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- Oppo has shown off its Air Glass 3 AR glasses at MWC 2024
- They’re powered by its AndesGPT AI model and can answer questions
- They’re just a prototype, but the tech might not be far from launching
While there’s a slight weirdness to the Meta Ray-Ban Smart Glasses – they are a wearable camera, after all – the onboard AI is pretty neat, even if some of its best features are still in beta. So it’s unsurprising that other companies are looking to launch their own AI-powered specs, with Oppo being the latest in unveiling its new Air Glass 3 at MWC 2024.
In a demo video, Oppo shows how the specs have seemingly revolutionized someone’s working day. When they boot up, the Air Glass 3’s 1,000-nit displays show the user a breakdown of their schedule, and while making a coffee ahead of a meeting they get a message saying that it’s started early.
While in the meeting the specs pick up on a question that’s been asked, and Oppo’s AndesGPT AI model (which runs on a connected smartphone) is able to provide some possible answers. Later it uses the design details that have been discussed to create an image of a possible prototype design which the wearer then brings to life.
After a good day’s work they can kick back to some of their favorite tunes that play through the glasses’ in-built speakers. All of this is crammed into a 50g design.
Now, the big caveat here is the Air Glass 3 AR glasses are just a prototype. What’s more, neither of the previous Air Glass models were released outside of China – so there’s a higher than likely chance the Air Glass 3 won’t be either.
But what Oppo is showing off isn’t far from being mimicked by its rivals, and a lot of it is pretty much possible in tech that you can go out and buy today – including those Meta Ray-Ban Smart Glasses.
The future is now
The Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses already have an AI that can answer questions like a voice-controlled ChatGPT.
They can also scan the environment around you using the camera to get context for questions – for example, “what meal can I make with these ingredients?” – via their ‘Look and Ask’ feature. These tools are currently in beta, but the tech is working and the AI features will hopefully be more widely available soon.
They can also alert you to texts and calls that you’re getting and play music, just like the Oppo Air Glass 3 concept.
Then there’s the likes of the Xreal Air 2. While their AR display is a little more distracting than the screen found on the Oppo Air Glass 3, they are a consumer product that isn’t mind-blowingly expensive to buy – just $399 / £399 for the base model.
If you combine these two glasses then you’re already very close to Oppo’s concept; you’d just need to clean up the design a little, and probably splash out a little more as I expect lenses with built-in displays won’t come cheap.
The only thing I can’t see happening soon is the AI creating a working prototype product design for you. It might be able to provide some inspiration for a designer to work off, but reliably creating a fully functional model seems more than a little beyond existing AI image generation tools’ capabilities.
While the Oppo Air Glass 3 certainly look like a promising glimpse of the future, we’ll have to see what they’re actually capable of if and when they launch outside China.
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