about interfaces and how users interact with computing devices.
Read at gizmodo.com
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