RayNeo Air 4 Pro Review: My Eyes Love These Video Glasses, but My Nose Disagrees
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RayNeo Air 4 Pro Review: My Eyes Love These Video Glasses, but My Nose Disagrees
"Video glasses are somehow simultaneously more niche and a lot more practical than smart glasses in some ways, since, unlike smart glasses, which have limited apps, power, and functionality, you can actually use video glasses to get stuff done."
"The $299 RayNeo Air 4 Pro are supposed to be light, bright, sharp, and capable of sitting in for a monitor for gaming, watching content, or even just everyday computing."
"The first thing you should know is that I'm typing this with the RayNeo Air 4 Pro on my face right now. Is it the most natural experience in the world? No. It is not. But it is surprisingly functional."
Video glasses represent a distinct category from smart glasses, functioning as portable display devices rather than AI-integrated wearables. TCL's RayNeo Air 4 Pro distinguishes itself as the first video glasses with HDR10 support, emphasizing light weight, brightness, and sharp image quality. While most consumers lack practical need for video glasses, they offer genuine functionality advantages over smart glasses by enabling actual computing tasks. The device provides a surprisingly functional experience despite ergonomic compromises. Video glasses appeal to niche users seeking a large virtual screen without external visibility constraints, though their practical necessity remains questionable for general audiences.
Read at gizmodo.com
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