Button, an AI gadget from two ex-Apple employees, is giving a whole lot of nothing.
There may be no way to escape camera-equipped glasses.
Everysight's Maverick AI Pro smart glasses are trying to take one of the Vision Pro's best features, but it ain't that simple.
In a video from March, Meta's CTO, Andrew Bosworth, says Ray-Ban users are "choosing" to have some of their content reviewed.
Whoop, there it is. And by "it" we mean another lawsuit.
Whether people want to give Meta all their food data is another question entirely.
Potential plans to add facial recognition to Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses aren't very popular it seems.
Google and Fitbit finally realize fitness bands don't all need a screen.
Even with an eye-catching design, privacy concerns over smart glasses could make them DOA.
New models have prescriptions in mind for people who actually still need help seeing.
They say eyes are windows to the soul. Well, they're also the windows to more windows, too.
I wouldn’t plan on wearing smart glasses to court anytime soon.
A European rollout is also hitting blockades thanks to the smart glasses' battery and use of AI.
The Street X is meant for urban athletes but has a little ruggedness, too.
A new company called Hark is building an ambitious-sounding AI lab, with a physical product of some sort in the works.
If these images are real, this is the first look at the Oura Ring 5.
The first video glasses with HDR10 have a great display, but the fit isn't for me.
Qualcomm imagines a future packed with AI wearables. We still have to find a gadget that makes AI worth the hassle.
All three feature multiple AI assistants.
The Luna Band is all about yelling at your wrist.