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 ray-ban meta smart glass


Replace your sunglasses with this rare deal on Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses during this rare Amazon deal

Popular Science

If you've been wanting a pair of Ray-Ban Meta smartglasses, this is the best price I've seen since last year's Black Friday. Amazon has pairs as low as 239 right now, both with and without tinted lenses. They offer the classic Wayfarer style, so they look good on just about everyone. The sale is limited to what's in stock right now, so grab the color and the size you want before they sell out. When talking about the Ray-Ban Meta glasses, most people focus on the built-in camera.


Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses do the AI thing without a projector or subscription

Engadget

The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses have been something of a pleasant surprise. They make videos, take photos, livestream and act as an adequate replacement for headphones, all while looking like a normal pair of sunglasses. However, everyone's been waiting for the addition of multimodal AI after early access testing began in January. What is multimodal AI? Simply put, it's a toolset that allows an AI assistant to process multiple types of information, including photos, videos, text and audio. It's an AI that can view and understand the world around you in real time.


The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are getting AI-powered visual search features

Engadget

The Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses are about to get some powerful upgrades thanks to improvements to the social network's AI assistant. The company is finally adding support for real-time information to the onboard assistant, and it's starting to test new "multimodal" capabilities that allow it to answer questions based on your environment. Up to now, Meta AI had a "knowledge cutoff" of December 2022, so it couldn't answer questions about current events, or things like game scores, traffic conditions or other queries that would be especially useful while on the go. But that's now changing, according to Meta CTO Andrew Bosworth, who said that all Meta smart glasses in the United States will now be able to access real-time info. The change is powered "in part" by Bing, he added.


Meta's metaverse is getting an AI makeover

Engadget

Meta's Connect keynote felt different this year, and not just because it marked the return of an in-person event. It's been nearly two years since Mark Zuckerberg used Connect to announce that Facebook was changing its name to Meta and reorienting the entire company around the metaverse. But at this year's event, it felt almost as if Zuckerberg was trying to avoid saying the word "metaverse." While he did utter the word a couple of times, he spent much more time talking up Meta's new AI features, many of which will be available on Instagram and Facebook and other non-metaverse apps. Horizon Worlds, the company's signature metaverse experience that was highlighted at last year's Connect, was barely mentioned. That may not be particularly surprising if you've been following the company's metaverse journey lately.