Potential plans to add facial recognition to Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses aren't very popular it seems.
New models have prescriptions in mind for people who actually still need help seeing.
Privacy be damned.
Maybe using people's naked videos to train AI wasn't such a good idea after all.
Smart glassses have a lot to offer, but AI needs to get out of the way.
Is this #glassholes 2.0?
Sorry, Vision Pro lovers, looks like smart glasses are sucking up all the air.
As someone who's already tried them, I'm telling you that you should do the same.
There's one big hurdle between Meta and making a device that actually stands on its own.
Meta's 'Hypernova' glasses could cost well over $1,000 and include a tiny display on one lens with its own, tiny app tray.
With Ray-Ban Meta’s popularity, Meta execs claim they will finally fulfill the promise of Horizon Worlds with more AI wearables.
In both public and private, Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg extols the future of AR even while staff worry about him getting in bed with Trump.
Judging by CES 2025, there’s little ‘augmented reality’ about the AR glasses available today.
The Ray-Ban Meta glasses are fine, but Apple needs to craft something that won't drag my face down to the floor like the Vision Pro.
The Ray-Ban Meta glasses' AI will confidently lie to you about anything, and just like dad, it thinks everything in big red armor is Iron Man.
Meta Connect announced new features for the smart glasses, but they're all still very basic.