I think the biggest success of this that so many pieces of technology completely miss is that it actually does what it says it will do. Every single function you tried worked fine. That's unfortunately very rare these days
@@bullpup1337 yes it is sponsored, but i just finished watching and it's genuinely pretty amazing tech. it looks like an impressive device that (in this case) appears to have some compelling and thoughtful features and worked well in practice, sponsored or not
Why arent these a bigger deal??? My in-laws are deaf, and if these could essentially have the translate always on to create subtitles for them, this is incredible.
These are out for a while. Tried them in berlin and they are very cool but these tech channels wont promote tech until they sponsor them. A shame. What the hell are you doing if not showing new cool stuff like this
I was thinking that too. It's not just useful for conversations, imagine being deaf, walking outside and get a warning when the mics pickup a police or ems siren. I know they're not cheap, but neither are decent hearing aids.
@livinlicious oh yeah, I'm definitely not buying this specific thing. Maaaaybe gen 3. But I still want this thing but cheaper, not the Apple vision glasses.
This is a huge step in the correct direction for wearable tech. I'd imagine 10 years from now we might have this with ai assistant features, AR features and seamless connectivity between smart devices. Really wish tech giants such as apple, microsoft, samsung etc would pay more attention to this type of tech. I would much rather have a pair of smart glasses over a smart watch or ring for example.
I'd like to get rid of my phone and swap it for glasses and maybe a ring that acts like a mouse. Heck, I can't even think of the last time I was on an actual computer, and I've been using them pretty constantly since the late 90's.
@@francescoardizzonicinema aside from the fact that lots of people who don't need glasses still wear them, the obvious answer is don't get them if they don't suit your needs. Did you expect any else?
Too many smart glasses have went way too far too quickly wanting full color displays, mic, cameras, etc. But this is where the tech needs to be right now to be viable long term. More self contained and simpler, daily use functionality.
We need both, gotta have the company that makes a sensible good quality working product and the companies that push the boundary of technology until they make something huge. I wish companies like Meta would do their wild crazy stuff, but also do more sensible stuff that just works with current tech. Give the normies something and the razor edge enthusiasts.
They poison the well, too. These glasses are just odd enough to be noticeable as smart glasses. I think a lot of people are going to accost you about recording them, because they heard all about the Google Glass.
@@VaradiioRay Ban is doing a huge holiday push for their actually creepy Meta glasses. Those are a lot more clearly something than these are to the average person. These are very lowkey
My complaint with my XReal Air 2 glasses besides the poor fit for big noses is that I can’t change the size of the image or just show it on one eye like a heads up display. I would love that while driving. Directions and speed limit and speed hud.
The mention of them open-sourcing the software at the end is what got me the most, that sounds so cool! Imagine if an actual ecosystem grows around them and they could integrate with your existing notes, calendar, running apps, etc.
Absolutely, the openness takes it from potentially having lots of cool features to 100% getting lots of cool features once the community starts their thing. I can see this being the Pebble watch of smart glasses
@@infiniti4654 I really enjoy them not focusing on camera integration and focusing more on the integrated display. I don't wanna buy glasses with camera on them...
OMG REAL WORLD SUBTITLES. This is so incredible. Like bro I could be chatting to someone in real time and literally see subtitles of what they're saying. Forget translating different languages. I feel like this alone could go a long way for helping with communication. Like if my mind wanders for a second in a conversation and I miss what was said? No problem. Got the transcription right there. Insane. Rise up subtitle lovers. Today is a new day for us all. Also these would be so so so so so so so sooooooooo sick for reading ebooks in bed. Or I mean just reading ebooks anywhere.. so cool
ALSO, the green text choice is fire. having the choice to customize text colour would be nice but may be needing more tech packed in so maybe not worth it just for slight customizability
Ooooh that would be excellent for flight attendants, or other's that frequently have to communicate with others that speak a different language. Though I suspect that these needing to have the language preselected in the app, while still useful, could be a bit of a hindrance. Maybe some day that will have a feature to auto detect the spoken language.
@@Locke99GS also not being able to respond in the same language limits the usefulness a bit. you'd have to know some basic way of saying "I'll get you someone who can speak your language"
Imagine to actually be able to go outside for a walk while reading / studying without having to hold anything and still be knowledgeable about your surroundings...game changer
Two questions: 1- Does it recognize the language itself, or do you have to tell it what language to translate? 2- What is the battery life? Can you use it a whole day with all functions on?
@@melvishprasad800 Well, that is good enough for visiting a country. Though in my work, we are 20 nationalities and some of them can't english, would have been usefull here :)
This might be one of the more practical tech products I've seen in ages and the most useful implementation of AI in a consumer product. I'm actually reminded of the old Pebble watches in how simple and usable the UI is. Everything about it just feels like it was built for actual human use without any garbage gimmicks.
All of the features seem to be implemented in an extremely passive manner, right down to the "visually silenced" mode. I love it. It isn't in your face (well, uh...) but rather stays out of your way until it's needed. Your Pebble analogy is apt - I immediately thought of them after watching the video.
@@rherydrevinsmy thought exactly. As soon as apple or samsung come out with objectively worse product that has shiny colours and 1hour battery they are hoing bankrupt. Insane but true. Still cannot believe that pebble got bankrupt by 2 hour color copies.
@@JerzyLasica You're being unnecessarily grimy. The website says 1.5 day battery with 1 to 2 hours charge. Frankly I think these kids are onto something quite special if they manage to create an open-source community with a true app ecosystem around them, and that's going to depend on how "open" they choose to make it. Samsung, Apple let alone Meta will never open source glasses because they're way too freaked out by BS privacy concerns. Early devs and adopters are usually not interested in investing time and money into artificially limited products. Like, the Meta Ray Ban with all their bells and whistles will never never be a good product to me or something I'd consider buying because you just can't dev funny things on it
Those big lumps on the ends of the arms would be in the way of my (cheapish) hearing aids where they go over my ears, interesting product but would definitely need a trial weaaring before buying :p
it's ONE phone app that cost $700 and gives you ugly glasses.... don't know what game you're playing but i promise you it won't be changed by this.... it's a cool idea but it's just a shitty app that both Android as well as iOS have for free stock.... also the translation just being one way makes it objectively worse than literally every free translation app out there Should've partnered with a glasses manufacturer like RayBan spend 5 more years on the software to make it actually useful for anyone and it could've been a game changer... instead they rushed to market to get investors and hype, released a really shitty product that may be worse (and way more expensive) than the orange AI box thing that nobody wanted Also just design wise... the knobs behind the ear look like they're impossible to wear over ear headphones with
Ok I have never seen your videos and your face, smile & personality is INCREDIBLE! You are not only informative, and easy to listen to but incredibly adorable 🥰 Thank You 🙏🏼
Yeah, I remember in school some kids were made fun of because wearing glasses was not cool. Heck, now I think, with these, wearing glasses might very well become cool. (PS, I never made fun of anyone wearing glasses)
@@tankerkiller125 Contact wearer too, and I have a eye condition that makes my left eye too dominant. So my lenses are very different and I have to close my left eye to see through the right effectively. Hopefully the software can let you compensate for this with displaying different or same images on each lens.
@@ku8721 Riley's upgrade was, I think, the second upgrade ever. It showed off his minimalist lifestyle. Hoarding dozens of screwdrivers is not minimalist.
@@Cylonknight the cracking happens if you over tighten them... though most places that sell glasses will adjust them for free as it only takes like 3 seconds
This is the perfect definition of doing a few things very well. They figured out a selection of features that just about everyone can use without going over the top with the interface, colors, etc - just a simplistic, mono-colored display that gets the job done! It’s the first time I’ve nearly bought something right away lol
I can remember when computer screens were monochromatic. 2 flavors: Green, and Amber. Everyone knew color was inevitable and fast approaching, but there were millions of mono units sold anyway. If your vision at the time was to roll out a computer that resembled the first flatscreen models, you'd lose out on ten years of sales waiting on the tech to catch up.
Designers will see the positive reception these get, puke all over themselves, and then immediately forget everything they saw to make the Apple Vision Pro 2.
So excited for the future of this. A product that actually seems to exceed expectations based on what is advertised rather than attenpting to exaggerate or embellish their features. That's the right way to go
its a flying shoppinglist to wear on your nose a forgetful ai assistant who works sometimes and sometimes not the nosepads press on your nose and leave red marks on it but after letting the glasses adjust by a professional its more ok and the frame also dont hurts so much anymore it was very tight at first. the case is great to charge the glasses and after 1 hour both the phone and the glasses only loses 4% battery which is impressive but sadly the cleaning cloth dont fit inside.. the box is great to open but bad to close all in one a great improvement and works for me personally for 2 working days by moderate usage, using the even ai assistant as calculator and the notes are useful too but the position for the touchpad is at the end of the frame, so its hard to reach for people with longer hair, especially not so comfy at work to touch it and the own hairs with the dirty workinggloves/hands. Navigation is also funny to use, feels a lil bit like the diablo 2 map but you need to stop sometimes and wait until the map updatet when looking up but the normal arrows are working all the time and get faster updated.
I'm impressed. This is the first instance of this form-factor that actually seems legitimately useful, and the price isn't too outlandish either for what you get. It might not have as impressive a display compared to some other attempts, but that's probably kept the price significantly lower and the features it does have seem thoughtfully implemented, made for maximum utility out of minimal R&D investment and with no flashy bloat that surely only would've driven up the price. Well done for a first-gen product; color me excited to see where Even Realities takes it from here, because I could see myself buying later-gen pairs of these for my parents in the future, for instance. Imagine that: an _actually_ compelling proof-of-concept device!
thought the same, I always wait until a ~50% sale before getting new glasses (and a new frame for that matter), only being about double the normal price for essentially having smart glasses isn't that bad of a deal honestly, at least you get something for it and not just... glasses.
Such a high-effort video for a shortcircuit. Please send my compliments to whoever recorded the HUD interface for the video. Looks like a spiritual reincarnation of Google Glass.
I’ve owned these glasses for a month. The only thing it’s missing is timed reminders. I wanna say remind me in 30 minutes to do this or that, it can’t do that yet.
Honestly as someone who’s job involves a lot of public speaking from notes this could be so very useful especially the AI teleprompter - being able to go off script and add some other thoughts and it just starts scrolling when i come back to the notes would be amazing
Awesome work by the editors with all the UI in this video. Well, I've to say... I started the video believing in a price tag much much higher than the real one. For me it's not absurdly expensive, normal glasses aren't cheap and if you've got a particular sight problem could easily reach 800/900 euros price tag. Sometimes even for the lenses only. I would be curious to try these, but I admit that I cannot think to buy one only for see how they're by myself.
But do they actually include perscription-glasses? Otherwise "fake" glasses dont cost more than 100€. The precisely cut glass elements are what makes real glasses so expensive
Thought they’d go for at least twice their actual cost, honestly. It’s not cheap of course, but for a first gen product that even the biggest tech giants couldn’t get right I’d say it’s almost reasonable.
Same here ! Would've thought the glasses would cost like 900€, quite nice ! And that is for a new product, at launch. I'm sure the tech will get cheaper soon
@@alainportant6412... I fail to see the point of this comment. Like, okay?? I don't think finding a person making dry jokes hilarious necessarily mean that that you're easily amused but what would I know.
@@ahmedelgabry2780 dry, as in dry humor. Like telling jokes in a emotionally neutral way. It's a type of humor. I don't mean the content is shallow. I agree it's insightful. I enjoy Riley very much.
I literally dreamed of a product like this, with pretty much the same features, a couple years ago. And now it's real. Really excited for like, the 4th generation of these things.
Futuristic AR only reaches full potential in a world built around it. Imagine a world without physical signs cluttering the landscape, just virtual ones.
I wear contacts and have an eye exam coming up. Thinking of getting a pair of these 😊 theyre pretty much the same price as prescription lenses and frames. I like that there is no camera pointing at people so no awkwardness and i can wear them to work!
That's a really old application of this technology; automatic translation and captioning/speech to text software have been built on LLMs since the mid 2010s (Google Translate, for example, has been using a machine learning model since 2016), but they previously were never advertised as "AI".
Yoo!! I'm so glad a big channel was able to show off these glasses, and I really hope this will inspire other big channels to show them off too! I've made a couple videos on these myself, just because I don't think they have enough coverage given how awesome they are. I daily drive these glasses and I must say, they're as great as you think they can be. The software is solid and pleasing to use, and they're constantly coming out with new updates, on top of the fact that the open source software will be ramping up pretty heavily as more developers chip in to add extra stuff. Thanks for making this video!!
I was sceptical on how long this product would last, but seeing that they are open sourcing much of the code gives me hope that this will last much longer than previous attempts at smart glasses. Even if the company itself fails, there's hope that the community can keep this product alive with their own apps. The price seems a bit much, but I can respect that it is the edge of tech, so it's going to cost more. I'm broke anyways, so anything is going to be too much for me so...
Ha exactly what I was thinking. Can't wait for them to go out of business, replaced by products that cost more, do tons of stuff you don't care about, with worse interface and battery life!
Finally!!! I've been waiting for these to reach bigger tech channels. I pre-ordered them and have been wearing them for awhile now. They're awesome and need more attention!!!
man, is that cool. every single new feature Ryan has shown is genuinely amazing. I'd get really excited if I wasn't trying to get rid of so much tech in my life
This is what smart glasses are suppose to be like. Quick notifications and features at a glance without annoying voice assistants. I'm honestly impressed!
This thing is actually really amazing to me honestly. The lack of colors is actually kind of charming by itself. Gives it a theme. Rrrreaalllly wanna see them grow bigger
11:30 Also, Chinese is a heavily contextual language with a lot of similarly sounding words (look for "The Lion-Eating Poet" poem), so the software maybe waiting for some amount of context to properly translate every word.
@@casparhughey5651 100%, there is absolutely no way a company selling these for $599 and the sunglasses clips for $100 is going to allow anything but proprietary software.
started the vid pessimistic, ended the video converted. really cool product. won me over on the open sourcing. can't wait to see what they're gonna do in the future!
These legitimately seem sick. I would love a pair of these for travel. Being able to have live translation, and having a heads up display for directions so that I don't have to constantly check my phone seems incredibly convenient. This is the kind of shit that was being promised by google 10 years ago that they never really delivered on.
I actually love the fallout green and pixelated/stylised text, even if it is a limitation due to hardware it works so so well. And they carried over the style to the app, noice.
Knowing that some of the people involved come from Lindberg makes me quite confident about the build quality. There are a couple of commenters here who seem to have them as their daily drivers.
but the other person needs to speak calm and slow because the subtitles/translate is also slowly and at first the glasses are uncomfy to wear, better go to a glasses expert for adjustment at first, otherwise its tight and uncomfy at first
Google Glass was probably the most excited I’ve ever been for a tech product, even though it ended up being a huge letdown. THIS is the content I want to see!
I HAVE BEEN WAITING ON THIS since I was a kid in the 90’s with this vision (see what I did?) I’m geeking out to this whole video because I knooow this is the definitive set we needed for these glasses to Actually start. When this version gets better we will see actual progress just wow wow wow bravo
Great job animating the reverse image. This is the first time an AR video review has displayed the product in a way that let me see what the glasses are doing. Kudos
that price was way better then i expected especially given this is technically still the early days for it i can't imagine the battery life is that good though but thats just the state of batteries in general honestly
I just got a pair of these recently and the battery life easily lasts all day with no problems. I think by the end of the day I am typically at around 60%, and that is after wearing them from 7 am to nearly 10 pm
@@FinnShamrock Since you got the glasses, would you be aware of any blue light filter on the lenses? This is a must-have feature for me to use these daily.
@@stefen0074 so it is only on when you choose for it to be on basically. typically it only turns on when you look up at whatever angle you have chosen, but you can also change a setting to have it turn on whenever you receive a notification, and it will show the notification on the screen. Otherwise, yes, you have to interact with the glasses to have the screen turn on!
The price is surprising to me. Many upscale glasses are in that range. Very interesting product and also a very well made video. Succinct script and the tempo is just right. Anyway, the glasses are really cool.
I might legit buy one of these, the notes feature seem extremely helpful, especially being great with someone like me with ADHD who misses stuff from conversations all the time.
Due to my profession, English is the second language to over 70 percent of my customer base. I have customers from all over Northern Africa, India, Eastern Europe, from all over this beautiful blue marble. So now it makes me wonder why I took Latin as my "Foreign Language Class" in high school. Although it is a beautiful and instrumental language, the foundation for so many modern western languages, it is now a dead language used by priests, lawyers, and doctors. These glasses. The translation ability alone, if works as advertised, would be a game changer in my life. Not only would this expediate transactions but I can only imagine the look on one of my unsuspecting clients faces when I can understand them in their first language. I'd pay for the prescription lenses if I could only get corporate to cover the rest! I'll just add it to my ever-growing list of wanted supplies!
This is an exciting product for me. I doubt I would get them, but it shows the tech is improving, and I'm totally ready for it to get better for when I am ready to buy in to it.
12:02 that's what Zack Freedman has been doing for years with his Optogon, super cool that it's in a form factor that can be worn in public without attracting wierd looks. (To be clear I think the Optogon is super cool, but average non-nerds will probbaly disagree with me)
The Optigon has different features. It's a monocle, display is full color but requires a wired connection to a large belt-mounted computation unit, with large batteries, that runs things for an hour or two at a time. The computer runs fairly modern Android, with decent support for apps. The G1 has a binocular, monochrome green display of moderate resolution, that depends on a Bluetooth connection to your phone for communication and compute, and is limited in feature set, for all that the features it DOES have all seem to be ideal, and actually functional. In exchange, it runs all day and then some on the on-board batteries. If you want to be cool at a tech convention, Optigon. If you want something you can wear anywhere with low likelyhood of catching flack for your headwear, the G1 is among the best options available right now.
I think the biggest success of this that so many pieces of technology completely miss is that it actually does what it says it will do. Every single function you tried worked fine. That's unfortunately very rare these days
This is not a review, this is a sponsored video. Take it with a grain of salt.
@bullpup1337 It is sponsored but I have seen them trash enough sponsored products to know that If it didn't work they'd tell us.
It is a dark era when 'does the thing it says it does' is a huge compliment.
@@bullpup1337 yes it is sponsored, but i just finished watching and it's genuinely pretty amazing tech. it looks like an impressive device that (in this case) appears to have some compelling and thoughtful features and worked well in practice, sponsored or not
I got them and everything is true@@bullpup1337
Why arent these a bigger deal??? My in-laws are deaf, and if these could essentially have the translate always on to create subtitles for them, this is incredible.
price
I think they didn't spend much on advertising. Unfortunately that's how a lot of great tech dies.
These are out for a while. Tried them in berlin and they are very cool but these tech channels wont promote tech until they sponsor them. A shame. What the hell are you doing if not showing new cool stuff like this
I was thinking that too. It's not just useful for conversations, imagine being deaf, walking outside and get a warning when the mics pickup a police or ems siren. I know they're not cheap, but neither are decent hearing aids.
@@TheRatlord74 Not to mention the second you promote them as a hearing aid product the price gets tripled
Want it immediately. Don't need 3d nonsense, don't need fancy graphics, just want a cyberpunk HUD. Gimme gimme gimme.
IRL Survival meters. Maybe we don't display everything, though. Reality kicks in hard when you see your Happiness and Loneliness meters.
It's 700usd.
Hard no.
@@livinliciousA good pair of frames can run $450
@livinlicious oh yeah, I'm definitely not buying this specific thing. Maaaaybe gen 3. But I still want this thing but cheaper, not the Apple vision glasses.
But guys, please buy this so the product and company live on to bring us the nth gen that we might buy.. I like this a lot
This is a huge step in the correct direction for wearable tech.
I'd imagine 10 years from now we might have this with ai assistant features, AR features and seamless connectivity between smart devices.
Really wish tech giants such as apple, microsoft, samsung etc would pay more attention to this type of tech. I would much rather have a pair of smart glasses over a smart watch or ring for example.
I'd like to get rid of my phone and swap it for glasses and maybe a ring that acts like a mouse.
Heck, I can't even think of the last time I was on an actual computer, and I've been using them pretty constantly since the late 90's.
what about people who don't need glasses?
@@francescoardizzonicinema aside from the fact that lots of people who don't need glasses still wear them, the obvious answer is don't get them if they don't suit your needs.
Did you expect any else?
Prob 7 years max
I think Google has pretty much just announced that.
Just want to give kudos to whomever did the effects for this video, nice that they added the all the visuals. Quality from LTT as always
Too many smart glasses have went way too far too quickly wanting full color displays, mic, cameras, etc. But this is where the tech needs to be right now to be viable long term. More self contained and simpler, daily use functionality.
We need both, gotta have the company that makes a sensible good quality working product and the companies that push the boundary of technology until they make something huge. I wish companies like Meta would do their wild crazy stuff, but also do more sensible stuff that just works with current tech. Give the normies something and the razor edge enthusiasts.
They poison the well, too. These glasses are just odd enough to be noticeable as smart glasses. I think a lot of people are going to accost you about recording them, because they heard all about the Google Glass.
@@Varadiiothey don't look different from all the other dumb glasses they have out
@@VaradiioRay Ban is doing a huge holiday push for their actually creepy Meta glasses. Those are a lot more clearly something than these are to the average person. These are very lowkey
My complaint with my XReal Air 2 glasses besides the poor fit for big noses is that I can’t change the size of the image or just show it on one eye like a heads up display. I would love that while driving. Directions and speed limit and speed hud.
The mention of them open-sourcing the software at the end is what got me the most, that sounds so cool! Imagine if an actual ecosystem grows around them and they could integrate with your existing notes, calendar, running apps, etc.
Absolutely, the openness takes it from potentially having lots of cool features to 100% getting lots of cool features once the community starts their thing. I can see this being the Pebble watch of smart glasses
@@infiniti4654 I really enjoy them not focusing on camera integration and focusing more on the integrated display. I don't wanna buy glasses with camera on them...
I can already see someone integrating them into home assistant in a smart way xD
@@infiniti4654 So many Fallout mods! It looked like new Fallout HUD, so I'm sure that will be a thing.
But none of it'll work.
Can we have a whole techlinked episode with this as a teleprompter?
i think they did
@@manitoba-op4jx well I need more I missed it.
Yes please 🙏
They didn't, you can see the screen on certain angles and lighting and it's not on
That would be really cool
OMG REAL WORLD SUBTITLES. This is so incredible. Like bro I could be chatting to someone in real time and literally see subtitles of what they're saying. Forget translating different languages. I feel like this alone could go a long way for helping with communication. Like if my mind wanders for a second in a conversation and I miss what was said? No problem. Got the transcription right there. Insane. Rise up subtitle lovers. Today is a new day for us all.
Also these would be so so so so so so so sooooooooo sick for reading ebooks in bed. Or I mean just reading ebooks anywhere..
so cool
ALSO, the green text choice is fire. having the choice to customize text colour would be nice but may be needing more tech packed in so maybe not worth it just for slight customizability
Imagine someone develops a looping subway surfers video in the display. Finally something for me to be able to focus.
A really cool way he could’ve shown them off was by wearing them at the start and then revealing he was wearing them the entire time
Yes, i approve
Unironically wanna see Alec from Technology Connections try this on as a teleprompter.
zack freedman would love that i bet
So that's his name
Or Zack Freedman
Technology Connection is so good. Also, yeah, these.
I can see him doing a bit where he cranes his neck way up and talks loudly to the ceiling
I'm a flight attendant and having live translate is SO EXCITING to me.
I guess you need network connectivity for that feature, so make sure you are connected to the onboard WiFi if possible.
Ooooh that would be excellent for flight attendants, or other's that frequently have to communicate with others that speak a different language. Though I suspect that these needing to have the language preselected in the app, while still useful, could be a bit of a hindrance. Maybe some day that will have a feature to auto detect the spoken language.
@@Locke99GS also not being able to respond in the same language limits the usefulness a bit. you'd have to know some basic way of saying "I'll get you someone who can speak your language"
I thought the flight attendant couldn't use glasses
@@FlemminGB why tho? samsung galaxy s23 and s24 can live translate without access to Internet, with voice transcription
Main channel video needed! This needs to be made into a much bigger deal this is exactly what we want the wearable tech to go towards
agreed
Imagine to actually be able to go outside for a walk while reading / studying without having to hold anything and still be knowledgeable about your surroundings...game changer
Absolutely, I want the ability to upload an entire book, to read on the go!
Two questions:
1- Does it recognize the language itself, or do you have to tell it what language to translate?
2- What is the battery life? Can you use it a whole day with all functions on?
about 2: on their website they say that it lasts around 1,5 days and charging time is 2-3 hours
U have to select the language on your phone currently,
I have around 65-70% charge after wearing them between 08:30 to 23:30....
@@eeeeeeeeeeeeeeemil So charging every 2-3 days :)
@@melvishprasad800 Well, that is good enough for visiting a country. Though in my work, we are 20 nationalities and some of them can't english, would have been usefull here :)
This might be one of the more practical tech products I've seen in ages and the most useful implementation of AI in a consumer product. I'm actually reminded of the old Pebble watches in how simple and usable the UI is. Everything about it just feels like it was built for actual human use without any garbage gimmicks.
Was just going to say that it's like a Pebble watch in its simplicity. It's just a shame that, like Pebble, they're _definitely_ going to go bankrupt.
All of the features seem to be implemented in an extremely passive manner, right down to the "visually silenced" mode. I love it. It isn't in your face (well, uh...) but rather stays out of your way until it's needed. Your Pebble analogy is apt - I immediately thought of them after watching the video.
@@rherydrevinsmy thought exactly. As soon as apple or samsung come out with objectively worse product that has shiny colours and 1hour battery they are hoing bankrupt. Insane but true. Still cannot believe that pebble got bankrupt by 2 hour color copies.
@@JerzyLasica You're being unnecessarily grimy. The website says 1.5 day battery with 1 to 2 hours charge.
Frankly I think these kids are onto something quite special if they manage to create an open-source community with a true app ecosystem around them, and that's going to depend on how "open" they choose to make it.
Samsung, Apple let alone Meta will never open source glasses because they're way too freaked out by BS privacy concerns. Early devs and adopters are usually not interested in investing time and money into artificially limited products.
Like, the Meta Ray Ban with all their bells and whistles will never never be a good product to me or something I'd consider buying because you just can't dev funny things on it
This looks like one of the most practical AR and AI glasses devices I've seen on this show. Impressive.
looks like a game changer for people who are deaf or going deaf or have had some sort of injury causing hearing loss.
A smartphone or smart watch would do the same, not sure this will be enough
@@tiloaloyou have to look down at a device for those though
Those big lumps on the ends of the arms would be in the way of my (cheapish) hearing aids where they go over my ears, interesting product but would definitely need a trial weaaring before buying :p
@@tiloalomaintaining eye contaxt with the person you're talking to is a noticeable quality of life benefit
Also hearing aids are crazy expensive
it's ONE phone app that cost $700 and gives you ugly glasses.... don't know what game you're playing but i promise you it won't be changed by this.... it's a cool idea but it's just a shitty app that both Android as well as iOS have for free stock.... also the translation just being one way makes it objectively worse than literally every free translation app out there
Should've partnered with a glasses manufacturer like RayBan spend 5 more years on the software to make it actually useful for anyone and it could've been a game changer... instead they rushed to market to get investors and hype, released a really shitty product that may be worse (and way more expensive) than the orange AI box thing that nobody wanted
Also just design wise... the knobs behind the ear look like they're impossible to wear over ear headphones with
Ok I have never seen your videos and your face, smile & personality is INCREDIBLE! You are not only informative, and easy to listen to but incredibly adorable 🥰 Thank You 🙏🏼
Wtf this is sick af and fits Riley perfectly
This is one of the coolest things I've seen this year and I don't even wear glasses.
I wear contacts, this is the first time I've actually thought I might want to wear glasses again in 10+ years.
@@tankerkiller125 I'm considering partially blinding myself just to have an excuse to wear these
Yeah, I remember in school some kids were made fun of because wearing glasses was not cool. Heck, now I think, with these, wearing glasses might very well become cool.
(PS, I never made fun of anyone wearing glasses)
@@tankerkiller125 Contact wearer too, and I have a eye condition that makes my left eye too dominant. So my lenses are very different and I have to close my left eye to see through the right effectively. Hopefully the software can let you compensate for this with displaying different or same images on each lens.
I don’t wear glasses and I use these! As a tech nerd and VR/AR geek, they are incredibly cool
3:30 if only Riley had a precision screwdriver to adjust that looseness by tightening a hinge screw..
You’re definitely right, but sometimes even tightening it doesn’t work or can crack if it’s plastic 🤷♂️
Really funny thing is when they do Riley's upgrade we'll see dozens of them in his house!
@@ku8721 Riley's upgrade was, I think, the second upgrade ever. It showed off his minimalist lifestyle. Hoarding dozens of screwdrivers is not minimalist.
😂
@@Cylonknight the cracking happens if you over tighten them... though most places that sell glasses will adjust them for free as it only takes like 3 seconds
This is the perfect definition of doing a few things very well. They figured out a selection of features that just about everyone can use without going over the top with the interface, colors, etc - just a simplistic, mono-colored display that gets the job done! It’s the first time I’ve nearly bought something right away lol
I can remember when computer screens were monochromatic. 2 flavors: Green, and Amber. Everyone knew color was inevitable and fast approaching, but there were millions of mono units sold anyway. If your vision at the time was to roll out a computer that resembled the first flatscreen models, you'd lose out on ten years of sales waiting on the tech to catch up.
Love it! and love all the positive comments on this. We want more!
Designers will see the positive reception these get, puke all over themselves, and then immediately forget everything they saw to make the Apple Vision Pro 2.
I’ve been looking at reviews for these for ages and I’m surprised it took this long for a big channel to pick up on them!
I love the visuals done for this video.
So excited for the future of this. A product that actually seems to exceed expectations based on what is advertised rather than attenpting to exaggerate or embellish their features. That's the right way to go
it's sponsored but the product is actually cool and useful?!
its a flying shoppinglist to wear on your nose
a forgetful ai assistant who works sometimes and sometimes not
the nosepads press on your nose and leave red marks on it but after letting the glasses adjust by a professional its more ok and the frame also dont hurts so much anymore it was very tight at first.
the case is great to charge the glasses and after 1 hour both the phone and the glasses only loses 4% battery which is impressive but sadly the cleaning cloth dont fit inside..
the box is great to open but bad to close
all in one a great improvement and works for me personally for 2 working days by moderate usage, using the even ai assistant as calculator and the notes are useful too but the position for the touchpad is at the end of the frame, so its hard to reach for people with longer hair, especially not so comfy at work to touch it and the own hairs with the dirty workinggloves/hands.
Navigation is also funny to use, feels a lil bit like the diablo 2 map but you need to stop sometimes and wait until the map updatet when looking up but the normal arrows are working all the time and get faster updated.
@@zombos22222 so for a first gen product it's pretty good! It delivers
I'm impressed. This is the first instance of this form-factor that actually seems legitimately useful, and the price isn't too outlandish either for what you get. It might not have as impressive a display compared to some other attempts, but that's probably kept the price significantly lower and the features it does have seem thoughtfully implemented, made for maximum utility out of minimal R&D investment and with no flashy bloat that surely only would've driven up the price. Well done for a first-gen product; color me excited to see where Even Realities takes it from here, because I could see myself buying later-gen pairs of these for my parents in the future, for instance. Imagine that: an _actually_ compelling proof-of-concept device!
Have to what an incredible natural entertainer/speaker Riley is! Always a pleasure to watch him, do anything actually..
Up until now everytime we saw smart glasses it felt like prototypes. But this one woah that's just a good product.
I was expecting over $1k for these glasses with prescription lenses, seeing that it's below that makes me very tempted to try them out
Same!
Dang! Some of my relatives have paid more for dumb glasses!
thought the same, I always wait until a ~50% sale before getting new glasses (and a new frame for that matter), only being about double the normal price for essentially having smart glasses isn't that bad of a deal honestly, at least you get something for it and not just... glasses.
And if you have vision insurance, I'm sure they will cover you partially for the lenses and frames, just like any other pair of glasses.
and, if you need glasses anyways, you would need to pay a few hundred $ anyways for glasses.
Such a high-effort video for a shortcircuit. Please send my compliments to whoever recorded the HUD interface for the video. Looks like a spiritual reincarnation of Google Glass.
I’ve owned these glasses for a month. The only thing it’s missing is timed reminders. I wanna say remind me in 30 minutes to do this or that, it can’t do that yet.
$200 + base prescription lens, i'm sold.
Its 600 bucks
@@thamomentum He's saying, if, it was that price he's sold
Honestly as someone who’s job involves a lot of public speaking from notes this could be so very useful especially the AI teleprompter - being able to go off script and add some other thoughts and it just starts scrolling when i come back to the notes would be amazing
Awesome work by the editors with all the UI in this video.
Well, I've to say... I started the video believing in a price tag much much higher than the real one. For me it's not absurdly expensive, normal glasses aren't cheap and if you've got a particular sight problem could easily reach 800/900 euros price tag. Sometimes even for the lenses only.
I would be curious to try these, but I admit that I cannot think to buy one only for see how they're by myself.
But do they actually include perscription-glasses? Otherwise "fake" glasses dont cost more than 100€. The precisely cut glass elements are what makes real glasses so expensive
Thought they’d go for at least twice their actual cost, honestly. It’s not cheap of course, but for a first gen product that even the biggest tech giants couldn’t get right I’d say it’s almost reasonable.
@@lynes2peters438 You didn't watch to the end, did you? :)
@@lynes2peters438 it includes if you pay a little extra. It is in the video.
Same here ! Would've thought the glasses would cost like 900€, quite nice ! And that is for a new product, at launch. I'm sure the tech will get cheaper soon
The more I watch Riley, the more I like him. The dry presentation is hilarious.
you are easily amused
@@alainportant6412... I fail to see the point of this comment. Like, okay?? I don't think finding a person making dry jokes hilarious necessarily mean that that you're easily amused but what would I know.
What do u mean dry, this was amazingly well balanced and incredibly insightful
@@ahmedelgabry2780 dry, as in dry humor. Like telling jokes in a emotionally neutral way. It's a type of humor. I don't mean the content is shallow. I agree it's insightful. I enjoy Riley very much.
@@AzureUnlinked dry humor, not dry person or shallow content
For me this is so much better value than all the smart watches out there.
10:47 - "wait, Bing chiling means ice cream?"
Someone haven't seen John Cena ice cream video
I literally dreamed of a product like this, with pretty much the same features, a couple years ago. And now it's real. Really excited for like, the 4th generation of these things.
These engineers took the "Heads-up display" in a literal sense.
Futuristic AR only reaches full potential in a world built around it. Imagine a world without physical signs cluttering the landscape, just virtual ones.
I wear contacts and have an eye exam coming up. Thinking of getting a pair of these 😊 theyre pretty much the same price as prescription lenses and frames. I like that there is no camera pointing at people so no awkwardness and i can wear them to work!
I always appreciate Riley being nice and courteous to viewers.
This is legitimately the first time I ever felt these "AI" features are actually useful. I might actually buy this for the translation function alone.
That's a really old application of this technology; automatic translation and captioning/speech to text software have been built on LLMs since the mid 2010s (Google Translate, for example, has been using a machine learning model since 2016), but they previously were never advertised as "AI".
Putting smarts in an upgradeable phone would be the best part especially with how ubiquitous they are.
You still have to pay for the translation feature on your G1s. It can run up to $45 just for using it lol
14:40 The capability to whip out a minimap at anytime is actually really cool.
a crazytaxi mod, or aliens motion tracker map (or location tracker)
Yoo!! I'm so glad a big channel was able to show off these glasses, and I really hope this will inspire other big channels to show them off too! I've made a couple videos on these myself, just because I don't think they have enough coverage given how awesome they are. I daily drive these glasses and I must say, they're as great as you think they can be. The software is solid and pleasing to use, and they're constantly coming out with new updates, on top of the fact that the open source software will be ramping up pretty heavily as more developers chip in to add extra stuff. Thanks for making this video!!
these look huge for the deaf community
Awesome post. I’m one step closer to ordering a pair myself. Thx!
Fascinating. Thanks for sharing. The teleprompter functionality is especially cool. I just wish it had bone conduction audio output as well.
I was sceptical on how long this product would last, but seeing that they are open sourcing much of the code gives me hope that this will last much longer than previous attempts at smart glasses. Even if the company itself fails, there's hope that the community can keep this product alive with their own apps. The price seems a bit much, but I can respect that it is the edge of tech, so it's going to cost more. I'm broke anyways, so anything is going to be too much for me so...
WOAH this look like they could be the Pebble of smart glasses instead of watches. Which is very exciting and scary at the same time
Ha exactly what I was thinking. Can't wait for them to go out of business, replaced by products that cost more, do tons of stuff you don't care about, with worse interface and battery life!
8:05 the croissant fishing rope was hilarious
Really appreciated the editing on this one. It helped me so much to see what he saw.
Send him a dono
Finally!!! I've been waiting for these to reach bigger tech channels. I pre-ordered them and have been wearing them for awhile now. They're awesome and need more attention!!!
man, is that cool. every single new feature Ryan has shown is genuinely amazing. I'd get really excited if I wasn't trying to get rid of so much tech in my life
this product just keeps getting better.
they're open sourcing the code? Thats absolutely awesome
I hope these are actually good. I've been waiting for GOOD smart glasses for so long. Google let me down so hard.
Some guy can also use them to look up everything about you as well without you even knowing he did so with these as well in public.
@@aj.j5833 As if people can't do that already with a smart phone
@@gecho8848 They do so why you want make it even easier for them to do so?
@@gecho8848 Also easier something is to do more people will do it as well.
@@aj.j5833 Huh? How is that any different than someone just looking you up on your phone?
This is what smart glasses are suppose to be like. Quick notifications and features at a glance without annoying voice assistants. I'm honestly impressed!
This thing is actually really amazing to me honestly. The lack of colors is actually kind of charming by itself. Gives it a theme. Rrrreaalllly wanna see them grow bigger
Riley nailed it here, really. I would like to see more calm reviews like this in this channel.
11:30 Also, Chinese is a heavily contextual language with a lot of similarly sounding words (look for "The Lion-Eating Poet" poem), so the software maybe waiting for some amount of context to properly translate every word.
Probably using phone system features/ai to translate, but impressive none the less
amazing thanks for this, for english contextual quirks example see Buffalo_buffalo_Buffalo_buffalo_buffalo_buffalo_Buffalo_buffalo
@@TheNewton definitely my second favorite sentence.
What am I watching? Riley calm and collected? Wow!
Well done, love ya Riley!
It being open-source is a an absolute game-changer. I hope they actually mean "anything you can code up and the hardware will support - you can run".
In practice that never happens
@@casparhughey5651 100%, there is absolutely no way a company selling these for $599 and the sunglasses clips for $100 is going to allow anything but proprietary software.
started the vid pessimistic, ended the video converted. really cool product. won me over on the open sourcing. can't wait to see what they're gonna do in the future!
You guys are doing a lot for the production value of this video. Its impressive!
These legitimately seem sick.
I would love a pair of these for travel. Being able to have live translation, and having a heads up display for directions so that I don't have to constantly check my phone seems incredibly convenient.
This is the kind of shit that was being promised by google 10 years ago that they never really delivered on.
I actually love the fallout green and pixelated/stylised text, even if it is a limitation due to hardware it works so so well. And they carried over the style to the app, noice.
the overlay you guys did was cool
Wonder if this was provided by the glass company
for a vr like IRL only product experience the editing is great and hilarious xD
This is such an insanely cool product THAT EXISTS AND WORKS AS INTENDED. THe future is finally here
Looks like an interesting product and I'd be very interested to hear Riley's thoughts on the glasses after a month or two of use
Durability should be a big one. Glasses have a rough life.
Knowing that some of the people involved come from Lindberg makes me quite confident about the build quality. There are a couple of commenters here who seem to have them as their daily drivers.
what about battery life? not mention of that anywhere?
Battery life is great. You can easily get about 1.5 days out of it, but I've never noticed mine die as at night I just put them back in the case.
I'd like to know too!
@@waitokyeah7564so as an actual user of them, what would you say are their biggest feature and flaw in your perspective?
@@waitokyeah7564 same here
Bizarre that an entire video didn't mention it
Oh wow. The live translate feature can be so good for traveling around.
Of all the tech-glasses I've seen on the market this is the first one that genuinely seems useful without being creepy or invasive
I'm impressed that the AI teleprompter kept up, not only while Riley talked fast but when he was changing the words a bit too. Incredible
My dad is hard of hearing, and irl subtitles actually sounds like an amazing tool
but the other person needs to speak calm and slow because the subtitles/translate is also slowly and at first the glasses are uncomfy to wear, better go to a glasses expert for adjustment at first, otherwise its tight and uncomfy at first
Google Glass was probably the most excited I’ve ever been for a tech product, even though it ended up being a huge letdown. THIS is the content I want to see!
Riley should do all the testing. He's very good at the product descriptions and how it is to use them.
I HAVE BEEN WAITING ON THIS since I was a kid in the 90’s with this vision (see what I did?) I’m geeking out to this whole video because I knooow this is the definitive set we needed for these glasses to Actually start. When this version gets better we will see actual progress just wow wow wow bravo
Great job animating the reverse image. This is the first time an AR video review has displayed the product in a way that let me see what the glasses are doing. Kudos
10 years since google glass and it's finally starting to seem viable
2:46 where did riley go?!?!
This product, to me, is more impresing than my own quest 3. I need it.
These are the first smart glasses that are actually really cool and useful, im impressed!
These are the first smart classes I’m genuinely interested in. I’ll have to keep an eye on this company.
Riley taking off glasses can pull off a Superman transformation
that price was way better then i expected especially given this is technically still the early days for it
i can't imagine the battery life is that good though but thats just the state of batteries in general honestly
Allegedly they last 1.5 day out of the case, and recharge in it (according to Google search and YT comments).
I just got a pair of these recently and the battery life easily lasts all day with no problems. I think by the end of the day I am typically at around 60%, and that is after wearing them from 7 am to nearly 10 pm
@@FinnShamrock how often is the display on? does it only show up when you get a notification or use one of the features?
@@FinnShamrock Since you got the glasses, would you be aware of any blue light filter on the lenses? This is a must-have feature for me to use these daily.
@@stefen0074 so it is only on when you choose for it to be on basically. typically it only turns on when you look up at whatever angle you have chosen, but you can also change a setting to have it turn on whenever you receive a notification, and it will show the notification on the screen. Otherwise, yes, you have to interact with the glasses to have the screen turn on!
these seem incredible. we need more of this tech
Open source is actually so genuinly insane and cool!!!
The "It kept up" after reading fast,had me Grinning 😁
The price is surprising to me. Many upscale glasses are in that range. Very interesting product and also a very well made video. Succinct script and the tempo is just right.
Anyway, the glasses are really cool.
My glasses arent 'upscale', theyre multivision, cos my eyes are going; and they cost $600 without frills.
I might legit buy one of these, the notes feature seem extremely helpful, especially being great with someone like me with ADHD who misses stuff from conversations all the time.
Due to my profession, English is the second language to over 70 percent of my customer base. I have customers from all over Northern Africa, India, Eastern Europe, from all over this beautiful blue marble. So now it makes me wonder why I took Latin as my "Foreign Language Class" in high school. Although it is a beautiful and instrumental language, the foundation for so many modern western languages, it is now a dead language used by priests, lawyers, and doctors. These glasses. The translation ability alone, if works as advertised, would be a game changer in my life. Not only would this expediate transactions but I can only imagine the look on one of my unsuspecting clients faces when I can understand them in their first language. I'd pay for the prescription lenses if I could only get corporate to cover the rest! I'll just add it to my ever-growing list of wanted supplies!
This is an exciting product for me. I doubt I would get them, but it shows the tech is improving, and I'm totally ready for it to get better for when I am ready to buy in to it.
Wow. This is surprisingly well made and put together. I’d consider getting them
Those glasses actually look pretty decent on Riley. Not surprised he uses them somewhat regularly.
12:02 that's what Zack Freedman has been doing for years with his Optogon, super cool that it's in a form factor that can be worn in public without attracting wierd looks. (To be clear I think the Optogon is super cool, but average non-nerds will probbaly disagree with me)
I was also thinking that. I wonder what he thinks of these glasses?
The Optigon has different features. It's a monocle, display is full color but requires a wired connection to a large belt-mounted computation unit, with large batteries, that runs things for an hour or two at a time. The computer runs fairly modern Android, with decent support for apps. The G1 has a binocular, monochrome green display of moderate resolution, that depends on a Bluetooth connection to your phone for communication and compute, and is limited in feature set, for all that the features it DOES have all seem to be ideal, and actually functional. In exchange, it runs all day and then some on the on-board batteries. If you want to be cool at a tech convention, Optigon. If you want something you can wear anywhere with low likelyhood of catching flack for your headwear, the G1 is among the best options available right now.
2:54 You're a wizard, Riley!
Tell them to produce them in Tortoise, and gloss black and we're in business.
Maybe a crystal clear pair for the techies.
This is the most complete and useful smart glass product yet
10:25 finally I can see the subtitles in real life 🤔