
"Beyond those "gee whiz" kinds of features, the Meta Ray-Ban Display can basically mirror a small subset of your smartphone's apps on its floating display. Being able to get turn-by-turn directions or see recipe steps on the glasses without having to glance down at a phone feels like genuinely useful new interaction modes. Using the glasses display as a viewfinder to line up a photo or video (using the built-in 12 megapixel, 3x zoom camera) also seems like an improvement over previous display-free smartglasses."
"Meta also showed off some pie-in-the-sky video about how future "Agentic AI" integration would be able to automatically make suggestions and note follow-up tasks based on what you see and hear while wearing the glasses. For now, though, the device represents what Zuckerberg called "the next chapter in the exciting story of the future of computing," which should serve to take focus away fr"
Ray-Ban Display supports composing messages via a neural interface that tracks mimed handwriting, reaching about 30 words per minute; the handwriting feature reportedly will not be available at launch. The glasses offer a live caption feature that types a partner's words in real time and filters background noise to focus on the person being looked at. The display can mirror a subset of smartphone apps, show directions or recipe steps, and act as a viewfinder using a built-in 12 megapixel, 3x zoom camera. Basic apps may be less convenient on the small display, and video calls share the wearer's outward-facing camera view rather than their face.
Read at Ars Technica
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