this post was submitted on 24 Oct 2023
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This is the best summary I could come up with:
Starting at $399, they plug into phones, computers, and a variety of gaming devices to project a display through a pair of sunglasses.
(That makes them a bit heavier than the roughly 50-gram Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses, which feature cameras but no built-in display.)
Xreal says it’s improved the temple and nose pads to offer a more comfortable fit as well, and it promises it’s redesigned the audio system to pipe sound more directly into your ears without leaking it to the rest of the room.
That means they can’t do some things people often associate with AR glasses, like make virtual objects stick to walls or floors.
While this is far from a new concept, Xreal’s take on it is unusually svelte, easy to use, and (by AR glasses standards) pretty normal-looking.
Xreal touts support for the Valve Steam Deck, Asus ROG Ally, and Nintendo Switch alongside Xbox and PlayStation consoles, iOS and Android devices, and PCs and Macs.
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