Snap has announced a new version of its Spectacles AR glasses with some major improvements, but is it enough to compete with ...
Snapchat’s creator has a new version of its glasses, and a vision for more approachable augmented reality. But it’s still a ...
These subscription-based developer glasses aim to go where bigger headsets like the Quest 3 and Vision Pro can't yet.
Due to the target audience being developers, Snap is taking a hardware-as-a-service approach to product sales, charging devs ...
That's largely thanks to new hardware features, but also to partnerships with some of the biggest AR developers around today.
A former Snap engineer who worked on designing previous versions of the glasses, slammed the product in a post on X this week ...
Snap’s latest generation of augmented reality Spectacles have been lambasted by one of the engineers that helped to create ...
Snap's new AR Spectacles aim for a sleeker look but are still pretty big. They also face similar challenges to Apple and Meta ...
Snap aims to bring 'cloud-hosted multimodal AI models' to its AR headset, which houses powerful hardware from Qualcomm. Developers can sign up here.
But the market for Spectacles — and AR glasses in general — still feels as nascent as ever. Snap has an idea for what could change that: developers. These new Spectacles, announced Tuesday at Snap’s ...
The glasses are powered by Snap OS, the company’s new operating system designed to enhance how people naturally interact with ...