I tested Google's new AI smart glasses
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Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton has launched an investigation into Meta's Meta AI Glasses for possibly collecting and sharing Texans' personal data.
If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, Rolling Stone may receive an affiliate commission. The holiday are just around the corner, and if you want to give someone a practical-yet-cool gift that’ll truly ...
This article is part of Kotaku Deals, produced separately from the editorial team. We may earn a commission when you buy through links on the site. The iconic Ray-Ban Wayfarer glasses have been cool all the way back to Buddy Holly and Roy Orbison in the ...
As momentous as it was for Meta to shove a display inside its smart glasses with the Meta Ray-Ban Display, whatever excitement the hardware generated was betrayed by the software side of things. The fact is, there just weren’t a ton of apps to use inside the company’s $800 smart glasses at launch, though things might finally be rounding the corner.
Meta is opening up the Ray-Ban Display glasses to third-party developers, and it could change how useful smart glasses actually are in your daily life.The Latest Tech News, Delivered to Your Inbox
Smart eyewear company Xreal is partnering with Google to produce augmented reality glasses that it is calling Project Aura, a new product built using Android XR technology. The AI-powered glasses will use optical see-through technology to enhance the consumer AR experience and will include a widened 70-degree field of view.
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Google just showed off ‘intelligent eyewear’ arriving this fall — Android XR glasses built with Samsung and Qualcomm to put Gemini in your line of sight
A decade after Google Glass became a punchline, Google is trying again. At its I/O 2026 developer conference in May, the company unveiled a new line of AI-powered smart glasses built on its Android XR platform,