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Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses do the AI thing without a projector or subscription
The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses have adopted multimodal AI features. This allows the glasses to describe the world around you and translate languages.
Ray-Ban's Meta sunglasses can now identify and describe landmarks
AI-powered visual search features arrived to Ray-Ban's Meta sunglasses last year, and a new one in the latest beta looks quite useful.
Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses hands-on: Techy sunglasses you might actually want to wear
On Wednesday at its annual Connect event, Meta announced its second-gen smart glasses which feature some major hardware upgrades and a wider range of colors and frames.
Meta privately admits its Ray-Ban Stories smart glasses aren't getting much face time
Less than 10 percent of owners actively use their sunglasses.
Engadget Podcast: iPhone 13 event preview, hands-on with Facebook's smart glasses
This week, Devindra and Cherlynn chat with Wired Reviews Editor Julian Chokkattu about Apple’s upcoming launch event on September 14th. What will the next iPhone be called, and what new features will it bring?
Facebook's first smart glasses are the Ray-Ban Stories
Facebook is making its first foray into the world of smart glasses.
Leak reveals Facebook and Ray-Ban's upcoming smart glasses
Facebook and Ray-Ban's previously teased smart glasses are set to arrive later today, but pictures of them have leaked out ahead of the announcement.
Facebook's next product will be its long-awaited Ray-Ban smart glasses
Facebook's next product release will be a Ray-Ban augmented reality sunglasses, according to CEO Mark Zuckerberg.
Facebook's first AR glasses are a research project called 'Aria'
Dubbed Project Aria, these smart glasses are more of a research platform than consumer-ready face gadget. As Facebook points out, “Project Aria was designed as a way to help us innovate safely and responsibly.
Ray-Ban and Oakley are working with Google Glass
Google only recently announced versions of its Glass headset attached to conventional specs and sunglasses (shown above), but a new partnership with Luxottica -- the company behind brands including Oakley and Ray-Ban -- will give it a significant boost. Described as a strategic partnership to "design, develop and distribute" Glass eyewear, it promises headsets "that straddle the line between high-fashion, lifestyle and innovative technology." Oakley has shown off its own heads-up display equipped goggles already, and one wonders if the two projects will merge or continue separate development. Andrea Guerra, CEO of Luxottica Group, says his company is proud to "set the pace in the eyewear industry once again," but offers few details on how or when that will happen, with more info to be released later. The Google Glass G+ post is a bit more revealing, highlighting Luxottica's more than 5,000 retail locations and distribution channels that will come in handy later. Of course, those big name brands will also help Glass expand beyond the 40 or so variations offered currently in its Titanium Collection (seen in the gallery below) and make the product something people don't want to snatch off of your face. Google's "Captain of Moonshots," Astro Teller, sees the deal as a way to push "smart eyewear" forward -- although wearers may want to wait for the law to catch up.