Meta glasses can change your phone—here’s how:These stylish Ray-Bans pack AI superpowers, live captions, and hands-free navigation to change your daily life.
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg has unveiled what the next big innings in technology can be:AI-operated smart glasses that can be you without checking, navigating, or even touching for video calls.
On Wednesday, during Meta’s annual Connect event, Zuckerberg introduced a smooth pair of wearables with a small performance made in the Meta Ray-Ban display glass lens. His pitch? A future where we do not spend our lives staring at a phone screen, but instead we organically interact with the digital world through glasses that look almost like regular glasses.
“Glasses are the ideal form factor for personal super intelligence,” Zuckerberg said. “They allow you to be present at the moment by providing access to AI capabilities that make you smarter, help you communicate better, and even improve your memory.”
A big bet on AI every day
The new displays are part of the aggressive push of the new display meta, which competes with veterans like Google, Samsung, Snap, and possibly Amazon to integrate artificial intelligence into daily life. Along with glasses, Meta upgraded to Jean 2 Ray-Ban, New Meta Okle Vanguard Sports Glass, and its Quest 3 VR headset, with a fresh gaming experience and Disney+ for Horizon, with the company’s immersive metaverse platforms.
Smart glasses are still a niche product, but they are gaining momentum. Meta partner Essilorelxotica (Ray-Ban’s original company) revealed in July that the sale of Mata Glass was more than three times in just one year. The company aims to produce 10 million pairs annually by 2026.
“This is the biggest launch so far,” EssilorLuxottica’s chief wearables officer, Rokko Basilico, told CNN. “You get a cool look of your favorite brand, as well as real-time information, such as an immediate superpower—either through the audio or now with a display.”
Zuckerberg compared the sale of Meta’s smart glasses to “some of the most popular consumer electronics ever.”
Credit: Zuckerberg Demos New Meta Glasses With Built-In Display
Meta Ray-Ban display inside glass
Meta’s Ray-Ban glasses have always been picked in the form of devices that “let you see what you can see and hear what you can hear and listen to.” Now, with the display edition, users eventually get a direct visual response inside the glasses.
The display sits in the corner of the right lens, offering information as if it were hovering in front of you a few feet away. She opens a whole new world of small-screen possibilities:
Messages and calls: Read and answer texts, see photos, or jump into a video call where you really see the caller’s face.
Social media: Capture video, review photos, and even see Instagram reels without pulling your phone.
Navigation: Get real-time maps right in front of your eyes so that you can be free from hands.
Live captioning and translation: See conversations that were immediately transferred—passengers, journalists, or a lifeguard in any noisy environment.
AI on demand: Ask AI assistant questions of Meta and get quick answers—both panels were spoken and visually displayed.
“We have been working on glasses for more than 10 years, and this is one of the special moments where we get to show something that we have put our life into,” Zuckerberg said. “This is contrary to anything seen earlier.”
Big picture
While Meta Smart Glasses can be one of the first to make those who really want to wear them, the competition is getting warm rapidly. Tech giants are owners of the “A-on-Yor-Fes” category, and the latest display glass of Meta can be the product that suggests balance.
For now, one thing is clear: Meta does not just want to compete with the phone—it wants to change it.
