Technology
A 'second brain' on your face: testing the AI glasses built by Meta's hackers
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A 'second brain' on your face: testing the AI glasses built by Meta's hackers To display this content from YouTube, you must enable advertisement tracking and audience measurement. Issued on: They first made headlines by bolting facial recognition onto Meta's Ray-Bans to show how easily the technology could identify strangers in the street. Now Anhphu Nguyen and Caine Ardayfio have a product of their own: Mira, a $650 pair of AI glasses, with no camera this time, that quietly transcribes and...
A 'second brain' on your face: testing the AI glasses built by Meta's hackers
To display this content from YouTube, you must enable advertisement tracking and audience measurement.
Issued on:
They first made headlines by bolting facial recognition onto Meta's Ray-Bans to show how easily the technology could identify strangers in the street. Now Anhphu Nguyen and Caine Ardayfio have a product of their own: Mira, a $650 pair of AI glasses, with no camera this time, that quietly transcribes and summarises everything, so you can turn your life into a searchable database.
Technology Editor Peter O'Brien lived with them for two weeks, weighing a genuinely useful "second brain" against the awkward reality of recording the people around you.