Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
AI Slashdot.org

Meta Is Adding AI To Its Ray-Ban Smart Glasses 23

Starting next month, Meta's Ray-Ban smart glasses will support multimodal AI features to perform translation, along with object, animal, and monument identification. The Verge reports: Users can activate the glasses' smart assistant by saying "Hey Meta," and then saying a prompt or asking a question. It will then respond through the speakers built into the frames. The NYT offers a glimpse at how well Meta's AI works when taking the glasses for a spin in a grocery store, while driving, at museums, and even at the zoo.

Although Meta's AI was able to correctly identify pets and artwork, it didn't get things right 100 percent of the time. The NYT found that the glasses struggled to identify zoo animals that were far away and behind cages. It also didn't properly identify an exotic fruit, called a cherimoya, after multiple tries. As for AI translations, the NYT found that the glasses support English, Spanish, Italian, French, and German.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Meta Is Adding AI To Its Ray-Ban Smart Glasses

Comments Filter:
  • Yeah (Score:3, Informative)

    by skrugen ( 229044 ) on Thursday March 28, 2024 @07:53PM (#64352552)

    Wear those out in public and an NPC will murder you for them

  • Meta Is Adding AI To Its Ray-Ban Smart Glasses

    Renaming them RAI-Ban would be paradoxical.

    • by kmoser ( 1469707 )
      If people who wear Google Glass are "Glassholes," does that make people who wear Meta's Ray-Bans "AI-ssholes?"
  • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Thursday March 28, 2024 @08:16PM (#64352578) Journal

    Not sure what having a mildly inaccurate object detector would do.

    You're looking at a pen! Or a cup!! And a car did you know you are looking at a car?

    • by dohzer ( 867770 )

      Much easier and cheaper to simply whip out Google Lens the one or two times a day you might need it.

      • Much easier and cheaper to simply whip out Google Lens the one or two times a day you might need it.

        With massive advancements in navigation tech, we find many becoming incredibly dependent on GPS in order to simply navigate through daily life. Those that don’t even bother to memorize street names anymore, because that’s a map apps responsibility now.

        Now imagine what AI is going to do with general knowledge and learning. One or two times a day might describe the current generations used to learning the old fashioned way, but rest assured future generations will become incredibly dependent on

        • Yep. I know people who've moved to a new city & are still regularly using GMaps after a year of living there. They haven't got a clue of where anything actually is & no sense of direction. I knew one guy who did this in a f**king village.

          Some people are giving over their basic cognitive functioning to Google.
        • Much easier and cheaper to simply whip out Google Lens the one or two times a day you might need it.

          With massive advancements in navigation tech, we find many becoming incredibly dependent on GPS in order to simply navigate through daily life. Those that don’t even bother to memorize street names anymore, because that’s a map apps responsibility now.

          Now imagine what AI is going to do with general knowledge and learning. One or two times a day might describe the current generations used to learning the old fashioned way, but rest assured future generations will become incredibly dependent on it. They won’t even bother with learning much if the answer is provided by AI all day, every day.

          Human-powered learning will ultimately be viewed as inferior when AI proves to be the recognized authority. Sounds crazy? Who would you trust to get directions to drive 100 miles in an unknown area today? A fallible human, or your favorite mapping app? I thought so.

          Yeah, I can see this happening. There was a time I had about twenty-five or so phone numbers memorized and ready to dial up at any time because when you were out and about, you had to know the numbers you wanted to call, and you grabbed a payphone. Now? You just press the button to call Dalton, or Jenny, or Craig, and that's that. I force myself to dial important numbers every time just so that I always have them in mind. My wife, my mom, my dad, a couple friends I know I can count on if shit goes down. But

    • How did you enable the adblocker on yours? This is what mine says:

      You're looking at a pen! Right now, Amazon has a special pen deal for $3.99 delivery in 90 minutes, enable 1-nod purchase? No actually it's a cup! Buy a bespoke tinfoil cup on Etsy for $210.50 plus delivery. Hurry while stocks last and nod to order. So sorry, this is actually a car you're looking at, definitely a car promise! Buy the new Xiaomi EV with complementary AAA battery charging pod before your friends get one! Just nod once up and

  • Isn't this more "adding a connection to the AI compute cluster" more accurate than "adding AI to the glasses"?

  • In, hmm, I think 1999 or 1998 I remember seeing professor Steve Mann of the U of Toronto (I think) gave a demo at Def Con via videoconferencing. I think it was so long ago it was "Cu-seeme". He had some kind of AI rig that he built himself. I remember it had an SGI machine (a heavily modified Indy, IIRC) which ran some kind of projection or LCD glasses. I can't remember how they worked. I just remember that he walked to the men's room and it blocked the Trojan condom advert on the wall and replaced it with
    • Wonder what the good prof would say about putting a permanently online, perpetually reporting spy tool on his nose.

      • He has written about it a bit. [getnarrative.com] Quoting from the article

        Surveillance embodies a kind of hypocrisy: “we’re going to watch you but you’re not allowed to watch us.”

  • ' It also didn't properly identify an exotic fruit, called a cherimoya, after multiple tries. '

    I couldn't do that to save my life.

  • It also didn't properly identify an exotic fruit, called a cherimoya, after multiple tries.

    Oh, well forget it then. Dealbreaker!

  • Good news! You do not have to feel a little slow and helpless anymore. Just put on our smart glasses with AI and be a Wizard.

  • A cherimoya [wikipedia.org] A Cherimoya, also known as a custard apple, is a tropical fruit that belongs to the Annonaceae family. It is native to the Andean highlands of South America and is now cultivated in various tropical and subtropical regions around the world.

    The Cherimoya fruit is usually heart-shaped or round and has a green, scaly, and bumpy skin. The flesh of the fruit is creamy and custard-like, hence the nickname "custard apple." It is pale white in color and contains numerous black seeds that are inedible. C
  • in search of a problem.

Somebody ought to cross ball point pens with coat hangers so that the pens will multiply instead of disappear.

Working...