It was back in September when Meta first revealed an early prototype of itsĀ Orion AR glasses, and while they are a long way from becoming an actual product you can buy, the company does believe it can achieve this. Indeed, Metaās wearables chief thinks that Orion can in time become theĀ AirPodsĀ of augmented reality devices.
Meta rather optimistically described the prototype pair as having āthe look and feel of a regular pair of glasses,ā andĀ I wasnātĀ entirelyĀ in agreement with this description. Perhaps to a short-sighted person in very foggy conditions at night, but to the rest of us, they look like exactly what they are: An early prototype of a product that takes us one step closer to that ideal.
Donāt misunderstand me. I think what Meta has shown us here is anĀ amazingĀ achievement. Itās quite phenomenal to squeeze this much AR tech into a form factor that is even slightly glasses-like. Itās way closer to glasses thanĀ the device shown off last yearĀ by Xiaomi. And the display is massively more Vision Pro-like thanĀ the proof-of-concept shown by Oppo. But the gap between what weāre seeing from Meta, and anything Apple would release as a consumer product, is vast. Not to mention the small matter of a $10,000Ā manufacturingĀ cost.
Meta and Apple are of course taking very different approaches to the same problem. Both companies want to end up with a truly glasses-like product which displays highly realistic AR content, but while Meta is proudly showing off its work in progress, whatever prototypes exist ofĀ Apple GlassesĀ are being kept locked inside the lab.
They do, though, seem to have a philosophy in common. Namely the technology should enhance your experience of the real world, not replace it. This is the reason Apple CEO Tim Cook has said that AR is much more interesting than VR, and Meta too seems to see its Orion project as creating a device people will put on when they want to use it and remove afterwards, not wear full-time.
The companyās Joshua To spoke toĀ FastCo. To doesnāt imagine Orion will be a place you are sucked into reality 2.0, but a quieter computer you can easily don and doff. āA bit how you think about Airpods,ā he says.Ā In other words, you put in your AirPods when you want to withdraw somewhat from the world to listen to music, but remove them when you want to engage with the people around you.
As someone who suffers from a condition known as mild facial aphasia, which makes it hard for me to recognize faces, one of the killer apps for me has always the idea of AR glasses identifying people I meet. Meta says it plans to do this, but with a surprisingly Apple-like approach to privacy.
Meta has built internal prototypes of its own to name-tag people you see with Orion, and as To describes, āitās freaking awesomeā to know everyone in a room. He floats the idea of a small conference, where you show up and opt-in, like sharing your contact on your phone, allowing your name to be displayed to other people. If you donāt, Orion leaves you anonymous.Ā āI think if we can thoughtfully do name tags in a very privacy-respectful and thoughtful way, thatās something weāre super interested in doing,ā says To.
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