
"Meta is taking wearable tech to the next level with the introduction of the Ray-Ban Display, its most advanced pair of smart glasses yet. Until now, Meta's collaborations with Ray-Ban and Oakley have focused primarily on audio-forward experiences - devices that allowed users to listen to music, take calls, and access voice assistants without reaching for their phones. The Ray-Ban Display represents a major leap forward, offering a private, integrated display that brings visual information directly into the wearer's line of sight."
"The defining feature of the Ray-Ban Display is its built-in right-lens display, which activates on command and offers a discreet way to check information without breaking focus. Users can view incoming messages, preview photos taken with the glasses' built-in camera, pull up directions in real time, and engage with Meta AI prompts - all without ever pulling out a smartphone. Unlike early heads-up displays or clunky AR headsets, the Ray-Ban Display keeps things sleek and fashion-friendly."
"The private display is designed to be invisible to bystanders, offering a level of privacy that makes the experience feel natural and personal. This makes the glasses especially useful in public settings, whether navigating a new city, capturing moments on the fly, or simply staying connected without staring at a phone screen. A key part of the experience is the Meta Neural Band, an EMG-enabled wristband that reads the tiny electrical signals produced by muscle activity."
The Ray-Ban Display combines a discreet right-lens visual display with a built-in camera and Meta AI integration to deliver on-the-go visual information without using a smartphone. The glasses present incoming messages, photo previews, navigation directions, and AI prompts in the wearer’s line of sight while remaining invisible to bystanders for added privacy. The device emphasizes fashion-forward design, launching September 30 in black and sand and offered in two sizes. Control options include the Meta Neural Band, an EMG-enabled wristband that interprets subtle muscle signals to manipulate on-screen content. The product shifts Meta’s wearables from audio-first to visually integrated AR.
Read at stupidDOPE | Est. 2008
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