AI glasses are coming for your smartphone… how to invest… a headwind and tailwind pushing on today’s market… why the crypto market has been sucking wind… the key “bull-or-bear?” level to watch VIEW IN ...
Meta Ray-Ban Display is now officially available to buy in select physical stores across the US.Originally announced at Connect 2025 two weeks ago, Meta's first smart glasses integrated with an ...
The second-gen glasses aren’t groundbreaking, but they’re improved. And for anyone who’s not willing to spend $800 on the Meta Ray-Ban Display, the Ray-Ban Meta Gen 2 are probably the only smart ...
Slow-motion and "hyperlapse" timelapse modes will arrive to the second-gen Ray-Ban Meta and Oakley Meta glasses sometime this year. For now, the advantage is 3K video recording (2,203x2,938 pixels in ...
It is an immutable rule of the tech world that once something becomes widely used, better technology will come along. In the mobile space, 5G is just coming of age, but the companies that power ...
Meta is accelerating the development of its smart glasses, looking for suppliers in South Korea in order to reduce its heavy reliance on China.
The guy who's spearheading Meta's AI-powered smart glasses is named Rocco Basilico — which matches a internet theory called Roko's basilisk.
Meta Platforms can rely on its sprawling social media network to fund its artificial intelligence ambitions. Oracle's strong push into the cloud services market has boosted its revenue growth ...
An equally big improvement when it comes to the Meta Ray-Ban Gen 2 is in the video capabilities. While the first-gen Meta Ray-Bans top out at 1080p at 30 fps, the Meta Ray-Ban Gen 2 ratchets things up ...
Meta Platforms stock is a 'Buy' as AI investments and Ray-Ban smart glasses launch fuel growth. Learn more about the META stock here.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, whose company has invested tens of billions of dollars in headset and glasses technology, has lately been making the argument that we’re moving toward a post-smartphone world ...
In 2003, Harvard shut down a problematic platform called Facemash. A 19-year-old Sophomore then coded something in his dorm that reshaped how we socialize.