惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
C
Check Point Blog
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
P
Proofpoint News Feed
V
Visual Studio Blog
C
Cyber Attacks, Cyber Crime and Cyber Security
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
博客园 - 聂微东
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
博客园 - 叶小钗
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
S
Schneier on Security
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
腾讯CDC
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
GbyAI
GbyAI
N
News | PayPal Newsroom
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
T
Tenable Blog
S
Secure Thoughts
T
Threatpost
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
Martin Fowler
Martin Fowler
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
Vercel News
Vercel News
罗磊的独立博客
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
小众软件
小众软件
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Y
Y Combinator Blog
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
P
Proofpoint News Feed
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
P
Privacy International News Feed
H
Heimdal Security Blog
量子位
B
Blog

Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics

Teenage Engineering Just Released A Stereo Mixer That Physically Connects To Its EP-Series Samplers Spotify Now Lets AI Agents Like OpenClaw Generate Personal Podcasts Qualcomm reveals two new affordable phone chips with Smooth Motion UI tech - Engadget Angry Birds And FIFA International Soccer Join The World Video Game Hall Of Fame Spotify's AI-Powered Personal DJ Expands To More Languages And Countries Google Is Turning The Fitbit App Into A Unified Portal For Your Health And Fitness Data The Survival Horror Game Hollowbody Launches For PS5 And Xbox Series X/S On June 5 The Google Fitbit Air Is An AI-Infused Take On Whoop Wearables DJI's Osmo Mobile 8P Gimbal Has A Detachable Screen Remote HP EliteBoard G1a Review: It's A Desktop In A Keyboard! But It's Not For You Chrome Downloads A 4GB AI File Without User Consent, Researcher Alleges Remakes Of Myst And Riven Are Coming To PlayStation, Xbox And The Microsoft Store The Steam Controller Sold Out Super Quickly And Valve Is Working On A Restock ChatGPT's New Default Model Is More Factual And Better At Personalization Book Publishers Accuse Meta And Mark Zuckerberg Of Copyright Infringement Alexa+ Is Now Available On A Bunch Of Bose Speakers Chrome On Android Will Now Let You Share Your Approximate Location Google Will Livestream The Android Show: I/O Edition On May 12 Game Pass Additions For May Include Subnautica 2 And Forza Horizon 6 The Creator Of Citizen Sleeper 2 Is Making Two New Games Horizon Hunters Gathering Is Holding Another Playtest On May 22 Meta Is Using AI Bone Structure Analysis To Detect And Remove Underaged Users Samsung Galaxy A37 Review: A Solid Deal Even In This Economy Bose's New Lifestyle Home Audio Lineup Includes A Speaker, Soundbar And Subwoofer Google's Pentagon AI Deal Reportedly Drove The DeepMind Team To Unionize Apple Said To Be Talking To Intel And Samsung About Building Key Device Processors Mini Motorways Is Letting Players Vote For Its Next City Map How To Watch Xbox's Stranger Than Heaven Showcase Sony Will Soon Settle A PlayStation Store Class Action Lawsuit For $7.8 Million Oura Adds More Detailed Hormonal Health Insights To Its Series 3 And 4 Rings Engadget Podcast: Is The Valve Steam Controller Worth $100? Meta Says It May Withdraw Its Apps From New Mexico If Judge Agrees To The State's Demands The ROG Xbox Ally X Is Getting Some Updates, Including Automatic Super Resolution ChatGPT Developed A Goblin Obsession After OpenAI Tried To Make It Nerdy The Upcoming Resident Evil Movie Looks Legit Scary In Its First Trailer Spotify's New Verification Badge Shows That Music Is Not AI-Generated Vine Reboot App Divine Arrives With A Ban On AI Slop Motorola's Latest Family Of Razrs Includes Its First Book-Style Foldable YouTube TV Gets A Fully Customizable Multiview Feature, With Availability For All Channels It Runs Doom: AI Chatbot Edition You Can Now Book A Hotel Via The Uber App Apple reportedly testing out four different styles for its smart glasses that will rival Meta Ray-Bans The US government wants Reddit to snitch on one of its users through a grand jury OpenAI says Elon Musk is orchestrating a last-minute 'legal ambush' before trial Rockstar Games has confirmed it was hit by third-party data breach The first European country to get Tesla’s Full Self-Driving Supervised will be the Netherlands IBM settles its DEI lawsuit with the DOJ for $17 million Engadget review recap: ASUS ZenBook A16, AirPods Max 2, Sonos Play and LG Sound Suite X's messaging app, XChat, may be available soon Marauding minotaurs, more CloverPit and other new indie games worth checking out The Artemis II astronauts are back after a 10-day journey around the moon The FAA is encouraging gamers to get jobs in air traffic control Epic is reportedly building an extraction shooter for Disney A man allegedly threw a Molotov cocktail at Sam Altman's house Estonia is the rare EU country opposing child social media bans Garmin may be working on a Whoop competitor Amazon Luna ends support for third-party subscriptions and game purchases French government says au revoir Windows, bienvenue Linux Google adds E2E encryption to Gmail for iOS and Android enterprise users Google has reportedly started to add Polymarket data to News results How to watch the Artemis II landing Sony Bravia Theater Bar 5 review: A basic TV sound booster YouTube Premium’s US pricing is going up Microsoft starts removing unnecessary Copilot buttons in Windows 11 The Morning After: Amazon pledges its satellite internet starts this year Google removes Doki Doki Literature Club! from the Play Store OpenAI has a new $100 ChatGPT Pro plan to better match up with Claude Apple is closing three US stores, including the first to unionize The Metal Gear Solid movie is back on, with Final Destination: Bloodlines directors in charge A maverick hacker got Mac OS X running on a Wii Instagram comments can now be edited (within 15 minutes) Jazzy stealth-action game Thick as Thieves hits PC on May 20 Netflix adds three Jackbox games to its TV app Another Don't Starve game is on the way Mountain climbing sim Cairn is getting free DLC this summer Co-op pirate survival game Windrose hits PC in early access on April 14 Tesla may be working on a smaller and cheaper electric SUV Razer just released some new gaming earbuds with low latency and fast switching between devices Indie game Neverway will launch this October, just in time for spooky season 1000xResist devs reveal their wild-looking second game about convincing an AI it's not human Amazon's satellite internet service is scheduled for mid-2026 availability Rhythm Heaven Groove comes to Switch on July 2 Roku will stream Savannah Bananas games, along with the entire Banana Ball Championship League Google introduces AI-generated avatars to YouTube Shorts OpenAI 'pauses' its Stargate UK data center plan Google bakes NotebookLM, its research tool, into Gemini Spotify now lets you turn off all video JBL Live 780NC and 680NC review: Great leaps, greater missteps Dyson just announced its first-ever handheld fan, with a motor that spins up to 65,000 RPM You'll have one more chance to buy Samsung's pricey Galaxy Z TriFold this Friday DoorDash and Wing are expanding their drone delivery partnership to Atlanta You'll soon be able to hide games from your Xbox achievements list How to watch the Triple-i Initiative showcase on April 9 Meta's Muse Spark model brings reasoning capabilities to the Meta AI app Greece will ban all kids under 15 from using social media The Nintendo Switch 2 version of 007 First Light is delayed until later this summer No Man’s Sky now has Pokémon-style creature battles GoPro to lay off over 20 percent of staff by the end of 2026 Forza Horizon 6 gives would-be racers another gorgeous open world to explore Fender Elie review: Handsome speaker/amp hybrids with excellent clarity
Meta Glasses hands-on: Ray-Ban is out, Kylie Jenner is in - Engadget
Cherlynn Low · 2026-06-23 · via Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics

Familiar styles that offer more adaptability for slightly less money than the Ray-Ban models.

A person wearing the Meta Starfire AI glasses

Engadget

After years of releasing smart glasses that bore the Ray-Ban or Oakley brand, Meta has finally made its own (although still in collaboration with Essilor Luxxotica). The company today unveiled a trio of AI Glasses — the Fury, the Adventurer and the Meta Glasses by Kylie (labeled in some places as "Starfire"), and the first two of those styles start at $299. The variant that was co-designed with celebrity Kylie Jenner, will cost $399.

At its launch event in New York City yesterday, Meta set us up with a pair of the new glasses and a companion phone, and let us roam around the venue and its demo areas somewhat freely. The company also had multiple units of the other styles around for us to pick up and try on as we liked, so I got a good sense of all the different options available.

What's new

But first, the basics. The new line of Meta glasses, according to the company's VP of wearable devices Ming Hua is "introduced by Meta and EssorLuxottica," and were built on "the same hardware platform as our best-selling AI glasses." You'll find a similar multi-array microphone setup, spatial audio and 3K video cameras. But the company has "really expanded the style, the colorways and materials" with a total of 26 combinations available. Of the three styles, the Meta Adventurer was described as more "classic" and rectangular, while the Meta Fury is a bit more full, square, and comes in more color options.

The Starfire, which looks a lot like the smaller oval frames that Jenner favors, comes in black or tortoiseshell, and features a gem on the lens (more on that later). Across the whole lineup, the new Meta Glasses feature a three-way adjustable nose pad to better fit more face shapes. Like the Ray-Ban Meta, they also have over-extension hinges and user-adjustable temple tips for those who like their glasses to really hug their skulls.

Alongside the new hardware, Meta is also updating the software for its glasses. The Meta AI companion app will launch with the Muse Spark AI update that rolled out to the company's existing glasses earlier this year, which should help it give better answers to questions. The company is also adding 14 languages to its library of supported languages for live translation, including Mandarin, Korean, Japanese, Arabic and Hindi. That brings the total number to 20.

Other software rollouts include a new "dynamic photos" feature that takes several photos in succession when you shoot and can pick the best image for you. Meta is also bringing the "pedestrian navigation" feature from its Display glasses to the new lineup so you can hear guidance like "Turn right now" when you're walking around a foreign city, for instance.

Hands-on with the Meta Glasses by Kylie

A person wearing the Meta Starfire AI glasses

Cherlynn Low for Engadget

I spent most of my time with a pair of the Jenner style in black, which are frankly reminiscent of cat eye glasses by Gentle Monster, Prada and Chanel. I was frankly shocked that the shape of the frames seemed to suit my face, and I certainly felt as if I was emulating Jenner's vibe. 

There are a few features unique to the Starfire version of the glasses, which cost $100 more than the other two styles. First, and most noticeable, is the small gem affixed to the top right corner of the right lens, close to where the camera is. It's a small nod to how Jenner gets hounded by paparazzi, with the way it catches light seeming like flashes of cameras. It's also sparkly, which is part of the Kylie aesthetic, after all.

As for more functional differences, a physical one is that the adjustable nose bridge is made of metal, which makes it easier to wipe makeup off of. It's something that was considered during Meta's conversations with Jenner when they asked for her input on the glasses. As someone who was wearing foundation and powder when I tried these devices on, and who constantly sweats down her nose, I was very happy about this. The different material definitely seemed effective, as I noticed less makeup residue on the Starfire than on a demo Adventurer unit I tried on later.

I also really liked fiddling with the adjustable nose bridge on all the models, which were easy enough to click into place, but sturdy enough to hold their position while on my face. It was really through experimenting with the different angles that I finally realized the type of nose pad that best suits my face and keeps these glasses from slipping off.

Though it's not unique to the new Meta glasses, I was happy to see the adjustable temple tips and over-extension hinges. I'm not a wearer of spectacles myself, having gotten LASIK about 16 years ago, so I'm not very familiar with all the different challenges that plague modern specs wearers. But compared to my experience with early (and slightly more recent) models of video-recording glasses, the trio of new Meta glasses were satisfyingly comfortable to wear for hours at a time.

One other feature that sets the Starfire glasses apart from the Fury and Adventurer: You'll be able to select Jenner as the voice for your AI and all other spoken elements like the onboarding instructions or battery life readout. This wasn't working on the model I wore for the session, but I tried on another pair at a Starfire specific demo area and can confirm that what sounded like an AI version of Jenner's voice was speaking to me. I was half expecting to hear some version of the "rise and shine" tune that Jenner, shall we say, was known to croon for a time. But I didn't.

There isn't much that's very different between the Meta Starfire and its non-Jenner counterparts. The little gem on the right lens is very subtle, and only once did I notice it from behind the lens. Admittedly, in that moment I did think it was a speck of dirt and try to flick it off, but once I remembered it was placed there deliberately it faded out of my consciousness again.

It's probably not worth taking too seriously, but I noticed that in about an hour of wear and use, the Starfire unit's battery life went from 96 percent to about 66 percent. But I would wait until we can test units that are ready for the real world before guessing at battery life, since there are myriad factors that could cause excessive power draw in this scenario.

Translation support for new languages

Like I mentioned earlier, Meta's translation feature now supports languages like Mandarin, Korean, Japanese and about 11 more (in addition to the original six). I had a quick conversation with Meta's product manager Emerson Qin about Sichuan food in New York City. He spoke Mandarin to me, the Meta glasses translated his speech into English into my ears and then I replied in English. My responses would appear on his screen in Mandarin, and as I'm bilingual, I was able to verify the accuracy of the conversation.

Aside from a few small stumbles that feel very typical of modern language translation systems, Meta's AI was able to capture the chat between Qin and I quite accurately. I was also able to get a preview of a new code-switching feature that allows people to use terms from other languages instead of having to make up or approximate names that don't exist in certain languages. In our chat, Qin said "East Village" in English before continuing his sentence in Mandarin, and the AI translated his whole sentence in English seamlessly to me.

Meta AI is familiar

A pair of Meta Adventurer glasses in tortoiseshell on a white surface.

Cherlynn Low for Engadget

I had to leave before our conversation made me too hungry, and of the new features coming to Meta's software, this was the only one I really checked out at the event. I haven't seen for myself the new dynamic photos, but from the demos that Meta showcased, it certainly seemed like the AI was capable of recognizing a lot of things and scenes.

Every time I asked it to tell me what I was looking at, it quickly and accurately described the launch event for Meta AI, calling out words and notable objects. When I requested a translation of a sign in Arabic, it told me what was written (an assortment of confections). At the suggestion of a nearby Meta exec, I asked the AI to play music inspired by the brightly colored, bakery-themed space. It decided to play "quiet ambient music" – you tell me how accurate that feels.

It's not perfect, of course. When I asked it to describe my outfit, though, it did keep misrecognizing the giant lens of my DSLR as a carrying case for glasses. Sometimes, I would have to reply to a real person asking me a question while the device was still reading out a response to me, and it would stop mid-sentence, only to carry on after a pause. It was a bit odd, but seemed reasonable in the chaotic environment. I do think it's nice we've reached a point where the glasses feel sleek and comfortable, and response time is thankfully short, but basically most of the features here aren't novel to the company or the industry.

Still, though there isn't much by way of meaningful new updates at the launch of Meta's new AI glasses, I think it's nice the company is attempting to cater to a wider audience with this series. Not only are these glasses more customizable and available in more styles, they're also about $100 to $200 cheaper than the current-generation Ray-Ban Meta glasses. Of course, you'll get basically all the same new features on those, and are paying a premium for the Ray-Ban brand. But I left the event mostly pleased with the adjustable nose bridge (which is easier to use than the replaceable nose bridges on the Ray-Ban pair) and slightly obsessed with the Starfire style.