I wouldn't be surprised if I was handed one of these or similar walking onto a plane, instead of a set of earphones for in-flight entertainment. Provided that they are easier to service than what exists I can see that being a thing. Of course, it could make in-flight entertainment an add-on in the future, since there wouldn't need to be a screen with every seat.
I'd love to use this when I'm working on electronics projects and have the wiring diagram, or the pinouts, available all the time. Even better would be one that knew the chip I was looking at and labeled all the pins for me. How about a system that recognized IKEA furniture and shows you step by step how to put it together.
@@BioSpaceMC that’s exactly what hololens is sold for too, albeit large mechanical engineering rather than home electrical. But I’m sure the price will keep coming down
There is a prediction as well that the year 2022 will be the year of AR where people will be engaging a lot with it. The one from oppo looks too far ahead in the future.
To be honest, i expect proper AR to be way more like the windshield projection in, say, Corvette C6. Simple, cheap, mostly monotone, not abstructing the view, but informative enough to be useful. I.e. basically a MiBand imbedded into glasses plus GPS directions and MAYBE automatic translation based on the level of processing power the phone and the glasses would have at the time.. No complicated interface or OS, no complex calculations, just a simple useful HUD. I hope manufacturers would realize that soon enough
Those glasses with the razer n95 rob mask, air pods pro, those electronic sound reacting shirts with matching goth pants with light up sneakers. That is going to be the look of 2022 and beyond.
I’m surprised the glasses didn’t have some kind of RGB. Imagine watching people use this in public. People leaning over mouth agape while their arms do a wacky flailing inflatable arm thing. The future is…interesting.
@@DerangedCoconut808 there is no reason for this glasses to have rgb since its consumer target isn't gamers. I can't see why you are suprised. You just sounds like a typical boomer who thinks advancements in technology is silly
@@DerangedCoconut808 i want this for food delivery apps on my phone, so i can keep the phone in my pocket, and see all the delivery information like door codes, navigation on the fly. just id need a ring that acts as a mouse cursor, but ive seen those too
I guess it's a style, and not everyone interacts with a host in the same manner. Maybe Mark is not used to that. But to me it feels off. You can see Mark's on his phone a lot rather than following along. Maybe that's normal in this situation. But I personally prefer more interaction between camera person and host. But again, might be a personal style thing!
@@viniciusp718 Hey, thats a bit harsh. Its not garbage. But i gotta admit, it would be very diffucult to use it in every day life. The AR glasses i want is without cable (wireless) and with the full field of view of normal glasses. But hey, the on in the video is a good first step.
@@swankshire6939 It's not a mature technology, so maybe it's harder to tell, but it's better than the hololens. Just consider the size, the level of computation and power required. It requires vastly less hardware, vastly less powerful hardware too yet isn't that far behind. It just needs to get a bit less bulky and wireless, and we'll have something that can be used daily. Everything else is software. Software represents a lot of work, but it is comparably easier to pioneering hardware. The hololens looked impressive mainly because it had so much demo software made for it. It also compensated a lot of issues through sheer brute force.
The text is surprisingly clear for an AR/VR experience! I can see a future version of this replacing my desktop monitors. Just a portable monitor to take with you wherever you go!
Imagine being the person walking into the studio at 9:27 and hearing Riley start talking about Elves and Tigers (10:05) that fight on his table... I'd be genuinely worried about him tbh
Just realized AR could be great for people who use multiple monitors: rather than having several screens that are not at all portable, you would have one pair of AR glasses connected to a screen-less laptop, that you an use anywhere.
And it can replace the need for a TV, it won't yet, but if you live alone then buying upcoming AR glasses sounds far more sensible than buying a large "bulky" and expensive TV.
therre are already some people using a vr headset lika a quest for a multi monitor setup - on the go - if you are only running offce stuff you could easyly work from a notebook, wirelessly and have even on the train 5 monitors + its even cheaper than often a single monitor
@@mackandelius Yes. The headsets that will come with micro oled displays will easily beat smartphones and TVs, and laptops. This the reason Apple's stock has been increasing for the past few weeks.
I think the ability to simulate traditional displays in AR will end up being a secondary use case. The primary (and most exciting) use case will be overlaying data on the world, so that it becomes enmeshed with your surroundings, rather than being something that takes you out of them. Such as, navigation that overlays streets, info about buildings and businesses you’re looking at, location based reminders that just pop right up, etc.
Correction: nreal Air is *not* "more advanced" it's actually just a 3DoF viewer instead of 6DoF that can track and see what is in front of you. Technically they're both equally as powerful though because they both require being hard tethered to a phone to work.
@TORPEDO theyre only available for general purchase starting yesterday (which caused me to rewatch this video), and it's for $380 on amazon. The hardware doesn't seem to be nearly as expensive (two tiny screens and a gyroscope), I hope some mainstream tech company like logitech copies the concept and uses economy of scale to make something like this but more affordable.
My usecase for the casting is when I'm doing chores that I cannot hold my phone but still wanna watch techlinked/the WAN show and THIS IS REVOLUTIONARY!
Honestly, I hope this AR glasses trend keeps going. I hope one day soon that even prescription glasses have the option to upgrade the frames to different styles of UI, like how we decide on brands of phones.
Use cases are obvious. For one: Imagine trying to look at a tiny screen on your phone, compared to, as you said yourself, a 70 inch TV. (Espepcially if on a commute, or sharing a home with roommates or family, &c)
The Quest 2 price point is just so brutal for other VR/AR startups. I know that's the point, for Meta to get early dominance and secure a big developmental/adoption lead over any potential competitors in the space, but it really sucks because it's going to slow down the industry as a whole. You have to be ready to throw a lot of money down the proverbial drain if you want to try and make a start as a competitor to Meta. My only hope is that future AR/VR developers (hardware and software) can figure out how to use Meta's development work as a starting point without running afoul of patent law to get a bit of a boost, and take advantage of daddy Zuck's warchest.
Man all I want is an IRL HUD. I don't need to be checking twitter while walking around, I can do that on my phone. But like ambient weather notifications in the corner, compass in the top left, clock in the top right, etc. That's all we want lol.
huds or a smart watch for your face like google glass r pretty useless.... a real ar headset with 6dof tracking gives u the equivalent of holograms u can interact with...it's a completely different thing .....but it can still do the hud functionality
"I don't know why you would do this" perfectly sums up all devices like this. AR glasses, wearables, and even tablets. I've tried all of them and I just wanted to go back to my computer again immediately.
he only use case for me would be proper sports glasses with the ability to add prescription lenses and display a HUD while running or cycling. Would be somewhat safer then locking at my bike computer. But I don't see this coming any time soon.
I think the best part about these is you can barley tell they aren’t regular sunglasses. Riley looked completely natural with them on. The cameras blend in so well!!!!🤣
These are cool, but I think it needs a generation or 2 more before it's useful to me. But I'm looking forward to the Arpara AIO (All In One) VR headset releasing in March. And the brightness issue that current reviewers have been mentioning a lot for the device... have been solved according to Arpara. They are still testing and verifying it, but it should be bright enough. Now the only potential issue is the 6DoF controls being bad, but if they are... I feel like Arpara will still be able to fix it up to around Quest 2 level before release. They seem to be open for feedback and actually do something with it.
Sailboat racing is an ultra niche use case. If there was a way to place a wind line, compass, and race line in the hud. You could use it for optimizing your tacking. The price point would even make it cheap when compare to anything sailboat related!
@@skillswiper A lot of the technologies required for AR are way further than the technologies required for VR were a decade ago. It will take a while due to the nature of R&D and market adoption, but certainly not a decade.
The oculus quest has been out for a while. The average phone processor is more than powerful enough for ar. Ideally, your phone should be doing all the processing, relying on the glasses only for the screen and battery, which shouldn’t be too difficult, maybe even with hot-swappable batteries employing some magnetic attachment. Wireless video technology is nearly seamless now via dji and other drone manufacturers. This is more than doable with current technology. The technology just isn’t being implemented properly IMO.
It's not easy to make them slimmer, because they absolutely need special optics to allow your eyes to focus on something that close which means you need a layer of optics on top of the screen. All things considered, I find the size of this thing impressive. They're small enough that you could wear them without standing out and people could conceivably think they're just regular sunglasses unless they looked really close. Meaning somebody just glancing over at you would be unlikely to notice anything out of the ordinary. That's impressive that HMD glasses have come this far already.
AR is definitely the way to go! I live and work in a van... with this I could work on three big ass monitors like a champ, without the need to store three big ass monitors in that tiny space. Let alone for watching movies or possibly navigation - I see alot of great usecases for technology like that!
I swear half of Riley's brain turns off when he does an unboxing, so I can't take any of his reviews seriously, but he's hilarious so I'm still here for it.
I'm happy they made these. We need this sort of thing to hit markets so further developments can be made. I'm not really sold on the NReal glasses though, even if I had a phone that could support them. But man, that second/third gen AR headset is going to be sweet. If NReal has this form factor working now, imagine a proper portable, non-phone reliant model below $400 (before prescriptions) with a better FOV and support for other ecosystems' software. Because we definitely need the software to make these work. But we aren't getting it from an independent company.
Love how the AR glasses pull your ears down like Harry Potter banking goblins. Also when you turned your head from side to side to show how you could position content all around my first thought was "oh good, more places for RUclips to stick ads". Cool tech, but I am gonna wait a few generations on this one. Leave it to the enthusiasts to work the bugs out.
the first time i rented an oculus quest 2 from my school short circuit uploaded right as i got home, so i enjoyed life-sized james discussing mediocre headphones. it was super cool, but this device is more expensive than the quest 2 to do way less so ??? i know we hate metafacebook, but like riley i want to see more.
To be fair, they are also less expensive than some other VR headsets (since they aren't heavily subsidized like the quest), way more compact, and in my opinion AR glasses have a completely different use-case to a VR headset anyway.
I wonder if you can crack this to make it mirror PC desktop screens. From a working standpoint, I'm a composer so I'd love to have a giant window for my DAW. From a gamer standpoint, you could get a pseudo VR experience from any flatscreen game & a VR experience from any VR game.
@@Eduardopy1 Being able to see the keyboard or other input devices. The only keyboard that the Quest can track is impossible to find anywhere. And the Quest passthrough is too low-res. I resorted to taping a clamshell mirror to the back of my laptop cover, so that the reflection of the keyboard could be picked up by the webcam, and get shown in a window on a virtual screen in VR, together with my fingers. Useful if you're going somewhere where you can't take any extra monitors. If your computer can handle it.
@@Eduardopy1 Portability, cost, ability to run bigger headsets, ability to still use it as AR for my smart phone... OR get this! AR.... on the desktop..... whooaaaaaa! Edit: sorry that came out a bit ruder than I wanted. Im in a sarcastic mood.
It doesn't look like they planned any of this, which is fine for a device costing around 100 - 200 dollars max but since these are 6 bills I assume most people will do at least some homework/research before buying. Probably something the script writer, an employee familiar with this kind of tech or Riley himself should of done before filming this. I have no idea if this is E-Waste or a must-have product, I learned nothing about it and left the video a little stupider than before it began
there r apps for the hololens for blind people ...the headset is basically looking at the world and making noises depending on the obstacles or it can describe or read something in front of the person
Why fight it? What we need are helmets like master chief rocks, maybe predictor or, for those so inclined, power rangers or something. They have lots of space to spread batteries and components, decent space for speakers and mics, all around cameras/night vision. Huge field of view etc and in times like these, they can double as face masks. Let's go for it. I'm looking at you Razer, you guys are mad enough for this.
Sometimes i wish they just made a pc monitor or tv in this form factor. Just to connect to a pc or laptop and use as a normal monitor and save space, or instead of carrying portable monitors for your laptop you just carry something like this.
I've been telling people about AR for years. It's going to take a while to get small enough for wearable use and cheap enough for everyone to use, but it's going to revolutionize everything. It'll be just like Tony Stark's glasses from Avengers Infinity War.
There's definitely potential here but it's not really worth 600 for a virtual RUclips screen and an elf verses tiger animation. I think it'll be a while before we get to the Ironman or video game HUDs.
@@evolicious depends on what you need? If your phone can show your map and current speed. Why wouldn't you be able to show speed and directional arrow that is anchored in the corner. That is still a HUD. If you are thinking of a smart hud. If they have a camera they can probably connect to Google or Bixby for smart translations. Everything is happening through the phone the glasses are just the display. There is a reason Microsoft hololens is so bulky. And there is a reason why they have a supported phone list of new and powerfull phones.
9:08 The box on the left side is labeled 网页收藏夹 in chinese which roughly translates to "Web Page Folder". I guess those are just URLs that automatically opens in your phone's browser.
That kind of glasses would be awesome in sim racing setups. Just a screen and gyroscope function. No speakers needed, maybe 3.5mm port or usb port for external earphones :) No need to be like AR thing just very lightweight screen :)
I mean, I'm sure tons of people would love to have a phone that they can use hands-free and is always at the ready. I can't count the number of times I've wanted to take a picture or record some crazy thing I see while I'm driving, but I can't because.. I'm driving.
the worst thing is about 75% of adults in the USA need some form of visual correction... people who need prescription glasses are LITERALLY THE MAJORITY OF PEOPLE
I'm going to be rude and say what I think about this episode, riley is not good at demoing units like this. This unit is super interesting and instead of getting a solid idea of what this unit is like, I am left with only a marginal impression of the video experience, which is 99% of why you would buy a unit like this. In the future for a device like this please spend more time actually in the AR experience, opening and using apps, resizing and moving the video wall, and give a more close up video of this. I would say take a bit of the tact that some emulation device and phone reviewers take, which is to spend the majority of the time not talking randomly but just focusing on getting quality examples of what it is actually like using it. 95% of the video was skippable filler talking about nothing and only 5% of the video was about the device, and maybe half of that really gave a real example of what it was like to use apps with it
I feel like the "big screen" application is enough to bring me in if the prices drop. The only problem of using a phone instead of a tablet, (or a laptop, or a monitor, or a TV) for general media consumption is screen size. We figured out how to squeeze good audio into a small footprint, good processing power but we were just missing a good screen, now we're not.
For me the screen size isn't the problem but holding the phone and looking downwards. Being able to sit in a train and looking straight ahead while my hands are empty - that's the dream.
3:43 They somehow made you look even more dorky. Which is a compliment. And I think it's the mustache that makes you look dorky. But I'm just jealous that mine isn't as nice. Imagine a luscious beard like Linus', but with a big spot missing between the chin and bottom lip, and a thin mustache like Jake's.... That's my almost beard(as I call it).
"It's for people that want to experience the jank for themselves." Beautifully said and made me literally LOL. Also as someone that's developed on a Magic Leap and used a Hololens, I'd agree with this statement. XD
I want this... Well, I want this in terms of the head mounted display aspect, but I don't need cameras, AR, VR speakers, mices, voicecontrol, digital assistant, dog walking mode, or what ever. Why do these things always need to be so overly complicated? I just want a proper and practical HMD! How is this so hard?
I can see this being a cool way to watch videos in bed or when travelling. I always wanted a way to watch movies like this in bed tbh, would give one a try if i wasn't so broke
The use case for having the phone mirror is watching a tutorial video while you are performing actions. Imagine a car repair with a video of the repair in real time.
I'm *really* looking forward to the time when I can have AR built in to my regular prescription glasses without them looking all bulky and weird. Have them look just like a regular pair of glasses, maybe with the frames a bit thicker than normal, but otherwise completely unremarkable. I'd definitely pay for that to be in my next pair of glasses.
One use case I'd love to use this for is itx gaming on the go. Instead of having a small portable monitor, I'd use this instead for immersive gaming etc.
Noticed how his ears are seemingly crushed by either the weight/poor positioning/overlapping glasses. I can’t imagine wearing it more than 5 minutes at a time.
You know, it would be ground breaking if someone would just develop a desktop suite for something like this. VR is the leading tech with immersed, and frankly, while ok to use. It's hard to stay in due to the headsets weight. Really, I just can't fathom why no one hasn't connected the dots on this front.
I wouldn't be surprised if I was handed one of these or similar walking onto a plane, instead of a set of earphones for in-flight entertainment. Provided that they are easier to service than what exists I can see that being a thing. Of course, it could make in-flight entertainment an add-on in the future, since there wouldn't need to be a screen with every seat.
Prolly a lot of people wud steal them 🫣
@@lourensiouslukito8786 would be pointless to steal them since they are hardwired.
It would probably be built into the seat itself.
I'd love to use this when I'm working on electronics projects and have the wiring diagram, or the pinouts, available all the time. Even better would be one that knew the chip I was looking at and labeled all the pins for me. How about a system that recognized IKEA furniture and shows you step by step how to put it together.
Also streaming the multimeter readout would be useful and easy to code.
Shit you're right, like looking at the schematic and stuff while you hands are full with soldering iron + tweezers
@@BioSpaceMC that’s exactly what hololens is sold for too, albeit large mechanical engineering rather than home electrical. But I’m sure the price will keep coming down
I have a gut feeling that we’re gonna see a lot more AR glasses going into 2022. Wasn’t there a rumor that Apple would be making one for next year?
There is a prediction as well that the year 2022 will be the year of AR where people will be engaging a lot with it. The one from oppo looks too far ahead in the future.
To be honest, i expect proper AR to be way more like the windshield projection in, say, Corvette C6. Simple, cheap, mostly monotone, not abstructing the view, but informative enough to be useful. I.e. basically a MiBand imbedded into glasses plus GPS directions and MAYBE automatic translation based on the level of processing power the phone and the glasses would have at the time.. No complicated interface or OS, no complex calculations, just a simple useful HUD. I hope manufacturers would realize that soon enough
Investing in the metaverse will probably include AR glasses. Expect Meta Glasses and The All New Google Glass.
It's Tony Stark time people
I have a great feeling my dad will come back in 2022!
That’s Apple VR not AR. AR tech is further off like 2025.
Those glasses with the razer n95 rob mask, air pods pro, those electronic sound reacting shirts with matching goth pants with light up sneakers. That is going to be the look of 2022 and beyond.
No... Just hell no... That cringe power is over 9000!
light up hair inserts. RGB head to toe
I’m surprised the glasses didn’t have some kind of RGB. Imagine watching people use this in public. People leaning over mouth agape while their arms do a wacky flailing inflatable arm thing. The future is…interesting.
@@DerangedCoconut808 there is no reason for this glasses to have rgb since its consumer target isn't gamers. I can't see why you are suprised. You just sounds like a typical boomer who thinks advancements in technology is silly
@@DerangedCoconut808 i want this for food delivery apps on my phone, so i can keep the phone in my pocket, and see all the delivery information like door codes, navigation on the fly.
just id need a ring that acts as a mouse cursor, but ive seen those too
I love how Mark isn't engaging with Rileys siilliness more than a word at a time.
I think everyone is tired of riley
@@TikkerLoS or mark is just that kind of guy
I guess it's a style, and not everyone interacts with a host in the same manner. Maybe Mark is not used to that. But to me it feels off. You can see Mark's on his phone a lot rather than following along. Maybe that's normal in this situation. But I personally prefer more interaction between camera person and host. But again, might be a personal style thing!
This video was played at x1.5 speed because of the dead air 🙄
Those who are tired of Riley are tired of living. Riley FTW!
You guys gotta improve those video titles😵💫
Thanks for mentioning thst
I feel like we're back in the 90s with this type of early generation tech.
Me too. Also, I don't know how this thing would be useful in everyday life. looks like garbage.
@@viniciusp718 Hey, thats a bit harsh. Its not garbage. But i gotta admit, it would be very diffucult to use it in every day life.
The AR glasses i want is without cable (wireless) and with the full field of view of normal glasses. But hey, the on in the video is a good first step.
@@viniciusp718 i could see this usefull if car company integrated this kind of thing to cars
@@z3r0ut78 nah its garbage. its worse than the HoloLens from my experience with one back in 2015. by now this thing isnt even worse a look compared
@@swankshire6939 It's not a mature technology, so maybe it's harder to tell, but it's better than the hololens. Just consider the size, the level of computation and power required. It requires vastly less hardware, vastly less powerful hardware too yet isn't that far behind. It just needs to get a bit less bulky and wireless, and we'll have something that can be used daily. Everything else is software. Software represents a lot of work, but it is comparably easier to pioneering hardware. The hololens looked impressive mainly because it had so much demo software made for it. It also compensated a lot of issues through sheer brute force.
The text is surprisingly clear for an AR/VR experience! I can see a future version of this replacing my desktop monitors. Just a portable monitor to take with you wherever you go!
Perfect for taking on a plane or car ride. You can watch literally whatever you like
I can see VW group EV cars using this kind of tech combined with with car windshields
@@ccelik97 maybe 25 years after every other car manufacturer included that in their basic models
@@David169100 Lmao probably
@@ccelik97 they have had this kind of tech in cars since like 2013.....
just like a uh phone
Mark was not ready for Riley innate need for interaction with him while recording 😂
Imagine being the person walking into the studio at 9:27 and hearing Riley start talking about Elves and Tigers (10:05) that fight on his table... I'd be genuinely worried about him tbh
Just realized AR could be great for people who use multiple monitors: rather than having several screens that are not at all portable, you would have one pair of AR glasses connected to a screen-less laptop, that you an use anywhere.
And it can replace the need for a TV, it won't yet, but if you live alone then buying upcoming AR glasses sounds far more sensible than buying a large "bulky" and expensive TV.
therre are already some people using a vr headset lika a quest for a multi monitor setup - on the go - if you are only running offce stuff you could easyly work from a notebook, wirelessly and have even on the train 5 monitors + its even cheaper than often a single monitor
I definitely feel like VR is more of a monitor/tv replacement then a phone replacement
@@mackandelius Yes. The headsets that will come with micro oled displays will easily beat smartphones and TVs, and laptops. This the reason Apple's stock has been increasing for the past few weeks.
I think the ability to simulate traditional displays in AR will end up being a secondary use case. The primary (and most exciting) use case will be overlaying data on the world, so that it becomes enmeshed with your surroundings, rather than being something that takes you out of them. Such as, navigation that overlays streets, info about buildings and businesses you’re looking at, location based reminders that just pop right up, etc.
Correction: nreal Air is *not* "more advanced" it's actually just a 3DoF viewer instead of 6DoF that can track and see what is in front of you. Technically they're both equally as powerful though because they both require being hard tethered to a phone to work.
Which degrees of freedom were lost between this and the nreal Air?
@@FlintTD 3dof is pitch, yaw, and roll. 6dof is those three, plus translation in x y and z axes
@TORPEDO theyre only available for general purchase starting yesterday (which caused me to rewatch this video), and it's for $380 on amazon. The hardware doesn't seem to be nearly as expensive (two tiny screens and a gyroscope), I hope some mainstream tech company like logitech copies the concept and uses economy of scale to make something like this but more affordable.
These AR glasses makes Riley look like he's going for that Oakley Dad glasses look lol.
Looks like he's about to buy a pickup truck, start talking to women like shit and continue voting for Donald Trump.
@@HalfDayHero Rent free.
so, like pewdiepie
you mean the racist dad sunglasses
My usecase for the casting is when I'm doing chores that I cannot hold my phone but still wanna watch techlinked/the WAN show and THIS IS REVOLUTIONARY!
Honestly, I hope this AR glasses trend keeps going. I hope one day soon that even prescription glasses have the option to upgrade the frames to different styles of UI, like how we decide on brands of phones.
Use cases are obvious. For one: Imagine trying to look at a tiny screen on your phone, compared to, as you said yourself, a 70 inch TV. (Espepcially if on a commute, or sharing a home with roommates or family, &c)
The Quest 2 price point is just so brutal for other VR/AR startups. I know that's the point, for Meta to get early dominance and secure a big developmental/adoption lead over any potential competitors in the space, but it really sucks because it's going to slow down the industry as a whole. You have to be ready to throw a lot of money down the proverbial drain if you want to try and make a start as a competitor to Meta. My only hope is that future AR/VR developers (hardware and software) can figure out how to use Meta's development work as a starting point without running afoul of patent law to get a bit of a boost, and take advantage of daddy Zuck's warchest.
Man all I want is an IRL HUD. I don't need to be checking twitter while walking around, I can do that on my phone. But like ambient weather notifications in the corner, compass in the top left, clock in the top right, etc. That's all we want lol.
google translate would be cool for traveling as well.
And minimap lol
Ammo and a health bar.
It would also be kind of cool to actively see how much your cart is up to when shopping
huds or a smart watch for your face like google glass r pretty useless....
a real ar headset with 6dof tracking gives u the equivalent of holograms u can interact with...it's a completely different thing .....but it can still do the hud functionality
I think that for the first few generations AR glasses should try to emulate snowboarding goggles instead of sunglasses.
"I don't know why you would do this" perfectly sums up all devices like this. AR glasses, wearables, and even tablets. I've tried all of them and I just wanted to go back to my computer again immediately.
he only use case for me would be proper sports glasses with the ability to add prescription lenses and display a HUD while running or cycling. Would be somewhat safer then locking at my bike computer. But I don't see this coming any time soon.
I think the best part about these is you can barley tell they aren’t regular sunglasses. Riley looked completely natural with them on. The cameras blend in so well!!!!🤣
These are cool, but I think it needs a generation or 2 more before it's useful to me. But I'm looking forward to the Arpara AIO (All In One) VR headset releasing in March. And the brightness issue that current reviewers have been mentioning a lot for the device... have been solved according to Arpara. They are still testing and verifying it, but it should be bright enough. Now the only potential issue is the 6DoF controls being bad, but if they are... I feel like Arpara will still be able to fix it up to around Quest 2 level before release. They seem to be open for feedback and actually do something with it.
neat
Sailboat racing is an ultra niche use case. If there was a way to place a wind line, compass, and race line in the hud. You could use it for optimizing your tacking. The price point would even make it cheap when compare to anything sailboat related!
Haha yeah, specially watches are multiple thousands, so 600 is a steal
Looks like a pretty prototype.
Maybe we are still another decade out from half decent wearable ar
Not sure about a decade, I think 5/6 years personally.
@@SatanDotExe I would equate AR as being where VR was a decade ago (as far as functionality)
Not very familiar with Microsoft’s though
@@skillswiper A lot of the technologies required for AR are way further than the technologies required for VR were a decade ago. It will take a while due to the nature of R&D and market adoption, but certainly not a decade.
The oculus quest has been out for a while. The average phone processor is more than powerful enough for ar. Ideally, your phone should be doing all the processing, relying on the glasses only for the screen and battery, which shouldn’t be too difficult, maybe even with hot-swappable batteries employing some magnetic attachment. Wireless video technology is nearly seamless now via dji and other drone manufacturers. This is more than doable with current technology. The technology just isn’t being implemented properly IMO.
it's the same fov and better image quality than the hololens2 while being tiny light and cheap......pretty great for early days
bonus feature, they'll make your ears pick up most am channels and a few fm channels lol
yeah why the hell didn't he lift up the arms that looked painful
That field of view sounds quite impressive, way, WAY better than the hololens I tried out which was simply prohibitively small
i dont have vr stuff for adult content, but if i ever think about getting somethign like that, this is probably it
It's not easy to make them slimmer, because they absolutely need special optics to allow your eyes to focus on something that close which means you need a layer of optics on top of the screen. All things considered, I find the size of this thing impressive. They're small enough that you could wear them without standing out and people could conceivably think they're just regular sunglasses unless they looked really close. Meaning somebody just glancing over at you would be unlikely to notice anything out of the ordinary. That's impressive that HMD glasses have come this far already.
Riley without glasses has scared me for life.
Riley without glasses, wearing those shades turns him into Dr. Disrespect.
Riley thinking it's techlinked 1:41 😂 waiting for James response
#Awkward
At first glance Riley looks like a clean Dr disrespect with them on lol
AR is definitely the way to go! I live and work in a van... with this I could work on three big ass monitors like a champ, without the need to store three big ass monitors in that tiny space.
Let alone for watching movies or possibly navigation - I see alot of great usecases for technology like that!
this is like having virtual huge tvs and monitors whereever you are, great for enjoying big screen anywhere you are
I swear half of Riley's brain turns off when he does an unboxing, so I can't take any of his reviews seriously, but he's hilarious so I'm still here for it.
I'm happy they made these. We need this sort of thing to hit markets so further developments can be made. I'm not really sold on the NReal glasses though, even if I had a phone that could support them. But man, that second/third gen AR headset is going to be sweet. If NReal has this form factor working now, imagine a proper portable, non-phone reliant model below $400 (before prescriptions) with a better FOV and support for other ecosystems' software. Because we definitely need the software to make these work. But we aren't getting it from an independent company.
Mom: "Don't stay too close to the television."
Me after 20 years: "AR Glasses."
You guys are great!
These glasses are just NReal & super cool 😎
Love how the AR glasses pull your ears down like Harry Potter banking goblins. Also when you turned your head from side to side to show how you could position content all around my first thought was "oh good, more places for RUclips to stick ads". Cool tech, but I am gonna wait a few generations on this one. Leave it to the enthusiasts to work the bugs out.
the first time i rented an oculus quest 2 from my school short circuit uploaded right as i got home, so i enjoyed life-sized james discussing mediocre headphones. it was super cool, but this device is more expensive than the quest 2 to do way less so ??? i know we hate metafacebook, but like riley i want to see more.
To be fair, they are also less expensive than some other VR headsets (since they aren't heavily subsidized like the quest), way more compact, and in my opinion AR glasses have a completely different use-case to a VR headset anyway.
I wonder if you can crack this to make it mirror PC desktop screens. From a working standpoint, I'm a composer so I'd love to have a giant window for my DAW. From a gamer standpoint, you could get a pseudo VR experience from any flatscreen game & a VR experience from any VR game.
man just use a normal vr headset at that point, whats the AR for?
@@Eduardopy1 Being able to see the keyboard or other input devices. The only keyboard that the Quest can track is impossible to find anywhere. And the Quest passthrough is too low-res.
I resorted to taping a clamshell mirror to the back of my laptop cover, so that the reflection of the keyboard could be picked up by the webcam, and get shown in a window on a virtual screen in VR, together with my fingers. Useful if you're going somewhere where you can't take any extra monitors. If your computer can handle it.
@@klystron2010 the quest 2 don't have the hardware for good passthrough, maybe quest 3 will have.
@@Eduardopy1 Portability, cost, ability to run bigger headsets, ability to still use it as AR for my smart phone... OR get this! AR.... on the desktop..... whooaaaaaa!
Edit: sorry that came out a bit ruder than I wanted. Im in a sarcastic mood.
“You wanna be lubricated when you slide into the meta verse” 🤣🤣🤣
"Cause you want to be lubricated when you slide into the metaverse" ~Riley
i love the people walking in the background of the screen recordings. dunno if planned or not but it is an amazing showcase of the screen opacity
It doesn't look like they planned any of this, which is fine for a device costing around 100 - 200 dollars max but since these are 6 bills I assume most people will do at least some homework/research before buying. Probably something the script writer, an employee familiar with this kind of tech or Riley himself should of done before filming this.
I have no idea if this is E-Waste or a must-have product, I learned nothing about it and left the video a little stupider than before it began
That doesn't show what Riley sees, though. The opacity is purely post-processed.
Let's get a guy who is legally blind to review the glasses. Great idea 💡
there r apps for the hololens for blind people ...the headset is basically looking at the world and making noises depending on the obstacles or it can describe or read something in front of the person
Why fight it? What we need are helmets like master chief rocks, maybe predictor or, for those so inclined, power rangers or something.
They have lots of space to spread batteries and components, decent space for speakers and mics, all around cameras/night vision.
Huge field of view etc and in times like these, they can double as face masks. Let's go for it.
I'm looking at you Razer, you guys are mad enough for this.
I know he said early-ish but this actually super early. This is the FIRST true consumer AR glasses out there. This is as early as it gets.
Sometimes i wish they just made a pc monitor or tv in this form factor. Just to connect to a pc or laptop and use as a normal monitor and save space, or instead of carrying portable monitors for your laptop you just carry something like this.
So like Lenovo's (rather expensive) ThinkReality glasses?
I've been telling people about AR for years. It's going to take a while to get small enough for wearable use and cheap enough for everyone to use, but it's going to revolutionize everything. It'll be just like Tony Stark's glasses from Avengers Infinity War.
There's definitely potential here but it's not really worth 600 for a virtual RUclips screen and an elf verses tiger animation.
I think it'll be a while before we get to the Ironman or video game HUDs.
@@carrotman it just sounds like you need to create the app for it. This stuff seemed pretty ready for a HUD experience.
@@Zutraxi No processing power would be capable of such a thing, lol.
@@evolicious depends on what you need?
If your phone can show your map and current speed.
Why wouldn't you be able to show speed and directional arrow that is anchored in the corner.
That is still a HUD.
If you are thinking of a smart hud.
If they have a camera they can probably connect to Google or Bixby for smart translations.
Everything is happening through the phone the glasses are just the display.
There is a reason Microsoft hololens is so bulky.
And there is a reason why they have a supported phone list of new and powerfull phones.
@@evolicious All it has to do is send the signal to either a powerful phone or a low ping server to do the heavy lifting for it
I love how the camera man Is legit on his phone the whole time every time he's in shot and legit not paying attention to Riley at all
9:08
The box on the left side is labeled 网页收藏夹 in chinese which roughly translates to "Web Page Folder". I guess those are just URLs that automatically opens in your phone's browser.
Window's Hello: "Super Trooper mustache, check, yep it's Riley." ;O)-
12:14 Thanks Riley. I always wanted to watch a movie while having a seizure👍
That kind of glasses would be awesome in sim racing setups. Just a screen and gyroscope function. No speakers needed, maybe 3.5mm port or usb port for external earphones :)
No need to be like AR thing just very lightweight screen :)
same fov and better image quality than hololens2 despite being tiny and cheap and having 6dof tracking and hand tracking
This needs so much more development time. Promising technology, it's not here yet.
Not sure why companies choose to believe that people not needing glasses are clamouring to wear some.
I mean, I'm sure tons of people would love to have a phone that they can use hands-free and is always at the ready. I can't count the number of times I've wanted to take a picture or record some crazy thing I see while I'm driving, but I can't because.. I'm driving.
the worst thing is about 75% of adults in the USA need some form of visual correction... people who need prescription glasses are LITERALLY THE MAJORITY OF PEOPLE
Riley looks like a Fed without his glasses. Like he should have on a black jacket that says FBI and be knocking on your door.
Riley is just flexing his Mustache-Glasses disguise.
I'm going to be rude and say what I think about this episode, riley is not good at demoing units like this. This unit is super interesting and instead of getting a solid idea of what this unit is like, I am left with only a marginal impression of the video experience, which is 99% of why you would buy a unit like this. In the future for a device like this please spend more time actually in the AR experience, opening and using apps, resizing and moving the video wall, and give a more close up video of this. I would say take a bit of the tact that some emulation device and phone reviewers take, which is to spend the majority of the time not talking randomly but just focusing on getting quality examples of what it is actually like using it. 95% of the video was skippable filler talking about nothing and only 5% of the video was about the device, and maybe half of that really gave a real example of what it was like to use apps with it
I was just about to say something similar. 95% of this video just annoyed the hell out of me, almost no usable information.
Riley looks like the coolest plumber in town when he wears those.
Imagine fixing a car problem step by step with an AR guided tutorial ...
This is what it looks like when you give a squirrel coffee and ask it to review something ... *snaps fingers* focus Riley!
uses case is VR game where you can still use your keyboard
Literally can’t wait to use this to work, no monitor limitations
One doesn’t experience self-transcendence, the illusion of self only dissipates - -🎈
My first thought was “it’s nreal, all it needs is u”
He looks like a undercover cop with those glasses on😂
I feel like the "big screen" application is enough to bring me in if the prices drop.
The only problem of using a phone instead of a tablet, (or a laptop, or a monitor, or a TV) for general media consumption is screen size. We figured out how to squeeze good audio into a small footprint, good processing power but we were just missing a good screen, now we're not.
For me the screen size isn't the problem but holding the phone and looking downwards.
Being able to sit in a train and looking straight ahead while my hands are empty - that's the dream.
@@Jehty_ just get this, and a ring that acts like a mouse bluetooth, in the air. thats what im gonna do
@ShortCircuit can you please try it with the Steam Deck and show us how it looks inside 🙏
3:43 They somehow made you look even more dorky. Which is a compliment. And I think it's the mustache that makes you look dorky. But I'm just jealous that mine isn't as nice.
Imagine a luscious beard like Linus', but with a big spot missing between the chin and bottom lip, and a thin mustache like Jake's.... That's my almost beard(as I call it).
"It's for people that want to experience the jank for themselves." Beautifully said and made me literally LOL.
Also as someone that's developed on a Magic Leap and used a Hololens, I'd agree with this statement. XD
VRMMO vibes, it's coming boys, all we need is a neural link interface now.
It would be cool to play like paintball or airsoft with everyone wearing AR glasses!
This short circuit is titled '...and I like it' but he ends with the thought of "I'll wait for the next one" lol
"You want to be lubricated when you slide into the Metaverse" :D
Doing an iFixit ad for Christmas but it's coming out on the 28th
First thing that came to my Mind -
*GREEN SCREEN P**N!!!*
using this with maps and other stuff would be epic
I want this... Well, I want this in terms of the head mounted display aspect, but I don't need cameras, AR, VR speakers, mices, voicecontrol, digital assistant, dog walking mode, or what ever. Why do these things always need to be so overly complicated? I just want a proper and practical HMD! How is this so hard?
These glasses with those tall nosepieces basically turn everyone into Zuckerberg...
I can see this being a cool way to watch videos in bed or when travelling.
I always wanted a way to watch movies like this in bed tbh, would give one a try if i wasn't so broke
These are really cool!
The use case for having the phone mirror is watching a tutorial video while you are performing actions. Imagine a car repair with a video of the repair in real time.
I'm *really* looking forward to the time when I can have AR built in to my regular prescription glasses without them looking all bulky and weird. Have them look just like a regular pair of glasses, maybe with the frames a bit thicker than normal, but otherwise completely unremarkable. I'd definitely pay for that to be in my next pair of glasses.
Once this gets down to $150-200 I can see this being used by frequent flyers.
The continual “jitter” would make me feel motion sickness
I can see that being sore on the upper ear after a little while, bending them down pretty good there.
One use case I'd love to use this for is itx gaming on the go. Instead of having a small portable monitor, I'd use this instead for immersive gaming etc.
I'll get something like this when it's at a Tony Stark level of smart glasses.
Well the good thing is that they make you look really really cool
I wish Magic Leap wasn't so secretive. Their headset was hands down the best AR experience I've ever had and that was years ago!
Riley looks like an elf thanks to these weird things.
Noticed how his ears are seemingly crushed by either the weight/poor positioning/overlapping glasses. I can’t imagine wearing it more than 5 minutes at a time.
Dude is actually funny. When he said it's in his mind... lol
Ok so this, but with transparent OLED displays. Full field of view, and images wherever you want them.
My ass felt violated when Riley put those glasses
You know, it would be ground breaking if someone would just develop a desktop suite for something like this. VR is the leading tech with immersed, and frankly, while ok to use. It's hard to stay in due to the headsets weight. Really, I just can't fathom why no one hasn't connected the dots on this front.