Meta, parent company FacebookMeta today unveiled what it calls “the most advanced pair of AR glasses ever made.” The new product is called Orion. The company describes it as glasses that look completely ordinary, but at the same time offer augmented reality features.
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Orion glasses they have been developed over the past five years and are described by Meta as lightweight and great for both indoor and outdoor use. Unlike VR headsets, AR glasses augment the real world instead of shutting it down completely, providing digital experiences that aren't limited by a smartphone or headset display. The Orion offers the largest field of view ever introduced for AR glasses of this size. This field of view opens up some really impressive use cases for Orion from multitasking windows and large-screen entertainment to life-sized holograms of people, all of which digital content can be seamlessly aligned with the view of the 'physical' world.
Meta managed to achieve the appropriate composure with the Orion model.onenty can be reduced to literally a fraction of a millimeter. Meta's latest augmented reality glasses have transparent lenses that allow the wearer to see the eyes and expressions of other people. Orion also offers contextual AI, which is able to "perceive and understand" the world around the wearer to "anticipate and proactively address" the wearer's needs. Meta's AI can do things like create a recipe from what's in your fridge or call a friend while the user is washing the dishes. While Orion is not (yet) a consumer product, it is not a research prototype either. Meta is currently providing access to the latest glasses to its employees.ancand “selected external experts” so that, based on feedback, it can develop a product line of AR glasses that could already be intended for ordinary consumers. In the future, Meta wants to improve the AR display to offer a sharper image, optimize the design and slowly prepare for mass production. It has also reportedly been working on glasses purely for augmented reality for some time Apple, but in this case we will probably have to wait a few more years for the launch.
I see the Spanish English stand and where is the Czech and the input prediction. I missed it back then iPhone 5 and that's 14 years ago. Silicon Valley, shame on you for not getting it together in 14 years. Siri and prediction well that's a bummer and Android has it loaded. I definitely write better on an Android device it's the biggest weakness of the iPhone. I prefer to dictate everything Because they would take you away typing it all out
not only are they stealing your data normally, now they will stream your life straight to the servers