solid_fuel 2 hours ago

Meta locked two games I already paid for - Blade & Sorcery VR and Beat Saber - behind account verification on the Quest 2. I already bought both of these, played them for a while, but now it won't let me use the headset without "verifying" my facebook account by sending them a photograph of my drivers license. Neither of these games are online, neither allow me to interact with other users in any way.

I will never buy a Meta product again, the brand reputation is lower than dirt to me. Even ignoring all the other awful things Meta does, they have no reason to require a verified account to play two local-only games that I already paid for. No matter how cool glasses like these may look, I have no trust that the brand will not suddenly demand more money or information from me to continue using a product I have already purchased.

  • whatsupdog 2 hours ago

    Agree. And the constant spying doesn't help either. Who wants an always online meta controlled camera/microphone in their bedroom all the time?

    • ryandrake 2 hours ago

      I'm never going to update a photo government ID to some company just to use an app. What kind of a bonkers world are we living in? Totally ridiculous. No app is worth this.

      • heavyset_go 2 hours ago

        Some sites outsource their ID verification to platforms that want live videos of different angles of your face, along with pictures of your ID.

        Literally all the data they could possibly need to build 3D models of your face for even better facial recognition, along with plenty of data to train models on. When that data eventually leaks, it will be interesting.

        It's insane that anyone puts up with it.

        • dahrkael 16 minutes ago

          people scan their retina in exchange of coupons amd shitcoins in mall booths

      • mikae1 2 hours ago

        Most new accounts seem to require a face scan too (finally they're true to their name?). I recently needed to get a Facebook account and was not able to use it without providing the scan. Luckily I was able to do an AI face swap, but far from everyone is that savvy.

    • anal_reactor 2 hours ago

      Lots of people, actually. This website is an echo chamber of those privacy-conscious.

      • bigyabai an hour ago

        HN is typically slow to admit it, but Facebook and TikTok wouldn't be popular if you were wrong. Consumers don't care.

  • zeroq 25 minutes ago

    This, plus the fact that if you dig deep enough into your google account you'll probably find an audio file with you saying "really? I can't play this game? Fuck you facebook, never buying your gear again" recorded from your android phone without your consent or knowing.

  • sneak 18 minutes ago

    The above post didn’t even load for me because I have all of their domain names DNS blocked at my router and in NextDNS on mobile.

  • xdfgh1112 an hour ago

    How does that work? The Quest doesn't even require a Facebook account. They were decoupled in 2022.

SchemaLoad 5 hours ago

>Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses are designed to help you look up and stay present. With a quick glance at the in-lens display, you can accomplish everyday tasks—like checking messages, previewing photos, and collaborating with visual Meta AI prompts

Can you imagine trying to talk to someone face to face, but they are giving you a blank stare as random notifications and tiktok videos are being beamed inbetween their eyeballs and you.

Meta seems like one of the few large tech companies where if the whole company vanished, the world would be purely a better place.

  • zmmmmm 4 hours ago

    I do think we're in for a bit of a reality check on how human attention works.

    I have a HUD in my car that shows me directions, speed etc and when I'm looking at that the rest of the view out the windscreen is hardly even there to my visual perception even though I'm looking right at it. This seems to be getting largely overlooked but I feel like over time statistics are going to emerge that HUD type displays are increasing accidents rather than preventing them.

    • Youden 37 minutes ago

      You mean a HUD projected on the windshield itself? That's not my experience with it at all; I don't have to "look at" it, when my eyes are focused on the road in front of me, the HUD is sharp enough and positioned so that I always know my speed etc. without having to actively look for it.

      Your car might have settings to adjust it somehow, have you tried those?

    • drdaeman 4 hours ago

      Isn't it a general rule of driving (or operating any sufficiently dangerous machinery) to keep the eyes on the road, constantly reminding oneself to do so, so the attention is kept where it is needed? I mean, in theory. In practice, I see people deep in their damn phones all the time - and it's scary - but I think that's more of an attitude (social) issue than a display (technology) problem.

      And, yes, surely, one needs to periodically switch attention to mirrors and instruments, and I must imagine that shorter gaze movement distance shouldn't hurt. It's the same as checking the speedometer - you don't see the road, only have a rough idea from the peripheral vision.

      Although I can imagine that a HUD can be actively distracting, constantly intercepting attention, e.g., flickering.

      • tsimionescu 2 hours ago

        I think the point is that it's much easier to forget you're focusing on the speedometer instead of focusing on the road when the speedometer is physically displayed by a HUD right on the road. Especially if the speedometer keeps changing, since your eyes are naturally attracted to movement in your current field of view.

        With a normal car dashboard, you're much more aware you're not seeing the road while checking your speed, and you don't actually see the speedometer moving while you're looking at the road, so it can't accidentally catch your attention.

        Of course, none of this will matter in the vast majority of cases. But driving safety is all about the tail end, when you're slightly tired or when someone in front of you does something unexpected and maybe illegal, or someone jumps on the road - these are the times where accidents are avoided, and a HUD might well hurt rather than help for these cases.

      • spike021 18 minutes ago

        My 2025 Corolla has a HUD and it doesn't flicker. it's also fairly minimal and very easy to keep in peripheral vision such that while looking at traffic and such, I can still grasp what it's saying without messing up my attention.

    • ryukoposting 4 hours ago

      A HUD reduces the difference in focus distance between "looking at road" and "looking at speedometer." It matters more as you get older, because your eyes focus slower.

      • Krssst an hour ago

        Somewhat unrelated, but this discussion made me go from "I don't see what I would need something that tells me tomatoes are tomatoes" (though realtime translation looks very useful), to kinda wanting it only to have a figher plane HUD-like display all the time (to be clear, minus all the fighting parts). Almost useless (at least the attitude and vertical speed part) but would feel kinda cool. Can see some value in having the heading all the time, and speed display to motivate myself to walk faster. (well they have directions which provides much more value than all that).

        Though I don't feel comfortable having more Meta in my life.

      • armadsen 2 hours ago

        Yep. My new car has a digital rear view mirror. You flip a switch and the rear view mirror becomes a screen showing a feed from a camera on the back of the car. It’s nice for night time as well as when the rear window is blocked by rear seat passengers’ heads, or cargo or whatever.

        But it’s uncomfortable for me because it requires my eyes to refocus from distant to close and back when I glance at it, which isn’t needed with an actual mirror. So I don’t use the feature.

        • m463 an hour ago

          Wonder why they don't optically refocus the display at a distance?

          There are ways to do stuff like this.

          • Kirth an hour ago

            The people working on these things likely don't use the end product.

            • m463 24 minutes ago

              lol, probably the bane of every industry.

          • imp0cat an hour ago

            Since we are talking about car companies, it's cost-cutting, probably.

    • cbsmith 2 hours ago

      What's amusing is the original use case for HUD displays was to reduce attention problems. ;-)

    • croes 2 hours ago

      There is a difference between status information like speed and directions and messages from other people.

      Your attention reacts differently

  • gorgoiler 27 minutes ago

    In my culture it’s considered extremely casual — and therefore quite rude in social situations other than the most private and familiar — to talk with someone while wearing sunglasses. I can imagine the same thing would apply to AR devices too.

    What you describe sounds like it could be a real problem, but one I’d blame on rudeness rather than Meta. We already live in a world where people order coffee while reading E! news on their phones.

  • drdaeman 4 hours ago

    > Can you imagine trying to talk to someone face to face, but they are giving you a blank stare as random notifications and tiktok videos are being beamed inbetween their eyeballs and you.

    They wouldn't do this if the conversation is important to them. Not as much as one would glance on a smartwatch when they get a chirp, which, I believe is perfectly socially acceptable in most business/casual situations.

    And if they do it's nothing new - it's a literal equivalent of talking to a person deep into their phone. Exact same audiovisual media consumption - just a different form factor and display technology. Or, in a pre-phone era, a newspaper.

    I don't think this technology introduces anything new to this issue.

    • brandon272 3 hours ago

      It's quite different. Both are rude. But in one case the person is looking at their phone, and in another case the person is basically looking directly at you but engaged with some other thing happening on their device, as if they are in some drug induced stupor or having a neurological episode.

    • heavyset_go an hour ago

      The glasses close the attention loop faster, and the brain really, really likes quick stimuli -> dopamine release loops.

      The faster it happens, the more addictive it is. It's the difference between oral administration of drugs and IVing them directly into one's veins.

  • milkshakes an hour ago

    I disagree.

    Among Meta's many technical contributions: React PyTorch osquery GraphQL Presto/Trino RocksDB Jest OCP Llama

  • ATechGuy an hour ago

    > Meta seems like one of the few large tech companies where if the whole company vanished, the world would be purely a better place.

    100%

  • _ink_ 24 minutes ago

    > Can you imagine trying to talk to someone face to face, but they are giving you a blank stare as random notifications and tiktok videos are being beamed inbetween their eyeballs and you.

    You spelled ads wrong.

  • BatteryMountain 18 minutes ago

    Now imagine people driving at 130km/h with a 4 ton SUV with these things...

  • xdfgh1112 an hour ago

    They made quest 2 and 3. Despite their recent pushing of shitty horizon worlds, the hardware is extremely solid and affordable for VR.

  • SoftTalker 4 hours ago

    Exactly. It is bad enough trying to talk to someone with earbuds in and this just seems 10x worse. Zero chance I would buy something like this or try to talk to someone wearing them.

    • SchemaLoad 3 hours ago

      I've been making an effort to keep my phone in my pocket or even bag when talking to someone, and not having it sit on the table so I can't get distracted. I just can't imagine having notifications literally shoved in your vision automatically all the time.

      The whole product category seems to be everything wrong with tech turned up to 11.

  • jayd16 an hour ago

    Probably about what you get now except their neck isn't craned down to a phone.

  • anal_reactor 2 hours ago

    I think this is going to be very funny to observe as a third person.

aacook 5 hours ago

It seems like there are a lot of negative comments about Meta's glasses which is surprising to me as a regular user. I bought these both in clear and sunglasses and I love them. I've recorded some of the most amazing videos of my baby with them. Listening to music is fantastic as it's different from regular headphones since you can still hear the world around you — I've even done a few longer bike rides with them and it's been great. I haven't enabled any of the AI or smart features on the glasses, although I've been meaning to give it a try. Some things I don't love about them is the proprietary charging cases, the battery life seems to degrade over time (not totally certain though), and they're sensitive to sweat. Overall I think they show a ton of promise.

  • JKCalhoun 5 hours ago

    They have a brand problem. Absolutely no way I buy anything from Meta.

    • al_borland 4 hours ago

      This is my #1 issue. I simply don’t trust them and I don’t know that there is a realistic path to build that trust at this point. They’ve been violating my trust for decades.

      I’m happy to let them prove out the tech, and if/when a company enters the market with a compelling product that I can trust, I will consider that competing product.

      • throwoutway 3 hours ago

        OP is taking videos of his baby with these when Meta's page here doesn't event mention data privacy or security of the user's information or how it protects them

        • vasco 3 hours ago

          All babies look the same, out of anything private you could film by mistake, a baby seems pretty harmless.

          • dweekly 2 hours ago

            Face recognition is uninuitively good. Google Photos was able to pick out faces from my baby photos pretty easily.

            • SchemaLoad 2 hours ago

              I was thinking about that a while ago and came to the conclusion that it's likely massively helped out by the narrow search space. They aren't trying to match between every single person, just the ones in your photo library which is an extremely small group compared to what most facial recognition is doing.

            • KPGv2 2 hours ago

              Google's face recognition can't tell the difference between my 5yo and my newborn. And, most hilarious, my 8yo could unlock my wife's iPhone with face recognition when she was 2yo.

          • jahsome 3 hours ago

            Yeah and stupid babies are too stupid to consent anyway

        • frosting1337 2 hours ago

          Yes, it does, the link to Data & Privacy is at the bottom.

    • splatter9859 3 hours ago

      100% this. I'd love to have some of these features in eyewear, but there is no way in hell I purchase anything like this from Meta.

      Less those bastards get of anything I control (data, finances, time) the better.

      • mdhb 23 minutes ago

        You’re about to be in a world where your consent is totally out of the picture with Meta releasing this product and people will be recording you all the time now and sending that data directly to Meta where they can then build models about where you are, who you’re with, what you’re doing and what you are talking about and all without providing you and way to opt out other than breaking the glasses when you encounter them in public.

    • paxys 3 hours ago

      Meta has close to 4 billion people worldwide using one or more of their products. Their brand problem doesn't extend much further than the HN comment section.

      • motorest 2 hours ago

        > Meta has close to 4 billion people worldwide using one or more of their products.

        If you ask any of those 4 billion people if they know WhatsApp is related in anyway to Meta, your answers will be split between "no" and "what's a Meta?"

        • mrheosuper 21 minutes ago

          and do you think they will stop using Whatsapp if they know Meta is the parent ?

      • pier25 2 hours ago

        You can use their products and still hate the brand.

        I use Whatsapp daily (as does everyone I know) and there's no way I'm buying anything from Meta.

        • lotsofpulp 2 hours ago

          You might not be buying anything from Meta with cash, but you are with information about yourself and your network.

          • pier25 2 hours ago

            Yes, but that's besides the point.

            My comment was in the context of "Meta has a brand issue" which is absolutely true.

      • bitmasher9 3 hours ago

        Instagram or WhatsApp are absolutely critical for daily functioning in certain circles of humanity.

        • crossroadsguy 2 hours ago

          WhatsApp. Instagram not really. WhatsApp has unfortunately become "official" (not in a figure of speech) mode of communication in certain countries, one of which has more than a billion people in it.

          • SchemaLoad 2 hours ago

            Depends on who you are. Quite a lot of careers require you to market yourself on social media now. You can hate Meta with a passion but acknowledge that you still have to reach customers who are on Instagram.

        • splatter9859 3 hours ago

          WhatsApp I can buy due to the communication factor, but Instagram you're really going to have to sell me on fitting into the category of 'critical for daily functioning'.

          Instagram. Critical to life. Naah.

          • xeromal 3 hours ago

            I kind of agree but a lot of modern american small businesses run completely on facebook. At least in the 4wheeling community they do

        • jachee 3 hours ago

          Yeah, but facebook^WMeta didn’t develop those… they bought them to stifle competition.

    • jlarocco 3 hours ago

      100% They couldn't pay me to use it. I fully expect it's violating the user's privacy in every way they think they can get away with.

    • notpushkin 4 hours ago

      I would probably buy a pair once there’s some progress on an alternative firmware for those. The price is (hopefully) subsidized, so putting Meta in the red while getting some cool tech would be nice. (Same reason I own a Quest 3.)

      • mavamaarten 27 minutes ago

        Hah, same reason I bought my Quest 2. Figured I could buy a device that is subsidized by them, and then buy zero games on their platform and stream from my PC instead.

        I was very angry though when they suddenly took away my USB debugging and had to go through another round of "verification".

    • mgh2 4 hours ago

      Why do you think they rebranded? They are chasing after Gen Z, brainwashing that clean slate.

      • AvAn12 4 hours ago

        "rebranding" takes more than saying "oh, now we are 'meta'" FB launched with great positive repetitional aura, but, at least to me, they have worn that away bit by bit over the years to the point where it becomes hard to earn back,.

        • ethbr1 4 hours ago

          You'd be amazed how many <25s have no idea Meta owns Instagram and WhatsApp.

          • dymk 3 hours ago

            The big “From Meta” at the bottom of the splash screen doesn’t tip people off?

            • mcintyre1994 an hour ago

              I suspect it’s more that they don’t know who Meta is and because it’s meaningless they don’t link the “From Meta” between the two apps, if they even use both of them.

        • xnx 4 hours ago

          > FB launched with great positive repetitional aura

          As a site that ranked how hot girls were?

          • mortenjorck 4 hours ago

            The vast majority of users knew nothing about Facebook‘s origins until The Social Network. In the mid-to-late 2000s, the perception was of simply a much better designed, much more exclusive alternative to Myspace.

            Hard to imagine nearly two decades later, but for a brief moment in time, it was cool to be on Facebook.

          • brandall10 4 hours ago

            To the larger public they were the opposite of that... a clean, uncluttered alternative to MySpace that had none of its social baggage, in spite of its DNA which was clearly unknown during the early phases of social media.

          • vasco 3 hours ago

            The most popular dating apps do basically the same now but since there's no leader board and they aren't side by side it's all good I guess. All the same except for the UX

          • AvAn12 4 hours ago

            Ok, I was trying to give as much benefit of the doubt as possible. You are 100% correct of course...

    • zmmmmm 2 hours ago

      The brand on display here is Ray Ban. That's why they spent billions to lock in the partnership.

      • ghostpepper 2 hours ago

        Facebook changed its name to Meta. Meta is the company with the brand problem, not Ray Ban.

    • dhjilop 4 hours ago

      I would buy something from them, but until I know I could wear them safely at work while developing, using the bathroom, driving, and watching TV at home, and that I’d want to do that without being distracted all day by texts, etc., I wouldn’t wear them. I have to wear glasses, so they’d have to be clear, prescription glasses with reasonable small and stylish frames. This product isn’t for me, and I don’t see how it makes sense to continue spending money on this boondoggle, which is effectively a massively expensive human-testing project to help them develop reasonable-looking glasses. I love Ray-Ban glasses, but not this style or size, and not with these features.

    • paul7986 3 hours ago

      I own two pair and love them yet hate them also because they are not durable and my 1st pair bought Oct 2023 stopped being smart in April so I bought a 2nd pair. After some big-ish water splashes the second paired died in June.

      Smart glasses are great for ppl who wear some type of glasses and use their phone to take pics. Also, when I was in Europe asking about my surroundings enhanced my trip per my learning of about many sights I explored in Berlin and Amsterdam.

      I do love and miss them but I’m not buying another pair til they are rock solid durable! Also the Ray Ban stores need to act just like Apple stores in terms of tech support but they do not ..and thus both Meta and Ray Ban are just selling a toy that easily breaks / doesn’t last. Even a Ray ban customer service rep said these things break I get so many calls.

    • bigyabai 4 hours ago

      Well, your loss. My Oculus Quest remains the best $400 I ever spent on consumer tech.

      • cosmic_cheese 3 hours ago

        I use my Quest 2 constantly but the moment that rumored Valve Index with inside-out tracking becomes available I'm switching. Not only is the association with Facebook not great, their Windows desktop software is awful and constantly breaking. PCVR took a big back seat to the weak on-board stuff with the Quests.

      • mupuff1234 4 hours ago

        Almost everyone I know who got a quest stopped using it after a week.

        It's a fun toy, but gets boring pretty quickly.

        • samplatt 2 hours ago

          Meanwhile I have a friend group (mostly build from real-life relationships) that gets together once a week for the last ~3 years to play VR games.

          YMMV :-)

        • fidotron 2 hours ago

          At one point it told you everyone on your friends list that had also got one - and in my case it was basically everyone I knew from work over the years. Literally the only people that used it more than two weeks were those working on VR.

          Even if you try to stick with it you grow to dread all interaction with their app or OS. They have some superb technology but the product management is atrocious.

        • bigyabai 4 hours ago

          I use mine for flight simming. The screen looks great for the price, and lets me stream games like DCS World from my desktop.

          Far as fun toys go, the Quest sits head-and-shoulders over my Nintendo Switch.

    • jryle70 3 hours ago

      Are you using Chinese brands? Tiktok, AliExpress, ByteDance, Binance, Tencent? If you have no problems with them but with Meta, that's hypocrisy on your part.

      I myself don't really have problems with them, and neither with Meta. I don't think they have a brand problem other than in bubbles like HN.

      • bitwize 3 hours ago

        One of these options (Meta vs. Chinese brands) is in bed with a dangerous totalitarian regime.

        The other is the Chinese brands.

      • JustExAWS 3 hours ago

        The Chinese government can’t do anything to affect my daily life. I would much rather the Chinese government know everything about me.

        • signatoremo 2 hours ago

          So you wouldn’t have problems with Meta if they weren’t American? Do you think Chinese people should use Meta’s products, if they were available there?

    • JSR_FDED 4 hours ago

      Meta has a Musk/Tesla problem

      • Handy-Man 3 hours ago

        Not even close to that level lol

  • qingcharles 11 minutes ago

    I got some of these for a friend who has severe vision problems. They don't seem to be able to read out texts or emails from your phone? If something is in your notifications, it can get to it, beyond that it just constantly complains it doesn't have access or can't do it, despite the app having damned near root on the phone, with every permission possible granted.

    Videos are limited to 3 mins, up from 1 min originally.

    He says you can't hear the audio or use them for anything useful if there is much noise around you, i.e. in a busy area they become completely useless.

    I still think they hold great promise, the main letdown is the awful software. Amazing miniaturization.

  • BatteryMountain 16 minutes ago

    So META now has videos of your baby. Let that sink in. Hope they were clothed at least.

    People never learn. One day your children will be your judge when they are grown up, when they realise what you did to them. I hope it was worth it.

  • motorest 2 hours ago

    > It seems like there are a lot of negative comments about Meta's glasses which is surprising to me as a regular user.

    It's strange that the only comment in this thread praising and supporting Meta comes from an account basically reactivated since 2023.

    Was there anything compelling about this topic that forced you to reactivate a long-lost account just to state you're oblivious to Meta's shenanigans and their products show a ton of promise?

    • Almondsetat 2 hours ago

      Why do you lie? Clearly this is not the case if you look at the user's submission and comment history

      • motorest 2 hours ago

        > Why do you lie? Clearly this is not the case if you look at the user's submission and comment history

        Do you think someone's comment history link is an obscure secret no one can access?

        > Clearly this is not the case (..)

        Oh really? Please explain in your own words why you believe this is not the case.

        • masterjack 2 hours ago

          > Please explain in your own words why you believe this is not the case.

          It wasn’t 2023: Last post 11 months ago, last comment 8 months ago, which is a typical level of lurking

        • cowthulhu 2 hours ago

          It’s unclear to me what you are even accusing them of, could you clarify?

  • lurking_swe 5 hours ago

    > Listening to music is fantastic as it's different from regular headphones since you can still hear the world around you

    Many earbuds, like Airpods, have transparency mode. The end result is the same…music while hearing background noise. In fact airpods are better because of the ANC mode that tunes out noise except conversation and other “important” sounds. I can also wear airpods indoors without looking like a dork, so that’s also plus. I’m not seeing why this is novel or interesting?

    > I've recorded some of the most amazing videos of my baby with them.

    This seems like a compelling use case. How is the video quality?

    • garbawarb 4 hours ago

      I wouldn't want to wear earbuds while doing anything active, the chance of them falling out is too high.

      • ptmcc 4 hours ago

        I've run many hundreds of hours with two variations of AirPods and they've never once fallen out

        • paxys 3 hours ago

          Not everyone's ears are the same. MKBHD famously does not use Airpods because he can't get them to stay in. I have tried jogging a couple times with Airpods Pro and they pop out every time.

          • Mtinie 3 hours ago

            > MKBHD

            For those like me who weren’t familiar with the moniker, it refers to Marques Keith Brownlee, a YouTuber who reviews technology devices.

          • elondaits 2 hours ago

            In his review of AirPods Pro 3 he says they now stay on better.

        • rossant an hour ago

          Might depend on the shape of your ear canal. Mines seem to be weirdly shaped so nothing holds.

      • SketchySeaBeast 4 hours ago

        I use shockz for running - stable and your ears are totally unobstructed.

      • 0_____0 4 hours ago

        I've only had earbuds fall out as the result of actively crashing a bicycle, and even then they usually stay in.

      • lurking_swe 4 hours ago

        Has not been an issue for me (walking, jogging, basketball practice)

        but i understand the concern! sometimes it’s sketchy haha. Like riding a bicycle.

      • anal_reactor 2 hours ago

        I developed a reflex that I periodically press above my nose to make sure the glasses are in place, which was super funny when I switched to lenses but kept pressing for no good reason.

  • dav43 2 hours ago

    I use them too for similar uses. Brilliant. I also use zero AI. I don’t care. I totally understand ppl not buying them because they are meta. I get it.

  • asdev 4 hours ago

    they also don't have an app store and are a closed platform which is a big downside.

    • aacook 3 hours ago

      Agreed, hopefully that changes as things are more ironed out

  • michelb an hour ago

    I think most of the negative comments are about morality and Zuck’s, Meta’s, Meta’s workers and Meta supporters lack thereof.

  • ugh123 3 hours ago

    What's the sweat issue about? Does the display fog up?

  • maldonad0 an hour ago

    I wamt less screens, not more.

  • JustExAWS 3 hours ago

    The camera is worse than any phone camera and you have been able to buy headphones with active pass through forever to “hear the world around you” including adaptive ones.

    And being sensitive sweat is kind of a deal breaker when you are working out.

  • vunderba 2 hours ago

    > It seems like there are a lot of negative comments about Meta's glasses which is surprising to me as a regular user.

    Really? Does nobody remember the "Glasshole" debacle with another equally large FAANG corporation who tried to push a similar technology? There were incidents of people getting physically assaulted JUST for wearing the things.

    • Jyaif 2 hours ago

      In 10 years the mentality evolves.

      It used to be considered extremely rude to pull out your phone during a conversation, now all the under 20 do it.

  • SilverElfin 3 hours ago

    These things have cameras and mics in them. Am I the only one concerned about people walking into every space with surveillance systems that are capturing us and sending that data to some random set of companies who have no obligation to keep our information confidential? How can I have a conversation with a friend wearing one of these? And surely workplaces will ban these?

    • BatteryMountain 13 minutes ago

      Hookup culture or any space (bars, clubs, festivals) where some level of shenanigans are expected will be destroyed by this even further than what smartphones has already done.

      Imagine you take your kids to the beach and people are wearing these things. So even the beach won't be safe anymore.

    • ghaff 3 hours ago

      > And surely workplaces will ban these?

      For all but the most security-conscious companies, that ship has probably sailed. Bringing a camera into many companies used to be an exercise involving forms, approvals, and so forth. Now everyone has camera, video, and audio recording in their pocket.

      • SonOfKyuss 3 hours ago

        To those around you, there is a big difference between having a video recording device in your pocket compared to on your head. I would personally feel pretty uncomfortable if someone pulled up to the next stall in the workplace bathroom with these on

    • ghostpepper 2 hours ago

      Most of the people in this thread are agreeing with you. You are not even close to the only one.

    • polyomino 3 hours ago

      Perhaps or maybe they will require them?

  • alex1138 5 hours ago

    One thing with technology is "iron sharpens iron" - I'm sure as advances in batteries (although I imagine there comes a point where that stops) occur it will have downstream effects of making all these things better

    ...unless part of the package for the improvements are things like "more likely to catch fire"

regnerba 2 minutes ago

I won’t buy another Meta device. Bought the Quest 3 and now they keep installing games and apps on the device that I cannot remove to promote things. I don’t want any of that. Will most likely be replacing it with the Valve Deckard/Frame device as soon as possible.

pilooch 4 minutes ago

I like the glasses path, well I do wear glasses, but some elements remain unclear to me:

- are prescription glasses available for display ? I guess not ? - these glasses need to be online, I guess they do so with a phone and bluetooth connection nearby ? So that's the glasses, the band and the phone, oh and the glasses case, seems a lot to carry. - pedestrian navigation seems to be rolled out per city, so it's not like having gmaps available right out of the box.

wronglebowski 5 hours ago

The live demo of this is brutal. https://x.com/ns123abc/status/1968469616545452055

  • llmthrow0827 5 hours ago

    All the VR/AR/XR demos are so insanely trivial and yet still manage to be much more difficult than current methods of doing things. Like, really, cooking?

    Normal method:

    * Search for a recipe

    * Leave my phone on a stand and glance at it if I forget a step

    Meta glasses:

    * Put glasses on (there's a reason I got lasek, it's because wearing glasses sucks)

    * Talk into the void, trying to figure out how to describe my problem as well as the format that I want the LLM to structure the response

    * Correct it when it misreads one of my ingredients

    * Hope that the rng gods give me a decent recipe

    Or basically any of the things shown off for Apple's headset. Strap on a giant headset just so I can... browse photos? or take a video call where the other person can't even see my face?

    • hdjrudni 3 hours ago

      I dunno, if these worked perfectly I don't think it'd be awful to be able to open my fridge and say "what can I make with this" and it could rattle of some suggestions based on my known preferences and even show me images in their new display.

      Hands-free while cooking (not having to touch my phone with messy hands) is not a bad thing either.

      • vasco 3 hours ago

        I touch my phone with messy hands all the time. They are water resistant now, just wash it after

    • twalichiewicz 32 minutes ago

      Watching the announcement, every feature felt like something my phone already does—better.

      With glasses, you have to aim your head at whatever you want the AI to see. With a phone, you just point the camera while your hands stay free. Even in Meta’s demo, the presenter had to look back down at the counter because the AI couldn’t see the ingredients.

      It feels like the same dead end we saw with Rabbit and the Humane pin—clever hardware that solves nothing the phone doesn’t already do. Maybe there’s a niche if you already wear glasses every day, but beyond that it’s hard to see the case.

    • SchemaLoad 5 hours ago

      These companies are reaching really hard for use cases while ignoring the only ones VR actually works well for. If they just went all in on gaming it would be a much better product than trying to push AI slop cooking help.

      • bayarearefugee 3 hours ago

        As a gamer, in my experience people don't want to play VR games either.

        Beat Saber as a social party experience with friends in the same room, sure, that's fun... but for day to day gaming the amount of people who want to play VR games on the regular is nearly zero.

        If they really want to lean into the VR use case that people want, its porn, but I suspect they won't put that front and center.

        • swalsh 3 hours ago

          I LOVED VR gaming, but after playing the same 2 games for 10 years, it never really evolved. They stopped innovating and went all in on AR.

          • SchemaLoad 3 hours ago

            I had a HTC Vive and I really loved playing VR games, particularly a shooter called Pavlov. Felt pretty social with a ton of absurd custom maps where the actual game was almost secondary to experiencing the immersive and strange maps.

            But since I moved I didn't want to screw the base stations in to the walls again and haven't played in a long time. I feel like I probably still would like VR gaming but haven't been tempted enough to buy any of the newer systems since it seems like Meta has fully captured the market and it all seems pretty distasteful now.

          • tsimionescu 2 hours ago

            I think you're very much in the minority. Also, VR games didn't really evolve because it can't really evolve - the fundamental thing that makes it attractive (immersion in a digital space) can't work well because of motion sickness. So, the only way to make an immersive VR game is to have an extremely tiny game world or an on-rails experience, and that drastically reduces the appeal.

            Of course, you could make all sorts of traditional top-down or isometric games work well without motion sickness - but no one is going to pay for VR to play Civilization or Star Craft or Baldur's Gate 3, since these would be fundamentally the exact same experience as playing on PC or console, but with a display strapped to your head.

            • xdfgh1112 an hour ago

              This is such nonsense. The new Batman game on VR has full motion and smooth turning. It's not on rails at all. Games have got better at reducing motion sickness, and players also adapt over time.

      • thepryz 2 hours ago

        In my experience, the biggest obstacle to broader AR and VR adoption beyond reducing the price, size, and weigh of the hardware will always be the lack of good content creation tools.

        I've been involved with two VR projects that were ultimately cancelled because, while we developed a sexy tech demo that showed the potential, building things out into something sustainable required too many resources and took too much time to maintain.

      • bee_rider 4 hours ago

        VR gaming seems like it is a bit of a niche, though. I think they want to sell glasses in quantities more like cellphones than gaming peripherals.

        I agree they are reaching (and not finding) for an application.

        • ubb_server 3 hours ago

          I agree that VR gaming is a niche, but I think it could be explosively improved if we had the kind of all-in idealism that the previous commenter referred to. I think because VR gaming IS niche, we haven't yet delved into what VR/AR could do in non-gaming.

          An idea that I've had before is like 'augmented curated experiences' for all kinds of things--for example imagine playing a Magic the Gathering (or similar) card game, and watching your cards come to life on the board in hologram-esque 3D. Or while watching a sports match, being able to pull up the stats or numbers of any players, or flip through channels of POV camera from helmets. Car navigation that shows you what turns to make by augmenting lanes or signs with highlighting. Brick and mortar stores having a live wayfinding route to products in their store based on your grocery list, recognizing and highlighting items you like.

          • tsimionescu 2 hours ago

            > for example imagine playing a Magic the Gathering (or similar) card game, and watching your cards come to life on the board in hologram-esque 3D

            This is the kind of thing that buries VR ideas. It's very cute in a demo, but as an actual product, the cost of coming up with 3D models and animations for all MTG cards currently being played is many orders of magnitude more than the total number of people who would pay for this. Ultimately this is completely unnecessary fluff for the game, like chess games where the pieces actually fight: irrelevant, and it actually detracts from the game because it interrupts the flow of what you're actually doing.

          • jdprgm 2 hours ago

            I remain convinced VR gaming is niche because despite these companies being willing to drop boatloads of money on all kinds of things they for some reason never decided to just allocate a few billion to create a handful of true AAA games and jumpstart the industry. I think even just 3 proper games with several hundred mil budgets and VR gaming might be in an entirely different space than it is now.

            • xdfgh1112 43 minutes ago

              Facebook made a very expensive new Batman game in VR, there's also Resident Evil, Assassin's Creed, a ton of other high budget games like Red Matter.

              It just isn't taking off. In my experience even though VR is unique and amazing, it's not that much better than playing those games flat screen. I tend to spend most of my time in Beat Saber.

            • tsimionescu 2 hours ago

              I think this is extremely doubtful. The reality remains that it's impossible to make a first person or even third person VR game with free movement, because of fundamental limitations in how human brains process movement. Having your eyes tell you are moving but your muscles and inner ear tell you that you are not makes you extremely sick very quickly, and technology can't actually fix this. The better and more immersive the visual illusion of movement, the worse the movement sickness you'll experience.

              And without free movement, you can't build any of the mainstream game genres. You can't build and get people excited in a Call of Duty or Assassin's Creed or Fortnite or Elden Ring or Zelda where movement works like Riven, the sequel to Myst. Valve actually tried with the first Half-Life game in a decade, and even that didn't work.

              Add to this massive gameplay limitation the second massive issue that you can't get a mass audience to pay hundreds of dollars extra for a peripheral without which they can't play your 70-80 dollar game.

              • xdfgh1112 42 minutes ago

                Those games literally exist now. Almost all new VR games use free movement not teleportation. It is frustrating that you seem to be talking confidently when your knowledge is 5 years out of date.

          • Aeolun 3 hours ago

            We should re-watch Dennou Coil every few years to be reminded of what we’re working towards :)

      • intrasight 3 hours ago

        > the only ones VR actually works well for

        I had really expected a different "only one"

    • dyauspitr 3 hours ago

      I wear my glasses all the time. If I could just talk to the void and get help with things I’m directly seeing reliably that would be a game changer. I’ve used Gemini’s video mode and we’re not all that far away.

  • zmmmmm 5 hours ago

    If you watch it carefully, he preempts the AI with "What do I do first" before it even answered the first time. This strongly suggests it did this in rehearsal to me and hence was far more than just "bad luck" or bad connectivity. Perhaps the bad connectivity stopped the override from working and it just kept repeating the previous response. Either way it suggests some troubling early implications about how well Meta's AI work is going to me, that they got this stuck on the main live demo for their flagship product on such a simple thing.

    • exitb 2 hours ago

      The way he clung to „what do I do first” makes me think that the whole conversation was scripted in the prompt and AI was asked to reply in specific way to specific sentences. Possibility not even actually connected to the camera?

    • daemonologist 3 hours ago

      I think preempting the AI the first time was meant to be a feature (it's not trivial to implement and is something people often ask for). Failing from there definitely wasn't great, although it's kind of what I'd expect from an(y) LLM.

      • WD-42 3 hours ago

        No, he preempted it because it was about to list all the ingredients necessary to make a steak sauce, despite having them in front of him. These are glasses, it should have skipped that part and went straight to what to do first.

    • mrandish 2 hours ago

      > Either way it suggests some troubling early implications about how well Meta's AI work is going

      I fully expect the AI to suck initially and then over many months of updates evolve to mostly annoying and only occasionally mildly useful.

      However, the live stage demo failing isn't necessarily supporting evidence. Live stage demos involving Wifi are just hard because in addition to the normal device functionality they're demoing, they need to simultaneously compress and transmit a screen share of the final output back over wifi so the audience can see it. And they have to do all that in a highly challenging RF environment that's basically impossible to simulate in advance. Frankly, I'd be okay with them using a special headset that has a hard-wired data link for the stage demo.

      • bauruine 36 minutes ago

        I assume you couldn't watch the video because it's just a live stream of a guy standing in a kitchen and talking to his glasses. He's not on the stage with hundreds of people on the wifi and you can't see what the glasses are displaying at all.

  • explorigin 5 hours ago

    I've done live demos of AI. Even with the same queries, I got a different answers than my 4 previous practice attempts. My demos keep me on my toes and I try to limit the scope much more now.

    (I didn't have control over temperature settings.)

    • hdjrudni 3 hours ago

      > (I didn't have control over temperature settings.)

      That's...interesting. You'd think they'd dial the temperature to 0 for you before the demo at least. Regardless, if the tech is good, I'd hope all the answers are at least decent and you could roll with it. If not....then maybe it needs to stay in R&D.

  • 303uru 5 hours ago

    It’s the WiFi, ya sure.

  • anal_reactor 2 hours ago

    Hearing this AI-generated voice awakens some primal aggression in me.

  • TIPSIO 5 hours ago

    If you’ve ever used the current Meta Ray Ban and AI, this almost exactly happens when the connection is bad. Pure confusion but the AI still tries to give you an answer.

    I bet the device hardware is small/cheap and susceptible to interference

    • stavros 5 hours ago

      I have the Meta glasses and I've never noticed this, and don't even understand why it could be the connection's fault. The AI gets your audio and your image, if it gives the wrong answer, it's because the AI went wrong. How would the bad connection ever affect it?

      • vunderba 2 hours ago

        Exactly. Like... what are they even saying here - that if the connection drops then it falls back to a tiny "dropped on their head as a child" 4b parameter LLM embedded in the physical firmware and so that's why it is giving inane responses?

        Mad props to the presenter for holding it together though.

      • dmbche 4 hours ago

        The ai is in the cloud

        Edit0: ie without internet access the ai is unable to produce an answer other than some prerecorded ones I guess

        In the live showcase the presenter even mentions that the wifi must have been bad for the ai to repeat the answer

        • stavros 3 hours ago

          You're saying "you've already used the first two ingredients, so go ahead and add the sauce" is the prerecorded response when it doesn't have a connection?

          • dmbche 3 hours ago

            No, that's the last queried answer. There is no ai in the glasses without a connection, so all it (edit1:it here being the program being run on the glasses, client to the ai between other things)can do (seemingly) is loop around and re-read the last queried answer, which was the mistaken "you've already...".

            In the glasses is just a client to the ai. Like there is no ai in your phone when you talk to chatgpt, you are querying it and it will not keep talking to you if you cut off the wifi

            The prerecorded responses I speculated about would have been things like "i'm having some connectivity problems, I'm unable to chat at this time, I'll let you know when I'm back." - the same kind of prerecorded things your earbuds tell you when they're low on power.

            • tsimionescu an hour ago

              This can't possibly be the case, because the AI voice says slightly different things between the two attempts. The first time it says "you've already combined the base ingredients, so now grate a carrot to add to the sauce"; while the second time it says "you've already combined the base ingredients, so now grate the carrot* and gently combine it with the base sauce".

              Unless you think they've added some inference logic on the device to slightly re-state the last answer they got from the cloud, it's clear that the glasses were connected and receiving the same useless answer from the cloud.

              * side note, but it can also sound like "pear" to me this second time

              • dmbche an hour ago

                Oh could very well be the case I've only listened once!

            • stavros 3 hours ago

              If you believe that they made the glasses repeat the last answer when they don't have connectivity, instead of saying "I don't have connectivity", I don't know what to tell you.

              I own a pair of Meta glasses, and the response when they don't have connectivity is "this function is not available at this time".

              • dmbche 3 hours ago

                Isn't this a very odd discussion to keep going? I'm not sure why you're being so confrontational as well. I see you have a lot of points, is that a way to drive engagement?

                • WD-42 3 hours ago

                  Are you a bot? Also "It must be the wifi" has got to be the lamest, unimaginative, predictable demo failure excuse I've ever heard, and you're trying to defend it.

                  • dmbche 2 hours ago

                    yes, i am a bot, and i'm paid by meta to convice you to buy their glasses by telling you they are shit? what are you on about?

                    Edit0: and what are you even doing? Where do you think this is going?

          • zmmmmm 2 hours ago

            the thing is, if it loses the connection, why on earth would the correct behaviour be to just keep repeating the last response? It should just straight up say, "Sorry I'm having trouble connecting". Even the best case scenario here suggests terrible product design.

            • dmbche 2 hours ago

              Hard agree on terrible. I guess i'd have disabled the no connectivity message for the demo to give it a chance to reconnect gracefully/quickly if at all (by non stop querying even without wifi) but that's just guessing on my part. I think they're garbage and same for meta, if that needs saying

    • m3kw9 5 hours ago

      next time they need 1 public and 1 private router and shut the public off right before the demo.

    • krustyburger 5 hours ago

      Even if it’s small/cheap, if the item is scanned multiple times this will prevent any electrical infetterence.

      • chatmasta 4 hours ago

        I don’t even think that’s a word!

  • klik99 5 hours ago

    This is why Jobs spent months prepping for each presentation.

    But hey, at least it's not all faked

    • gretch 5 hours ago

      When I was at Meta (then facebook), people lived and died by the live demo creedo.

      Pitches can be spun, data is cherry picked. But the proof is always in the pudding.

      This is embarrassing for sure, but from the ashes of this failure we find the resolve to make the next version better.

      • Anon1096 5 hours ago

        Yep I hope that mindset never dies. Meta is one of the last engineering-first companies in big tech and willing to live demo something so obviously prone to mishaps is a great sign of it. It's not unlike SpaceX and being willing to iterate by crashing Starships for the world to see. You make mistakes and fix them, no big deal.

      • gcr 5 hours ago

        why did they choose to air this live?

        For an internal team sure absolutely, but for public-facing work, prerecorded is the way to go

        • com2kid 5 hours ago

          One of my internships was preparing Bill Gate's demo machines for CES. I setup custom machine images and ran through scripts to make sure everything went off w/o a hitch (I was doing just the demos for Tablet PC, each org presumably had their own team preparing the demos!)

          Not doing it live would've been an embarrassment. I don't think the thought ever crossed anyone's mind, of course we'd do it live. Sure the machines were super customized, bare bones Windows installs stripped back to the minimum amount of software needed for just one demo, but at the end of the day it sure as hell was real software running up there on stage.

        • bee_rider 4 hours ago

          If it was pre-recorded we’d know it was staged and that assume they didn’t have a working product.

          Their actual result was pretty bad, but, ya know, work in progress I guess.

        • stonogo 5 hours ago

          The same unwarranted sense of confidence that tells them this product is worth making tells them that they can easily pull off a live demo. This is called "culture fit"

    • SoftTalker 5 hours ago

      I saw Jobs give a demo of some NeXT technology and the system crashed and rebooted right in the middle of it. He just said “oops” and talked around it until the system came back up.

    • postalcoder 5 hours ago

      i love jobs but i do remember the “everybody please turn off your laptops” presentation.

      live demonstrations are tough - i wish apple would go back to them.

      • paxys 5 hours ago

        Totally agree. Up until a few years ago failures during live demos on stage used to be a mark of authenticity, and companies playing recordings was always written off as exaggerated or fake. Now all of Apple's keynotes are prerecorded overproduced garbage.

    • neilv 5 hours ago

      "At least it's not faked" was my main reaction, too. Some other big-tech AI-related demos the last couple years have been caught being faked.

      Zuckerberg handling it reasonably well was nice.

      (Though the tone at the end of "we'll go check out what he made later" sounded dismissive. The blame-free post-mortem will include each of the personnel involved in the failure, in a series of one-on-one MMA sparring rounds. "I'm up there, launching a milestone in a trillion-dollar strategic push, and you left me @#$*&^ my @#*$&^@#( like a #@&#^@! I'll show you post-mortem!")

    • garbawarb 5 hours ago

      I appreciate the live demo but I'm suprised they didn't at least have a prerecorded backup. I wanted to see how video calls work!

      • paxys 4 hours ago

        Considering there's no camera pointing to your face they can't be all that interesting.

  • joshdavham 5 hours ago

    For those who didn't pick up on it, they were being sarcastic about the issue being wifi related haha

    • bigtones 5 hours ago

      That was not sarcasm. They were being serious.

    • stavros 5 hours ago

      It didn't sound like sarcasm at all to me?

  • herval 5 hours ago

    Typical Meta product. I used to believe and wasted money on multiple generations of Quest & Ray-bans. I expect this device to be unsupported at launch, just like Quest Pro was

  • m3kw9 5 hours ago

    so when I talk but not to it, it may response like i accidentally say siri? Except is every time?

ghm2199 3 hours ago

Zuckerberg's online actually quite slick @30 WPM. Brand concerns aside, its a good tech leap forward for this fidelity of communication using gestures(and costs will fall as apple, google, 3rd party get into this). You have to realize that there are only smart glasses in the market which are 1/2 way between smart and AR/VR and at the moment none have any AR/VR that are commercially at this price point or massively available like Orion. I still think the puck will make its usecase be more specialized and will be a hindrance to massive adoption, but things will get smaller and they have separated the power hungry screen made it way less power hungry as an interface goes and they will go after puck's size next.

I have been reading the book called Apple in China and hardware is so hard. 30 hours of battery with wireless communication (I wonder if this is BLE 6.0 alone) between the EMG + Wave guide tech is not easy.

This is the second long term bet by meta that is panning out, the first being investing in long horizon AI projects(pytorch and a bunch of AI models), though that org has had rough times it did yield something good.

  • robin_reala 2 hours ago

    It’s six hours battery, not thirty:

    with up to six hours of mixed-use battery life and up to 30 hours of battery life total thanks to the portable (and collapsible!) charging case

  • ghm2199 3 hours ago

    I would also say several other less known software and data breakthroughs are probably going to also help this tech

    1. A world wide localization map that can let the glasses SLAM system do useful things.

    2. I believe the Puck runs on a custom OS. The glasses are probably on somekind of a real time Microcontroller driven thing(would be surprised if its much more than firmware, code wise) that needs to efficiently package sensor data and send it over BLE to the puck/wristband. I am not sure they have open sourced those two components.

    I hope they open source both of those for public good.

paxys 6 hours ago

I saw the keynote, and while everything about the glasses was more or less as expected, seeing Zuck easily navigate the interface and type 30 words per minute while barely moving his fingers was a true WTF moment. If they can actually make the neural interface work that well then Meta has won this round.

  • bemmu 5 hours ago

    Exactly, felt like the wristband was the big thing. I don't want the glasses, but I'm somewhat curious if it'd be useful as an extra input device when using a computer.

    • sigmar 4 hours ago

      they've been bragging about how good that neural wristband is for years. It's strange they haven't ventured to make a smartwatch with it. Maybe because Zuck has been so focused on AR/VR

  • stavros 3 hours ago

    While I agree this is extremely impressive, when I'm out walking, I'm not going to be looking for a convenient flat surface I can rest my hand on so I can type a message. It seems useless in practice.

    • etrautmann 2 hours ago

      That's not a limitation - it works in the air, on your leg, other hand, etc.

  • yakz 5 hours ago

    Doesn’t that make the wrist accessory the important part? The chunky glasses look like they’re still too early, not enough tech.

    • NitpickLawyer 32 minutes ago

      > still too early, not enough tech.

      At one point I was tracking a company researching beaming images straight on your eye. I think they were MS related, but not sure. After a while they stopped updating, so I guess that went nowhere? It seemed really promising.

    • paxys 5 hours ago

      That's why they are sold as a pair. The glasses are simply a screen strapped to your face. How to control it was always the real problem to be solved (and no, voice was never the answer).

    • jayd16 5 hours ago

      It's still certainly early adopter tech. We have the technology for stereo vision and augmented reality. It's just a matter of getting the display and battery and compute bill of materials in order now that they have the screen and a feasible input path.

    • zmmmmm 5 hours ago

      i was disappointed they didn't say you could connect it to other devices too. I would buy it just as a bluetooth keyboard!

  • cflewis 5 hours ago

    How does the finger thing work? What's he doing? I saw him tippy-tappy but it didn't seem like he's moving through some invisible keyboard.

    • dagmx 5 hours ago

      It’s tracking the EMG signals that trigger your finger tendons. Doing that it knows how your fingers are moving.

      It can therefore translate it to a handwritten stroke and then do classical handwriting to text conversion.

    • jwrallie 5 hours ago

      It was hard to see, but it looked like handwriting to me.

      • phire 2 hours ago

        For marketing reasons, it needs to be something that people can pick up with absolutely minimal practice.

        I doubt it has enough accuracy for a virtual keyboards (since keyboards require precise absolute input and it measures relative), besides, most people aren't experienced with single-hand typing.

        A bespoke gesture based shorthand would be optimal, but then users would need to spend months learning this new shorthand.

        But (almost) everyone already has experience with handwriting, which is a single hand relative input method. It's the easiest option for people to quickly pick up and enjoy.

        Though, it's far from perfect, you can see he is struggling to trick his muscle memory into writing without a pen, and he needs to do it on a solid surface (I'm not sure if that's a technology limitation, or a muscle memory limitation).

  • zmmmmm 4 hours ago

    yep. whatever else you say, Meta's willingness to throw some tech out there is thrilling from a geek / tech perspective.

klik99 5 hours ago

I believe the wristband came from this acquisition: https://www.theverge.com/2019/9/23/20881032/facebook-ctrl-la...

Insanely cool, and awesome to see a viable wave guide device.

It's so cool that it might outweigh my reluctance to strap facebook to my face.

  • jayrhynas 5 hours ago

    CTRL-Labs themselves acquired the wristband tech from North/Thalmic, who pivoted into smart glasses for a few years before being acquired by Google.

    > In an interesting twist, CTRL-Labs purchased a series of patents earlier this year around the Myo armband, a gesture and motion control device developed by North, formerly known as Thalmic Labs. The Myo armband measured electromyography, or EEG, to translate muscle activity into gesture-related software inputs, but North moved on from the product and now makes a stylish pair of AR glasses known as Focals. It now appears the technology North developed may in some way make its way into a Focals competitor by way of CTRL-Labs.

    • etrautmann 2 hours ago

      That's not true. Thalmic did develop an sEMG band, but the tech developed here was created by Ctrl-labs and continued development within Meta.

    • teleforce 5 hours ago

      > measured electromyography, or EEG

      Should be EMG, but is it normal EMG or sEMG?

    • spot 5 hours ago

      nope. the technology was invented by CTRL-labs, and at Meta after the acquisition.

      https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09255-w

      yes the Myo was a similar, earlier, and less capable technology also based on EMG sensing.

      • prawn 4 hours ago

        I had one of those Thalmic Myo armbands 12ish years ago. Used it a couple of times and then forgot about it. From memory, there were only a few gestures available to program, and anything I could think to sync them to was just as easily handled with keyboard shortcuts (show desktop, close window, change workspace, etc).

  • jorvi 5 hours ago

    Disney is about to have a serious talk with Facebook. Disney Research has had a prototype on gesture detection via wristband electric sensing tech since 2012: https://youtu.be/E4tYpXVTjxA?t=2m8s

    • spot 4 hours ago

      not the same tech at all.

zhyder 5 hours ago

Neural band is huge, glad they're shipping it already rather than waiting (years?) for a production version of Orion (the full AR glasses they demo'd a year ago together with this neural band). TheVerge found the controls great, even tried an alpha of handwriting for text input: https://youtu.be/5cVGKvl7Oek

These glasses are just "annotated reality" rather than full AR, with just 1 small display; think Google Glass but 100x more discreet. So discreet input and output on a device with a camera.

  • askvictor 16 minutes ago

    I think the backlash against Google Glass was counterproductive - the product was intentionally made to be obvious that someone was wearing it. But because of the backlash, companies that want to do this kind of tech now have to hide it, such as this.

withinrafael an hour ago

I have the previous generation Meta Ray-Ban glasses and they're great, but I wish I could use the underlying tech for... something more useful. It has no API, no extensibility options, nada. I--and my friends--don't use Messenger, Facebook, etc. I fear it'll be the same w/ the Ray-Ban Display, so I doubt I will be upgrading. Such a shame.

bix6 6 hours ago

> you can accomplish everyday tasks—like checking messages, previewing photos, and collaborating with visual Meta AI prompts — all without needing to pull out your phone.

Why do I need to pay $800 for this? I already paid a grand to have a phone disrupt my every waking moment!

  • gumby271 5 hours ago

    Sorry, is "collaborating with visual Meta AI prompts" just a casual everyday task we're all doing? I must be missing out!

  • ww520 5 hours ago

    A Ray Ban sunglasses can run up to $500 already.

    • bix6 5 hours ago

      Love me some luxottica monopoly pricing!

      • paxys 5 hours ago

        There's no monopoly. You can buy identical glasses on the side of the street for $10. Except you aren't going to get the RayBan logo, and that's what people are paying for.

        • gretch 5 hours ago

          > You can buy identical glasses on the side of the street for $10. Except you aren't going to get the RayBan logo

          That's funny because the ones sold on my street are $10 and they definitely have the rayban logo

          • dmix 4 hours ago

            It’s usually the build quality which is usually noticeable by other people looking at it and how they’ll break in a week from light wear

            • efskap 4 hours ago

              The main reason I avoid cheap sunglasses is that if they only dim in the visible spectrum, your pupil dilates and lets in more UV light than it would have otherwise, damaging the retina. Not that the full spectrum protection explains away the entire premium, but it is a reason not to go for bottom of the barrel ones sold on street corners.

              • tsimionescu an hour ago

                Common glass absorbs most of the UV light, and your lens and cornea absorb the rest. If UV light did hit your retina, you'd actually notice it - people who lack a cornea and/or lens can actually notice UV light, which is why artificial lenses like you'd get after in cataract surgery are now made of UV-absorbant materials.

                So unless you have a rare medical condition AND you're buying plastic lens glasses, I think you're worrying for nothing.

        • bix6 5 hours ago

          Technically not a monopoly but colloquially I disagree.

          They account for 30% of the global market. They own key brands, license key premium names, and control key distributors like sunglass hut and LensCrafters.

          Their cost to manufacture vs sale price shows a clear ability to price like a monopoly. As does their ability to box out competitors.

          The $10 look alikes are not identical. They generally are cheaper materials, not polarized or coated, etc.

          • SoftTalker 4 hours ago

            True for the $10 ones. But you can get very nice sunglasses with coating and polarizing lenses for way less than RayBan. RayBans are nice glasses too but you are mostly paying for the name.

          • paxys 4 hours ago

            > Their cost to manufacture vs sale price shows a clear ability to price like a monopoly

            Again, you are getting confused by branding vs monopoly. They sell luxury goods and can mark them at wild premiums, same as Hermès and Ferrari. None of them are monopolies. Very far from it.

            • bix6 3 hours ago

              No I’m not. Hermes and Ferrari are one off brands not massive conglomerations of multiple brands. LVMH is also monopoly-like. Ferrari is not even close to 1% of global auto sales, they aren’t moving the market the way Luxottica can. Sure Ferrari has luxury pricing but it’s not boxing you out at Sephora.

          • lotsofpulp 2 hours ago

            >Their cost to manufacture vs sale price shows a clear ability to price like a monopoly.

            No, it doesn't. It shows there exists demand for their products at that price point.

            >As does their ability to box out competitors.

            They have none. Anyone can go to various websites and order cheaper sunglasses that work just as well, or go to Costco and buy them for $25.

  • swaptr 2 hours ago

    "We appreciate your honesty! While our data shows a few unoptimized pauses, those afternoon naps, we’re happy to confirm your six-hour rest cycle remains respected. This isn’t just a device; it’s your partner in reclaiming every waking moment with seamless efficiency."

  • jayd16 5 hours ago

    Now you can wear clothes without pockets.

chupchap 3 hours ago

I've been using the RayBan Meta glasses for a while now, and the main reason I like them is because they do not have a display (https://balanarayan.com/2024/12/31/ray-ban-meta-long-term-re...). Another screen to glare at is the last thing I need, but I can imagine there are people who want one of this.

I use them for taking videos when I'm out and for listening to music without putting on headphones or earphones. While it is not the best at anything, it is definitely capable of doing a lot of things well enough and that is what matters a lot of times.

gregwebs 17 minutes ago

Is there a way to just use this as a computer monitor? That’s what the Viture glasses are and it’s great to have a portable monitor that focuses at a longer distance.

neilv 5 hours ago

What do people think about the (almost hidden) cameras in glasses?

With traditional cameras, feature phones, and smartphones, if someone wanted to be creepy with the camera, they'd have to point the device at someone, which tended to look exactly like they are using the camera.

(IIUC, some countries even required a shutter sound, for anti-creepy reasons, when the pointing of the phone wasn't enough warning.)

Now, the wearer of the glasses spy camera just has to look in the general direction that creepiness should be sprayed.

The creepiness isn't even that of the wearer; it could also be that of the tech company.

Is this going to end up another Google "Glassholes" situation, with the wearers shunned?

  • paxys 4 hours ago

    There's a pretty bright light that turns on when the camera is recording, and if you try and cover the light the camera won't work. Their existing glasses are pretty popular and there haven't been big compaints about it. If you really wanted to do secret recordings there are plenty of better and cheaper glasses in the market for it.

  • pesus 4 hours ago

    I'm really not a fan of them. There's already too much recording going on on a daily basis. I would personally avoid anyone wearing these. They say the mandatory LED activation prevents the issue, but I still don't trust it, and find it very off putting either way.

  • jayd16 4 hours ago

    They've had the camera glasses part for a few years now.

  • anal_reactor 2 hours ago

    Many years ago there was some summer camp and the staff organized a game "take a picture of your team leader without having them realize you're taking a picture". I completely obliterated the game by downloading an app that allowed me to record "in the background". I got a few good shots by showing a funny picture to people while having the front-facing camera on. Then I got other shots by turning on the back camera, locking the phone, and then just casually holding it in my hand like any other locked phone and waving it around.

    The point is, if you want to secretly record, it's already trivial to do it.

Philpax 4 hours ago

I'd be the first one to buy these if they weren't made by Meta. I've wanted a pair of smartglasses for a very long time, and these seem like the first viable pair in terms of capabilities - aside from the thickness, which I can live with.

Unfortunately, Meta, and Zuckerberg, have been involved in far too much malfeasance. I just can't ethically justify buying a product from them again. I'm hoping that viable competitors become available, but it's going to be hard to compete with Meta's investment, especially on the HCI front.

  • pm90 4 hours ago

    Fwiw i don’t have a facebook/instagram account (have whatsapp) and am still able to use all functionality in my Meta Rayban glasses.

    I struggled with this question too. Unfortunately our current system doesn’t make it easy for startups to build this stuff at scale without being gobbled up (the FTC under Lina Khan seemed to want to change that but oh well) so Im resigned to using Big Tech products if they’re the only option.

    • solid_fuel 2 hours ago

      > Fwiw i don’t have a facebook/instagram account (have whatsapp) and am still able to use all functionality in my Meta Rayban glasses.

      That was the promise when I originally bought the Quest 2, but a year later they forcibly tied those accounts to Meta accounts and through that, facebook accounts. Now I can't use my Quest 2 because it is locked into an account verification screen, demanding that I upload a photograph of my drivers license to access the games I already purchased from the quest store.

      Meta cannot be trusted.

      • grumbel an hour ago

        That was the promise with the original Rift, not the Quest. The Quest2 required a Facebook account from day one and never worked with an Oculus account, unlike Quest1. They relaxed the requirement in 2022 to only require a Meta account and converted all old accounts to Meta accounts later on (and if you didn't login to 'ok' that change they deleted your account completely including all the games).

        If you created the account early in the Quest2's life, or hit the wrong button in the UI, your Meta account will end up linked to your Facebook account.

        You might be able to unlink the Facebook account from your Meta account at https://accountscenter.meta.com/accounts, though I don't know if you can still reach the page.

    • ryukoposting 3 hours ago

      It's a tough needle to thread. I mentor a high school robotics team that's using a Quest 3S as odometry. You'd be astonished at how well a Quest keeps up while both spinning around and moving laterally at 12mph. Imagine an IMU that never, ever drifts no matter how much you whip it around. And you can just buy this thing from the local Best Buy! And it's cheap!

      And yet, Meta is squeezing every cent they can out of our attention spans, and knowingly tearing apart the fabric of our society in the process. Do I discourage the kids from doing amazing stuff with Meta's gadgets? I don't think so. They're not my kids. It's not really my place to be having those conversations with them.

kstrauser 5 hours ago

Very interesting.

And also, I hereby ban them in our office. Thou shalt not wear spyware while looking at the screens that contain our company IP.

  • paxys 5 hours ago

    Do you also ban cellphones in your office? And email? Text messaging?

    If an employee wants to steal your IP, they will.

    • kstrauser 5 hours ago

      I'm not unreasonably worried about my coworkers, compared to a software-controlled camera they'd be wearing on their heads and pointing at our code, internal docs, customer information, etc.

      And yes, if someone made a habit of pointing their cellphone camera at the screen all day, I would ask them to please knock it off.

      I don't trust Facebook installing cameras in our workspace, or trust that they couldn't be compromised by another party who might want to watch what we're doing.

      • AceJohnny2 5 hours ago

        Indeed. Time and time again Facebook/Meta has secretly or openly breached privacy boundaries for their own gain. They cannot be trusted with user data.

    • AvAn12 4 hours ago

      Yes. I work on a trading floor. Personal tech is a big issue in the world of private equity, investment banking, capital markets, law, medicine, proprietary research, coding, national defense, homeland security, most government roles, law enforcement, and may other professions. An employee may try to steal IP, but in the case of regulated industries, they can wind up in jail very quickly for doing so. This is no joke, and there is no room for sloppy move-fast-and-break-things jackassery.

      • mylifeandtimes 4 hours ago

        Fortunately this is no longer true in most US government roles.

        • AvAn12 4 hours ago

          RU kidding? You don't think a monitoring for loyalty is happening right now?

    • oldfuture 2 hours ago

      You have more control, in theory, on a cellphone, and so do people around you. With the glasses you really have no way to say if they are listening or watching what you see. The phone has most of the time the sensors partially blocked by a bag or a pocket so it really can't be compared with eyewear.

    • dylan604 5 hours ago

      at a company I used to work at, yes, very much so. our personal devices were checked into a locker with security before entering the secured part of the building. you were free to come back out to use it when you needed during the day. the USB ports to our workstations were covered with epoxy. the desktops didn't actually connect to the internet, so email/etc used a remote citrix connection to isolate networks. any network transfer over a set size would send notices. to be honest, it was glorious to be without the device. the shit part was everyday when leaving the office you had to have your bags searched.

  • moralestapia 5 hours ago

    So, no smartphones in your office?

    Edit: Lmao, fake downvotes while another comment which is essentially the same gets upvoted. The veil has been lifted :D.

tempodox 9 minutes ago

How does anybody see anything if they ban rays?

hanief 5 hours ago

I refuse to buy hardware from Meta again. I bought two Portal TV from them and it discontinued and not supported within two years. Now I have two junks in my drawer. :(

  • amatecha 5 hours ago

    cries in Oculus Go :(

    > released on May 1, 2018 to generally positive reviews. By July 2019, the Go was estimated to have sold over two million units. On June 23, 2020, Facebook Technologies announced it would be ending the sales of the Oculus Go later that year

    • laweijfmvo an hour ago

      ending sales is not the same as ending support; use the correct dates!

      • grumbel an hour ago

        The Oculus Go was discontinued June 2020, the shop was locked down for any further updates or new games December 2020, that's just six months apart. They did "support" it with security updates until 2022, but it's pretty dead when no new games can be sold.

      • amatecha an hour ago

        I used the correct dates, at least the text is copied/pasted from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oculus_Go

        At least they released an update in 2021 that allows people to "root" the device so it won't rely on the cloud services anymore -- a pretty rare occurrence for abandoned products!

        • laweijfmvo 24 minutes ago

          John Carmack was the driving force behind this!

bryant 5 hours ago

The biggest thing stopping me from getting these is knowing that a derivative of Meta's Orion AR prototype will release to manufacturing in the next few years, and this just feels like a stop-gap.

But the wrist/hand control is the thing that impressed me the most in today's release. I'd hope for this to go far beyond just the glasses.

  • zmmmmm 2 hours ago

    > knowing that a derivative of Meta's Orion AR prototype will release to manufacturing in the next few years

    You actually know that? how? Just the leaked road map or something more concrete?

  • paxys 4 hours ago

    Every piece of tech has a better version a year or two away. If you keep waiting then you are never going to buy anything.

  • SequoiaHope 5 hours ago

    The nice thing about AR/VR is that a better version will always come out in a couple of years so you can always wait. I love VR as a concept and some years late I bought a Valve Index and am considering a Bigscreen 2 but really the best thing to do is always wait.

sharkjacobs 3 hours ago

I like the look of the Oakleys better than the Raybans. I get why they want to make their glasses look like Rayban Wayfarers, because they're the most neutral inconspicuous glasses frame style of the last 25 years, but, IMO, they missed the mark pretty bad, and they look pretty conspicuous and pretty bad.

You won't blend in wearing the Oakleys, but they look like what they are, which is an insane mirrorshades cyberpunk HUD, and if the wearer can own that they could actually look kind of sick.

Of course, I'm technically underwhelmed and unimpressed by what I've seen of the actual technology, but that's hardly the most important thing.

LorenDB 5 hours ago

Well, Apple might be Cooked (pun very much intended). Tim is apparently very focused on AI glasses, but here is Meta with display-enabled glasses a year before Apple is planning to release anything.

Source: https://www.macrumors.com/2025/05/21/apple-smart-glasses-eve... or some other Mark Gurman leak

  • solid_fuel 2 hours ago

    If Apple launches a similar product it already comes with a huge brand advantage, although Tim Cook has been working to squander that reputation recently. Regardless, an Apple version would like be local-first and come with stronger privacy controls than anything Meta releases, and that alone is a huge advantage for glasses that will be worn into the bathroom.

  • blackqueeriroh 5 hours ago

    We all love to say this, but everyone forgets: Apple has never beaten competitors by being the first – they’ve beaten them by being the best.

    Personal computers? Apple wasn’t first. Smartphones with screens? Apple wasn’t first. Tablets? Not first by a mile. True Wireless Earbuds? Nope, not at all first. Smartwatches? Hell no, not first.

    And yet, Apple’s a category leader in every single one of these areas.

    I don’t think it matters if Meta releases something first; Apple wins by doing it way better. Arguably, Vision Pro was way too early, even though it’s an incredible experience.

    • cflewis 5 hours ago

      I think it's a "yes but" here. AI is the first transition point since the smartphone. Apple knows how to make hardware, and knows how to make software. I am extremely unconvinced Apple has a clue about what to do with AI.

      You can't just jump in, the lead up to getting this stuff going is a 5 year+ horizon, and Google, Meta, OpenAI and Anthropic are still moving exceptionally fast. Apple has shown they are nowhere near. They missed the boat on buying Anthropic, OpenAI was never going to sell with Musk behind it. There's no path forward for them, let alone catching up.

      • JSR_FDED 4 hours ago

        They also don’t own a search engine, yet google pays them $20B annually

    • wklauss 5 hours ago

      To be fair, Meta is also not the first company to launch smart glasses with a display.

      But the reality of it is that it's probably still to early to say if these devices will have mainstream appeal. I see a lot of people saying "well, i no longer need to take the phone out my pocket", but that has been the case for a couple of years with smartwatches, for example, and it has not meaningfully changed our dependency from the smartphone or the smartphone market dynamics that much.

    • jayd16 5 hours ago

      What does wins even mean, then? Apple doesn't dominate a market. They make competitive hardware that integrates well with its ecosystem. If there's a market for smart glasses they'll probably use the same strategy.

    • jhatemyjob 2 hours ago

      Wat. Vision Pro was a complete flop, Airpods aren't the best on the market, Apple Watch isn't the best on the market

      • SchemaLoad 2 hours ago

        VR in general was a flop. Airpods and Apple watch I'm fairly sure are way ahead of the rest in sales. Airpods on their own are bigger than most tech companies in sales.

        • jhatemyjob an hour ago

          Ya sure, they have more sales volume. Doesn't mean they're better. Toyota tells more cars than Rolls Royce.

          Top-shelf wireless earbuds aren't from Apple. Same for smart watches.

          • SchemaLoad an hour ago

            "better" is subjective. Competitors might offer advantages in a narrow scope, but clearly as an overall package, consumers think the Apple product is best since they choose to buy them over the alternatives.

            • jhatemyjob an hour ago

              You are absolutely right. The average consumer is super smart. Has great taste. Definitely knows what's best.

    • t0lo 5 hours ago

      No- they beat them by squatting on the most generic logical human friendly style so that other companies can't copy the most natural conception. They're copyright colonialists.

    • paxys 5 hours ago

      People keep saying this, but it is absolutely not true.

      Apple was first to the personal computer. First to the smartphone. First to the tablet. First to wireless earbuds. The vast majority of the company's revenue comes from segments where they had a multi-year head start over their competitors.

      In fact products where they play catch up are more prone to failing (Vision Pro, Airpods Max, Homepod, Maps, MobileMe, Ping, Music Connect, AirPower, Airport).

      • stavros 3 hours ago

        I don't remember about the rest, but we definitely had smartphones long before the iPhone.

      • blackoil 4 hours ago

        They were first in phone with touch interface and no keyboard. In terms of other capabilities/apps there were other phones much more powerful and capable.

        Edit: even for touch LG Prada was first.

      • DonsDiscountGas 5 hours ago

        They absolutely were not first to the smart phone, that was blackberry. It's just that blackberry sucked. They were first to PC but I don't think they were first to laptop.

        • paxys 5 hours ago

          Sure you can go back well before blackberry to find even earlier versions of the smartphone but the type we all use today was introduced by Apple.

          • SchemaLoad an hour ago

            They just removed the physical keyboard. Pretty much everything else about a modern phone was either added in later years or already existed. The first iphone was extremely basic.

      • Philpax 5 hours ago

        ...what?

        Aside from maybe the personal computer, they were not the first to any of those. BlackBerry/Palm/Windows Mobile devices all existed prior to the iPhone; the LG Prada was announced prior to the iPhone and had a similar form factor. Many tablet PCs existed before the iPad. Many Bluetooth earbuds existed prior to the AirPods.

        They did a much better job of integrating each of these into a cohesive experience, but they absolutely had predecessors in each category.

thrownawayohman 3 hours ago

The best part of this tech is the being recorded by random strangers without you noticing. I can’t wait to learn about who and what gets access to this data. Let’s go surveillance state!

oldfuture 3 hours ago

https://www.wired.com/story/tiktok-promotes-stickers-for-sec...

Why they shouldn't be allowed ---

1.The glasses have cameras and microphones capable of recording people nearby often without their knowledge (e.g. the recording indicator can be subtle or blocked, “GhostDot” stickers are being sold to block the LED indicator light so others won’t see when recording is happening)

2. As I remember Meta has changed its privacy policy so that voice recordings are stored in the cloud (up to one year) and “Hey Meta” voice-activation with camera may be enabled by default, meaning more frequent analysis of what the camera sees to train AI models.

3.The possibility that anytime someone might be recording you wearing glasses that look like ordinary sunglasses can create a chilling effect: people may feel uneasy, censor themselves, avoid public spaces, etc.

  • oldfuture 2 hours ago

    the fact that surveillance capitalism, or we should rather say surveillance oligarchy, is here does not mean we have to support it going forward, it can only be worse if nobody reacts

  • TheDong 3 hours ago

    As opposed to now? Everywhere you go in public, people are holding their phone up watching tiktok or such. There's no recording indicator on phones, they could be recording you.

    Heck, go to a tourist location, like a famous area of london or tokyo or new york, and there'll be dozens of wannabe influencers holding up gopros on selfie sticks.

    It's too late. It's already happening. If it has a chilling effect, we're already chilled.

    • Octoth0rpe 3 hours ago

      > wannabe influencers holding up gopros on selfie sticks

      I think there's a huge difference in how one perceives these as a privacy/self-censoring risk. Yes, a bunch of tourists with their gopros might catch me in the background, but I think it's reasonable to assume that their intended target is themselves, and catching me in the background is incidental. If someone is recording with their glasses, basically by definition their target is not themselves (though perhaps a companion?), and it's more likely that I am their target.

      • TheDong 3 hours ago

        Holding a phone in front of your face in public is so normalized at this point that targeted recording is not a matter of hardware, but of someone wanting to do it.

        As you point out, most influencer-types aren't aimed at you.

        That generalizes pretty well, with or without glasses, no one cares about recording you, other than incidentally as part of the background

        If someone does want to target recording you, i.e. you're a semi-famous idol or such, they'll just pretend to watch tiktoks on their phone and record without an indicator, right? At least the glasses have an indicator, unlike phones.

        • Octoth0rpe 3 hours ago

          I think the angle that a phone is held at is a reliable determinant of intent. People look down at their phones to read the screen. People hold their phones up vertically to record. The difference seems immediately apparent to me.

_ZeD_ 2 hours ago

The very first thing I though was: "yeah, they're gonna shovel advertising directly into my retina"

mrcwinn 2 hours ago

Really excited about these types of products. Would never trust anything with Meta, but I appreciate them trying to contribute a product. Unfortunately, it’s a dead end. Mark’s always regretted missing mobile - and thus being the app rather than the platform - and here it’s no different.

rossant an hour ago

Not a big fan of Meta but got to admit the tech is interesting. Can't wait to see the competition on this market.

rashidae an hour ago

I got so excited watching these videos and going through the product page. I completely ignored the price tag without putting any resistance and I thought to myself: I'VE GOT TO HAVE THIS!

Not only that... I started to think about ways I could use this!! I pictured myself using them... I visualized it all, and then remembered when I felt this way when the Ipod was released, and then again, when the first Pebble watch was launched or maybe even, the first kindle.

Although there's going to be some strong competition in the next 1-2 years with Apple, as we all know, the "thin phone" is nothing about the phone, and all about their pathway towards wearables...

I must have this. This is a game changer. WOW!

  • rashidae an hour ago

    who ever's downvoting my comment... You're literally trying to shut up the positive review due to your lack of empathy? WTF? This is my preference, I'm an expert in tech and I don't hold your negative views... Stop trying to control the narrative.

sho_hn 4 hours ago

I'm not sure I'll ever get over my concerns about making people around me uncomfortable to ever don one myself, but I hear the non-display ones are breakthrough assistive devices for impaired folks and this one might be too with the captioning.

I wonder how the etiquette will evolve for people with legitimate needs to use them in polite company.

  • pm90 4 hours ago

    I do see them being recognized more and sometimes banned (eg i saw a video of a strip club stopping someone with those glasses from entering). But otherwise… meh? We already know everyone around us is carrying incredibly high powered cameras in their pockets.

jrowen 5 hours ago

I think continuing to go for the classic Ray-Ban look is a mistake. I don't think this product is enticing to the Ray-Ban crowd at this point. Ray-Bans are for looking effortlessly cool, not maybe secretly filming people, it's a wolf in sheep's (bulging) clothing. I would go for more steampunk goggles. Get nerds and hobbyists really excited about it. Create a new lane.

  • kstrauser 5 hours ago

    I don't think these look like classic Ray-Bans. It looks like someone selected Wayfarers and then ran stroke path 30px. They're basically the clip art version of Ray-Bans.

  • yakz 5 hours ago

    A version that is just plainly nerdy (and more comfortable) might not be a bad idea; maybe call it the developer version or something to avoid any association with fashion or luxury.

Giorgi 13 minutes ago

They keep pushing this useless augmented reality to the sunglasses sometimes without sometimes with vr, ai, whatever new hype is there, it all failed, this one will fail too, there simply is no use.

pm90 4 hours ago

This is very cool; It seems likely to be the next step in human computer interaction. I could see Meta (or someone else) adding cellular features and a small screen to the wristband and getting rid of a phone entirely.

nothrowaways 2 hours ago

What are the privacy guarantees for passerbys (non-wearers).

jnaina 4 hours ago

This is beginning to mirror the evolution of the Smart Phone.

The Apple Vision Pro is AR glasses at the Apple Newton evolutionary stage, an early smart PDA (Yes I'm the sucker that bought both at their respective launch, 3 decades apart).

The Meta Ray-Ban Display is AR glasses at the Windows Mobile/Blackberry stage.

Apple will likely swoop in and launch the final refined version of the AR glasses (thin, 8 hour battery, eye gaze control, retina based authentication, tethered to the iPhone, Apple AI, etc), when the tech is available at a decent price point for mainstream launch.

And yes, being the unrepentant Apple FanBoi, will be buying the Apple iGlass at the launch.

  • cco 3 hours ago

    Apple is very well positioned since they also sell you a super computer in your pocket.

    One of my biggest annoyances is the OS on the Ray Ban Metas. If they just served as dumb I/O they'd be an incredible product and everything else about them, e.g. battery life, weight etc, would be so much better.

  • pm90 4 hours ago

    I really hope that Apple is working on this. It seems like they have at least some of the framework through the Vision; if they fire that team/abandom this software its gonna be a huge mistake.

    • jnaina 4 hours ago

      Apple really plays the long game. More than 10 years ago, on a now defunct website for AAPL investors, there was an Apple employee who inadvertently blurted out about how his work at Apple was related to researching saccades & micro-saccades, the small rapid eye movements of the eye, as it never stays completely still, even during “fixation".

      Apparently eye tracking must distinguish meaningful gaze from the natural jitters. I was thinking at that time, as an AAPL investor, that Apple seems to be wasting money on worthless R&D endeavors.

      It only became apparent to me, much later with the launch of the Apple Vision Pro, how his seminal research on saccades contributed to the design and realization of the AVP.

nicman23 33 minutes ago

if there is a custom os for these i d buy them. i am not running meta os

qwerty_clicks 2 hours ago

I can’t believe they believe this is what people want. Why isn’t Zuckerberg doing the demo in the metaverse? Ha

iammrpayments 4 hours ago

I’m 99% sure that EMG band is collecting several biomarkers and sending them all to facebook headquarters, get ready to get mattress ads when your HRV goes down.

post_break 5 hours ago

Still no way to replace battery, so in 3 years tops this thing is e-waste.

  • Philpax 4 hours ago

    That is also true of most smartphones. Smartphone batteries can be replaced, but specialty equipment and training is required. It's the same problem here, but much worse: they have to pack a significant amount of hardware into the space available. Even if they wanted to, it's unlikely that they could offer user-serviceable batteries.

    • blackoil 4 hours ago

      TWS are better comparison. Smartphone battery need to be changed in 3-5 years and should cost < $50. People throw them away because new one is better and they have money.

ashu1461 3 hours ago

Is it weird I went through the complete landing page and still did not get what actually the features are

Octoth0rpe 3 hours ago

It's hard to imagine using these for more than 30 minutes in my day. If I'm at work, whatever these can display I'd rather have on my monitor. When I'm socializing, I wouldn't want random popups or notifications, and I certainly wouldn't want whoever I was with to be looking at them either. So that leaves some pretty narrow use cases such as the cooking example in meta's demo, which might be interesting if it actually works well (the demo did not inspire confidence). So I'd end up using this maybe 30 minutes, every 3 or 4 days? Most of the time I know what I'm doing with my ingredients and don't particularly need AI assistance to combine noodles w/ sauce or whatever I'm doing. That's a very, very hard sell.

albert_e 4 hours ago

Is anyone else seeing concerns about where this technology is heading --

(A) Are we going to consume food prepared by a human so incompetent that he needs Live AI to tell him what ingredient to put and how much ... and that too an AI so unreliable that it can't tell whether the bowl is empty, let alone what ingredients are in it.[1]

In what world is this a sane marketing proposition?

(B) Distracted driving due to smartphones is at least detectable -- how do we escape distracted driving because of smart glasses?

When people eventually crash cars or walk into traffic or fall into pits -- no tech company will so much as acknowledge that the tech they are pushing so hard might have something to do with it.

Who should take the lead on saying: wait a minute we need some common sense boundaries around this ... some ground rules around responsible use of technology.

[1] Failed demo of Live AI - https://x.com/ns123abc/status/1968469616545452055

  • manco 3 hours ago

    > Are we going to consume food prepared by a human so incompetent that he needs Live AI to tell him what ingredient to put and how much

    Yes, I have cookbooks full of recipes I follow.

    > When people eventually crash cars or walk into traffic or fall into pits -- no tech company will so much as acknowledge that the tech they are pushing so hard might have something to do with it.

    Adults have agency and I expect them to be held accountable for their actions; not use technology as a scapegoat. If someone drives drunk it's not the alcohol at fault.

  • enos_feedler 4 hours ago

    Dont worry. The market decides what we want and we just wont go for it

cco 3 hours ago

I understand the existential problem that Meta faces here, but those forces have created a worse product.

As a Meta Ray Ban owner my biggest takeaway is that these glasses shouldn't have a CPU. They should be a dumb camera, mic, and speakers for my phone.

Interacting with Gemini on my phone would be the ideal product here, but of course that means Meta doesn't reap any of the data rewards.

So of course, since they don't make the phone in your pocket, they're strapping a device to your head and everyone pays the price of a big battery, CPU, and RAM in a sunglass form factor.

They're a remarkable product, but again, "dumb" glasses that just serve the I/O directly to your phone would be an incredible product. I wish Google or someone else would make them.

  • chrischen 3 hours ago

    There’s a Chinese AI glasses brands (Solos) that integrates with ChatGPT and I’m wondering if simply being paired with a better AI model will make it significantly more useful. One thing Meta seems to be completely ignoring up until now is Asians and Asian markets (lack of low bridge fit models, lack of translation features for any Asian languages despite ChatGPT being state of the art at it).

  • sidcool 3 hours ago

    Amazingly, I agree with you. But the average HN user does not understand the market and regular users' demands. It's been repeatedly demonstrated in the past too.

spot 6 hours ago

AI Glasses With an EMG Wristband available Sept 30 for $799

AvAn12 4 hours ago

Use cases: 1: FPV "how-to" videos are marginally easier to make, though GoPro remains a thing...

2: Users get to look like the nerd emoji

3: The rest seems like creepy-spying-on-friends-or-strangers kinds of things. Any constructive suggestions? I'm willing to be enlightened...

  • culopatin 4 hours ago

    I tried to record every day things with my action cam and I always feel like a weirdo with a box hanging off, I think these would help me not care about that as much,

    • AvAn12 4 hours ago

      Out of curiosity, for what purpose? Do you go back and watch your videos of everyday things? Share them with friends? With photography (and most visual media) the secret seems to be to take many many photos, or draw many many pictures, or shoot tons of video, and then curate and edit meticulously to find just the very best parts. Do you really get much value out of recording lots of day to day video? Is this part of some kind of art project?

wkat4242 3 hours ago

I wonder if these are also available in prescription form? I imagine this would be harder due to the light guide in the lens

  • paxys 3 hours ago

    They are (only within +/- 4 though)

    • wkat4242 3 hours ago

      Oh that wouldn't be a problem but I would need astigmatism correction. They might not have that.

nubela 6 hours ago

I think the tech is really cool. But I was actually hoping for a device that does the whole "phone strapped to my face" thing without actually looking like one. I mean if I'm already staring at my screen, why not make it easier?

boxerab 5 hours ago

I continue to be amazed by people rushing to give away even more of their personal data to a large corporation, especially one with Meta's privacy-challenged history.

addaon 5 hours ago

Pretty cool hardware. Count me in if and when it supports interesting software.

  • tootie 5 hours ago

    There's the rub isn't it? We've been doing AR for over ten years at this point and I can't name a single blockbuster app besides Pokemon Go.

geuis 5 hours ago

Interesting tech, but the item is completely without any attractive style. Look up "army birth control glasses"

(Sorry about the google search link. Apple and Google go out of their way to hide the url when doing searches on Google from mobile Safari.)

https://www.google.com/search?sca_esv=046dc2c9c0fa6748&udm=2...

This is what no one else can seem to understand. The iPad was created in Apple's labs before the iPhone. But Jobs and other staff made the decision to wait several years to launch the phone until the tech caught up to the ambition. They had a certain ascetic they wanted in addition to the hardware and it required time.

In this case, it looks like opposite. The tech is finally getting there, but the design team has no sense of making a daily wear product that people should reasonably want to wear. If I imagine a large population of people wearing these daily, it's going to look like middle and high school students from the 70s and 80s in yearbook photos.

What's awful is that I'm one of the most fashion ignorant people I know. I wear the same type of shirts and shoes because they're comfortable not stylish. And my glasses are as minimal frame as possible because I don't want a large mass of matter sitting on my face. Even that being said, this product just reminds me of my buddy's army photo of him wearing the Army issued glasses. Not good.

  • dylan604 5 hours ago

    >Apple and Google go out of their way to hide the url when doing searches on Google from mobile Safari.

    What? It's only 2 clicks away. You can click the copy button after hitting the share button. /s

    • geuis 4 hours ago

      Yup. I can go to any other of billions of domains in the world and just see the url, but because Google and Apple have a special compensatory friendship we can't do that.

senectus1 23 minutes ago

gods the frames are always so thick and ugly...

303uru 5 hours ago

I could not be less interested. As the world determine their relationship with their phone needs distance, Zuck has decided everyone wants a phone on their face. Doubt it.

Slow_Hand 3 hours ago

What is it with the Meta site disabling the back button on the browser?

I can understand why apps like Instagram - when used in the browser - wouldn't be compatible. But this product release page? What's going on here? Why?

pm90 4 hours ago

Seems like Apple should get the wristband tech so people can type on their watches.

barbazoo 5 hours ago

My neighbour is gonna buy this one as well and I bet it’s going to end up in the same junk drawer as the last one.

  • jsheard 5 hours ago

    It seems like a pattern that Meta hardware usually sells relatively well, but then struggles with user retention. It happened with the Quest and so far it's happening with the glasses too. People like the idea of the products much more than the reality of actually using them.

    https://www.theverge.com/2023/8/3/23818462/meta-ray-ban-stor...

    • aerostable_slug 5 hours ago

      Good point.

      OTOH, for me the Quest killer app is Ace. I can practice pistol shooting any time I want, which keeps me using the headset every day. For the glasses, the killer app might be translation. Now, I couldn't say if that will 'translate' into widespread user retention, or — like Ace — only really keep a smaller community engaged (I don't think most users need translation services on a regular basis).

    • dylan604 5 hours ago

      It's not so much the hardware, it's the lack of software to use with the hardware. Nobody wants to wait until real hardware exists and risk losing consumer interest, yet they risk losing consumer interest with these half baked products. Sibling comment claims a killer app, but there hasn't truly been a killer app that makes people willing to use the product all the time. The new wears off, and then the use just craters.

blondie9x 2 hours ago

Google Glass again ...

dskhatri 4 hours ago

Someone help me understand why the Ray-Ban branding? Meta should be able to make the frames themselves. Ray-Ban doesn't seem to be a strong enough brand that Meta couldn't go it solo and build a glasses brand themselves.

chatmasta 5 hours ago

This is getting closer to the ideal product, but I’m gonna wait for the one from Apple that I know it will be well-tested and integrate with my device. I’m sure it’s coming in the next few years. I can only imagine the pain that will come with trying to get the half-baked Meta ecosystem to cooperate with my iPhone.

pciexpgpu 2 hours ago

Meta really desperately wants to own a platform so they can avoid paying the Apple tax and the Google tax and directly plumb a vision to ads pipeline.

Just imagine the dollars in front of those glasses… if it only darned worked.

I really hope they don’t though because it’s beyond dystopian to own such a billboard company with a sick twist.

homeonthemtn 5 hours ago

It's fine. I still don't have a need for this in my life, and it's impractical as a replacement (good luck keeping them on once you start sweating) - you're still going to need your phone.

So that means this is just adding 2 more gadgets, both of which I now need to wear?

Nah. Not happening.

Neat gestures though.

  • JKCalhoun 4 hours ago

    > So that means this is just adding 2 more gadgets

    Yeah, I see where this is going. (And here I am wanting less gadgets.)

  • paxys 5 hours ago

    You'll still need to have a phone, yes, but if the glasses reduce the number of times you pull it out of your pocket then I'd consider them worthwhile. Same as a smartwatch.

nomilk 5 hours ago

Looks like there were some bloopers during the demo: https://x.com/nearcyan/status/1968473003592990847

Huge respect to Zuck and co; I much rather authentic demos where stuff goes pear than some glossy marketing spiel by a non-technical exec.

Also, I didn't know this demo was taking place until afterwards, meta really should do more to publicise their demos, especially given they're actually making cool new stuff, unlike a lot of other big tech companies who are more about rent-seeking, advertising and enshitifying than inventing.

lostmsu 5 hours ago

The camera access is limited to Meta, no 3rd party developers. For privacy reasons. Meta ♥ privacy

bitwize 3 hours ago

Can I hack it? Can I load whatever OS and software I wish to run on it?

No? Then no thank you.

jayd16 4 hours ago

I was a bit disappointed to see it was a single display and no mention of AR. Even if it wasn't stereoscopic you could still have world locked visuals.

But I realized this is a pretty clever move. Only allowing a fixed, inset screen really hides any issues with display field of view.

avlbk 4 hours ago

At first I was shocked by the price, but now I just sort of want it. If they opened the OS it would be AMAZING.

m3kw9 5 hours ago

nobody is gonna use this, it's the Humane device except on a glasses.

tinyhouse 5 hours ago

So this is like Alexa in glasses with a band that lets you do things without speaking? Sounds like a cool technology. I can see how it is useful for sport (bike riding, running, etc; hopefully people don't use it while driving), but to be honest, not something I'm too excited about buying. It feels more of the same.

smitty1e 5 hours ago

As a theoretical matter, this is some nifty stuff. Hats off to everyone involved, as a simple matter of engineering.

As a practical matter, this feels too Orwellian. I don't want necessarily want to emit that much information (he said, looking at his Galaxy smart phone and watch) all the time.

Possibly I'm trending Luddite in my dotage.

ivape 5 hours ago

I feel like this and this (https://www.visor.com/) are going to converge into the same thing. If you really think about it, the average person will only ever use AR glasses for hands free camera, mic/headphone, and to see notifications. If they get really good, then a map overlay of the world. But real productivity will require it to start converging into a bigger visor type headset that is definitely not the same bulky VR form factor. The bulky VR form factor is DOA ergonomically for productivity imho.

Lastly, I don't put it past humanity to actually be interested in seeing ad overlays throughout the world because it's just ... cool, at least at first.

Killer feature for me:

I'd like to see that 3D marker in the world that I need to walk towards like a video game.

  • herval 5 hours ago

    Visor is largely vaporware (to put it mildly). It’s the form factor Apple is aiming with version 2 or 3 of Vision Pro

    It’s a very different experience to passthrough, no matter how small you make the glasses, so I’m not sure there’s a clear path to convergence

moralestapia 5 hours ago

>The only wave guide device out there with > 42 pixels per degree (ppd) is a giant headset that isn’t sold commercially anymore.

Magic Leap.

  • dylan604 5 hours ago

    Are you countering that's the name of a device that does this, or the name of the device that isn't sold any more? I didn't think ML ever made it to anything viable. They just gave great demo

    • Philpax 5 hours ago

      The Magic Leap 1 and 2 were commercially available to some degree, but they were not successful. I can't speak to their PPD, but I can't imagine it was that amazing.

      The HoloLens devices might be another set of candidates.

moron4hire 5 hours ago

CapitalOne Meta Ray-Ban Display, brought to you by Costco.

jhatemyjob 6 hours ago

I'm getting Macworld 2007 vibes

  • enos_feedler 6 hours ago

    I am getting Phillips CDI vibes. It takes me back to a mid 90s infomercial where products will built by marketing departments and companies with cash to splash. There is just no bottom up cool factor. At all.

    reference: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hhZdWvnF3do

    • bigyabai 5 hours ago

      > There is just no bottom up cool factor. At all.

      That's just like, your opinion, man.

      • bix6 5 hours ago

        The wrist thing is kind of cool but he has to set his arm down to type 30wpm so maybe in a few iterations it’ll be more compelling.

        The glasses seem pointless to me for now. I’m surprised he didn’t add a booty zoom in view. We thought of that idea way back in middle school. Seems like something he’d vibe with.

      • enos_feedler 5 hours ago

        Did you watch the video link and compare? Curious what you think? Or are you just trolling? I bring substance and you bring negging

        • bigyabai 4 hours ago

          I grew up on the internet, I know what the CD-i is. Smart glasses are cool. For $800, I'd get one tomorrow if someone had a reproducible jailbreak. I own an Oculus Quest that was worth every dime.

          Too often HN threads devolve into the same tired comparisons about laserdisks and Palm Pilots. The only precedent we have for a product like this failing is Vision Pro, and this is nothing like that. Your comment was jumping to a conclusion that I think many would disagree with.

          • jhatemyjob 3 hours ago

            Even if it doesn't get a jailbreak it will still be a gamechanger. It's far more of an open platform than iOS ever was. Sideloading Android apps on the Meta Quest doesn't require any hax, I imagine it will be the same on the Meta Display. An SSH client on this thing will be a huge boost in productivity for me. Can just randomly sit on a park bench and write some code w/ my pocket bluetooth keyboard. This will reduce 90% of my need to bring my laptop out of the house.

josephpmay 5 hours ago

It's weird that they give a figure for PPV but not FOV. That tells me that the FOV must be pretty terrible

  • jsheard 5 hours ago

    The Verge's article says it's 600x600 over a 20 degree FOV.

65 5 hours ago

It's cool in theory, but frankly my mental health is significantly improved if I don't stare at a screen all day.

babelfish 5 hours ago

Pretty disappointed that prescription is limited to -4/+4!

t0lo 5 hours ago

considering meta is short for metadata, this opens up whole new avenues of data harvesting

rvz 6 hours ago

This is very impressive for a first version of the AI glasses from Meta.

Zuck really has cracked this one.

To Downvoters:

Give credit where credit is due.

I think you are going to realize in a few years why tens of billions was poured into Reality Labs and Oculus.

Version 2 or 3 of these glasses is going to set Meta ahead of the rest (except at least Apple).

thot_experiment 5 hours ago

Just in case someone is working on this type of thing. I will easily pay $1000 for an open source glasses thingy that has a monochrome laser display projecting directly onto my retina. IIRC Bosch and Intel have tried this before and the prototypes never went anywhere so there's probably a really good hardware reason why it's not happening but I want that more than any other hardware, it doesn't even have to be both eyes.

(admittedly with the recent Android news perhaps non-exploitative mobile computing is about to be dead and buried but shit, I'd lug around a backpack module everywhere running linux if it came to that)

  • mietek 40 minutes ago

    Old Microvision Nomad units from around 2004 pop up on eBay from time to time. I have one; it's a monocular red laser retinal projection display, with a permanently attached computing unit running an ancient version of WindowsCE. It's bulky, finicky, and nowhere near open source; there's hardly any documentation for it, but it does work somewhat. I haven't done anything interesting with it yet, because it doesn't have a IMU, and integrating one with it has proved difficult.

    Microsoft Hololens 2 also used Microvision-derived laser retinal projection technology. I don't have one, so I can't say how well it really works, but Microsoft seems to have given up on it as well.

    If you relax your requirements and allow for a green holographic waveguide display, there are a few other options, but still nothing open source that I'm aware of.

  • Philpax 4 hours ago

    Apple is rumoured to have tried this and caused eye damage as a result: https://macdailynews.com/2017/04/20/leaked-document-details-...

    It's quite difficult to do that safely, as it turns out! I would love a virtual retinal display, but I assume there's a good reason that nobody has managed to ship one in the last two decades.

    • mietek 30 minutes ago

      Microvision Nomad was indeed two decades ago, but Microsoft Hololens 2 also used retinal laser projection.

psyclobe 2 hours ago

I would give up some privacy in order to get some cool future tech; honestly I’m so in love with sci fi that I’m pretty excited to be fully connected to my own ai 24/7 like how iron man did it.