The world's biggest social media company announced on Wednesday
that it was partnering with Ray-Ban maker EssilorLuxottica for
its 2021 smart glasses launch.
It also announced a research project, Project Aria, to collect
data that would support the development of more advanced glasses
down the road.
Michael Abrash, who heads Facebook Reality Labs Research, said
fully interactive display and audio capabilities could not yet
be crammed into lightweight devices like glasses, which he
estimated should be around 70 grams (2.5 oz) to be viable.
Those capabilities include the ability for people to jointly see
and interact with persistent shared virtual objects, like a
virtual whiteboard on which they could collaborate, he said.
"Those glasses are still years off," said Abrash. "That's not a
2021 thing. I'm talking about the future."
A company spokeswoman said there would be no display in the
initial 2021 product, which will work with and rely on mobile
phones.
Many in the industry believe the glasses will eventually replace
the functionality of mobile phones altogether, making their
development a hotly contested race among tech giants like Apple,
Amazon and Alphabet's Google.
Snap Inc's "Spectacles," initially released in 2016, began
incorporating AR elements in its third generation product last
year.
Abrash said smart glasses would need to rely on devices like
phones for the forseeable future due to constraints like battery
life and the heat generated by processing.
But with "true AR glasses," he said, other devices would become
"an accessory to the glasses, because the glasses are how you
see and interact with the world."
(Reporting by Katie Paul; editing by Richard Pullin)
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