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Apple to use microLED in AR glasses and 2026’s Apple Watch Ultra
4:44 pm | October 7, 2024

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

Given how it's canceled its order for microLED displays for the Apple Watch Ultra 3 earlier this year, you'd be forgiven for thinking that Apple was done with the technology, but a new rumor refutes that hypothesis. According to a tipster on X, Apple is still very much invested in microLED, aiming to finally use it in an Apple Watch Ultra model launching in 2026 (one year earlier than rumored at one point back in February). But that's not all. Apple is also reportedly going to use microLED panels for AR glasses which will be mass produced in 2026 as well. So if this pans out, 2026...

Apple may be reconsidering its AR strategy in the wake of Meta’s Orion reveal
6:41 pm | September 30, 2024

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It seems that Apple watched the launch of Meta’s new AR and VR glasses with interest and has started to reconsider its “spatial computing” strategy, reports Bloomberg’s Mark Gurman. And it wasn’t the cheap Quest 3S that caused doubt within the walls of the Cupertino HQ, not so much the Ray-Ban Meta glasses either, but the Orion prototype. VR cuts you off from the world and replaces it with a fully virtual world. Some goggles, like the Quest 3 and 3S, use cameras with color passthrough to create more of an AR experience – a mix of virtual and real things. Apple’s Vision Pro does this too,...

Snap’s new Spectacles 5 AR glasses bring massive improvements, you still can’t buy them
6:24 pm | September 18, 2024

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Snap unveiled new AR glasses, the fifth generation of Spectacles, which are a massive improvement over the fourth generation. Not that you’d know, both the fourth and fifth generation of glasses are aimed at developers only. The Snap Spectacles 5 have a new design and are significantly chunkier at 226g, almost double the 134g that the 4th gen weighed. The battery life has been improved from 30 minutes to 45 minutes without external power. The Liquid Crystal on Silicon (LCoS) micro-projectors and waveguides are the thing to focus on – they create an image with a 46° diagonal Field of...

Tecno announces wireless AR glasses, handheld console and Dynamic 1 robot dog
12:29 pm | February 26, 2024

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Tecno is expanding its product portfolio far beyond smartphones at this year's MWC, as the company unveiled a Pocket Go wireless AR gaming set and a Dynamic 1 robot dog in Barcelona. Tecno Pocket Go and AR Pocket vision The Tecno Pocket Go is a Windows handheld console, meant to work with a pair of AR glasses – a truly intriguing combination we haven't seen before. The headset is equipped with a 0.71” micro-OLED screen, which would match the viewing angle of a 215” TV from six meters away. It is also equipped with adjustable diopter settings of up to 600 degrees. The handheld...

Tecno announces wireless AR glasses, handheld console and Dynamic 1 robot dog
12:29 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

Tecno is expanding its product portfolio far beyond smartphones at this year's MWC, as the company unveiled a Pocket Go wireless AR gaming set and a Dynamic 1 robot dog in Barcelona. Tecno Pocket Go and AR Pocket vision The Tecno Pocket Go is a Windows handheld console, meant to work with a pair of AR glasses – a truly intriguing combination we haven't seen before. The headset is equipped with a 0.71” micro-OLED screen, which would match the viewing angle of a 215” TV from six meters away. It is also equipped with adjustable diopter settings of up to 600 degrees. The handheld...

Tecno to announce new Pova phone, robot dog and AR gaming set at MWC 2024
12:04 pm | February 6, 2024

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Tecno officially confirmed its attendance at MWC in Barcelona at the end of February. The company will unveil a bunch of new products including a new Pova smartphone, a robot dog, an AR gaming set of AR glasses, and a Windows handheld console. The brand will also once again showcase its Universal Tone tech it introduced last summer and Phantom Ultimate foldable concept phone. The Tecno Pova 6 Pro 5G will be a new phone “built for super endurance and optimized entertainment,” but the press release did not provide any specs. We will also see the Megabook T16 Pro 2024 Ultra laptop...

Lenovo Legion Glasses review: your best bet for AR glasses
7:00 pm | November 11, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Computers Computing Gadgets Software Virtual Reality & Augmented Reality | Tags: | Comments: Off

Lenovo Legion Glasses: Two-minute review

Lenovo’s first foray into the AR glasses market could easily be one of the best smart glasses, with a great balance between design and functionality. They look similar enough to other AR glasses on the market, all-black, and mostly sleek sunglasses. There is a bulkiness that comes from the built-in lenses, which does make them jut out from your face a bit, and the optional lenses that can be slotted behind the main ones don't help with that either. 

Those spare lenses have a purpose, however, as those who wear corrective lenses can have them made out in our prescription. But having to pay for extra lenses on top of shelling out over $300 for the Legion Glasses is a tall order, which is why I appreciate the modified nose guard that allows you to wear your glasses under them. 

Lenovo had warned me about them not fitting every pair of glasses and I personally experienced the awkwardness of trying to shift them to stay on properly, which took a bit to master. But once I found the sweet spot, they stayed in place surprisingly well around my large plastic frames. Not the best look, however, so if you care about aesthetics you may want to splurge for the prescription lenses.

Compared to other AR glasses like the Xreal Air AR which only offers the corrective lens option, or the Rokid Max AR which offers the corrective lens option plus myopia adjustment wheels for each eye, the Legion Go offers the simplest yet most effective method out of them.

The build quality of these glasses is quite premium – it has a sturdy yet light form factor with glass lenses and a solid frame. These are glasses clearly built to last. Not to mention that it comes with spare nose guards and a spare pair of anti-slip adapters for when wear and tear happens.

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Editor John Loeffler wearing Lenovo Legion Glasses

(Image credit: Future)
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Editor John Loeffler wearing Lenovo Legion Glasses

(Image credit: Future)
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Editor John Loeffler wearing Lenovo Legion Glasses

(Image credit: Future)
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Lenovo Legion Glasses on table

(Image credit: Future)
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Lenovo Legion Glasses on table

(Image credit: Future)
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Lenovo Legion Glasses on table

(Image credit: Future)
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Lenovo Legion Glasses on table

(Image credit: Future)

I also love the buttons in front of the speakers, two on each side, as they activate several useful features depending on whether you short or long-press them. You can increase or decrease brightness, enable Low Blue Light Mode, control volume, and toggle the display off and on.

As for performance, the Lenovo Legion Glasses work exactly as promised, which is to say, quite well. I extensively tested it out with a wide variety of devices that feature USB Type-C ports including videos on the best smartphones, the Lenovo Legion Go, the best gaming laptops, the best gaming PCs, and more. 

Even though it only states that the Legion Glasses works with Android, iOS, and Windows, it also works perfectly with the Steam Deck as well. And it works equally well with all of them, though I wish there were more connection types other than Type-C, however, I can understand the rationale behind it.

The picture quality and brightness are superb, living up to its micro-OLED HD visuals and more. My only real complaint in that regard is the image can blur around the edges a bit and obscure any UI, especially if the glasses aren't fitted properly to your head. Sometimes you have to readjust them to hit that sweet spot, and then the visuals are great. Accompanied by excellent visuals are equally excellent built-in speakers, which are so robust that I forgot I wasn’t playing video games on a gaming PC. That also carries over to music and movie streaming, delivering great audio quality on those fronts.

Something that often isn't mentioned with AR and VR tech in general is how they can affect more sensitive people, such as myself. Normally I have sensitivity issues with 3D, VR, and some AR technology ranging from watering and burning eyes, headaches, and nausea to name a few symptoms. But I've found that prolonged use of the Legion Glasses doesn't affect me in the slightest.

Lenovo Legion Glasses: Price & availability

Lenovo Legion Glasses on table

(Image credit: Future)
  • How much does it cost? Starting at $329.99 / £329 / AU$599
  • When is it available? Available now
  • Where can you get it? Available in the US, UK, and Australia

The Lenovo Legion Glasses is a pricey gadget at $329.99 / £329 / AU$599, though it’s still more affordable than some of its competitors like the Xreal Air AR and Rokid Max AR, making it a much better deal by comparison. And if you're investing in a pair of AR glasses, you're most likely already prepared to spend a sizable amount of money so that shouldn't be much of an issue.

It’s also available for shipping in the US, UK, and Australia from the Lenovo storefront, which is great news for those in regions outside the US.

Lenovo Legion Glasses: Specs

Should you buy the Lenovo Legion Glasses?

Buy it if...

You want good-quality AR glasses
The build quality is extremely good with a nice weight and sturdy form factor. The lenses being made of thick glass also help.

You want a clear picture quality
The display is made of dual micro-OLED HD screens for each eye and the result is a bright and clear picture quality.

Don't buy it if...

You're on a budget
Though it should be expected for AR glasses, you're going to be paying quite a bit of money for them.

You want a completely clear image
Though it's usually not an issue, sometimes the edges can blur a bit which is exacerbated by misaligned glasses.

Lenovo Legion Glasses: Also consider

How I tested the Lenovo Legion Glasses

  • I spent about a week testing these AR glasses
  • I tested it with a wide variety of screens
  • I used it extensively in different environments with different lighting

I tested the Lenovo Legion Glasses keyboard in a home office environment, seeing how well it functioned in both productivity work and gaming. I also carried it around in various bags to test its portability.

The Lenovo Legion Glasses is a pair of AR glasses that's meant as an alternative screen for a wide variety of devices. I made sure to quality-test it to see if it held up to being able to work on nearly any device with a USB Type-C port.

I've tested a wide range of accessories and these in particular I've tested for well over a year at different stages of completion, becoming familiar with its features and improvements.

We pride ourselves on our independence and our rigorous review-testing process, offering up long-term attention to the products we review and making sure our reviews are updated and maintained - regardless of when a device was released, if you can still buy it, it's on our radar.

Read more about how we test

First reviewed November 2023

I tried smart AR running sunglasses that show me a heads-up-display like Iron Man
5:00 pm | May 27, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets | Tags: , | Comments: Off

Engo 2: One minute review

My calves are aching, and sweat is running down my back and soaking my shorts. I can feel my pulse in my neck: I’m not going a mile a minute, but my heart sure is. Or am I? I flick my eyes to the display in the corner of my mirrored sunglasses to check my splits and heart rate. It ain’t great, but I’m on pace still. For now, anyway.

The display is the important part of the Engo 2 augmented reality glasses, which resemble Arnie’s shades from the Terminator flicks but house a secret. Tucked in around the nose piece is a monochrome OLED display that beams stats from your bike computer or smartwatch directly onto the lens in front of your eyes. 

It’s like the head-up display fighter pilots use, and it’s made by one of the top suppliers. I’m wearing tech designed for F-15 pilots. I am invincible. 

Other augmented reality glasses – like the Nreal Air or Virture One, or even the prototypes we’ve seen from Xiaomi and TCL and Lumus – aim to be platforms that do it all, offering directions, integration with your virtual assistant, the vast database of the Internet at your fingers. They also threaten location-based advertisements (“McDonald’s is just ¼ mile away. How about half price McNuggets?”), which feels as intrusive as it is inevitable. The Engo does one thing and one thing alone: Real time data for endurance athletes.

“We’re not here to facilitate a new advertising context,” Mark Prince, GM and Chief Commercial Officer for the company told me. “We’re here to make people faster, better, smarter.”

It’s a glimpse of the future, the first AR solution that connects directly to the Apple Watch. It also retails for $329.95 – a fair bit of money for sunglasses. Does Engo 2 deliver on that promise? Can it make me a better runner?

Engo 2: Price and availability

Currently, the Engo 2 is available to purchase directly from the Engo website in the US and Europe. Engo 2 is available for in the US for $329.95, and in mainland Europe for €329.00 euros. Although the Europe store ships to the UK, the glasses are not currently available in Australia. 

Engo 2: What's in the box

Engo 2 smart glasses

(Image credit: Jeremy Kaplan)
  • Two carrying cases
  • One charger
  • No manual

The Engo 2 glasses come with a fairly comprehensive collection of components. There’s the glasses, of course, as well as a cloth travel sleeve and a rigid case. The rigid case is quite well designed, with cut outs for the glasses and a spot to store your cords. There’s a microfiber cloth, cleaning brushes to get the gunk around the display components, and a somewhat janky power cord  

The Engo 2 glasses come with a fairly comprehensive collection of components. There’s the glasses, of course, as well as a cloth travel sleeve and a rigid case. The rigid case is quite well designed, with cut outs for the glasses and a spot to store your cords. There’s a microfiber cloth, cleaning brushes to get the gunk around the display components, and a somewhat janky power cord -- more on that later. There’s also a safety manual for some reason, but no user guide.

This absence became a real sore spot for me. A manual handily details the features and functions of a product, walks you through setup, and so on. Somehow, Engo hasn’t made one. There are detailed YouTube videos for Android and iOS set up, and help pages online. These are not a manual. 

The Engo 2 glasses come with a fairly comprehensive collection of components. There’s the glasses, of course, as well as a cloth travel sleeve and a rigid case. The rigid case is quite well designed, with cut outs for the glasses and a spot to store your cords. There’s a microfiber cloth, cleaning brushes to get the gunk around the display components, and a somewhat janky power cord -- more on that later. There’s also a safety manual for some reason, but no user guide.

This absence became a real sore spot for me. A manual handily details the features and functions of a product, walks you through setup, and so on. Somehow, Engo hasn’t made one. There are detailed YouTube videos for Android and iOS set up, and help pages online. These are not a manual.manual for some reason, but no user guide.

This absence became a real sore spot for me. A manual handily details the features and functions of a product, walks you through setup, and so on. Somehow, Engo hasn’t made one. There are detailed YouTube videos for Android and iOS set up, and help pages online. These are not a manual.

  • Score: 3/5 

Engo 2: Design and display

Engo 2 smart glasses

(Image credit: Jeremy Kaplan)
  • Comparable to ordinary sport glasses
  • Hardware neatly concealed
  • Power button is an afterthought

From the front, the Engo 2 glasses look more or less like ordinary sports sunglasses, with a mirrored, wrap-around sun visor and black or white plastic temples (I had black). The glasses themselves are state of the art polycarbonate. Turn them around to put them on and you’ll see the magic: Tucked in around the nose bridge is a tiny micro-OLED projector, mirror system, and batteries to power them.

Put the glasses on and you will notice this hardware, but not really by much. Just place your index fingers on either side of your nose and you’ll see that they mostly vanish; the Engo’s hardware works in the same way. Yes, it’s there, but it’s not as intrusive as you might think. Within a day I had forgotten it completely.

The glasses weigh 36 or 41 grams, depending on whether you’ve got the large, full coverage lenses or the slightly smaller streamlined model. (I’ve been testing the large model.) That’s about as much as a standard pair of Oakleys, Prince told me. They feel a bit heavier to me, but not much. But the weight is definitely off center, meaning the glasses will slip down your nose and off your face if you aren’t careful. To offset that, the company includes a bungee cord that slips snugly over the temples and cinches behind your head. It’s a perfect solution.

A bit of background on the display: The Engo 2 glasses come from MicroOLED, which is the largest manufacturer of micro OLED displays outside of Asia, and the second largest globally in certain markets, notably military supply. The company’s displays are in use in most western military organizations today, in things like head-up displays, night vision, scopes, and so on, Prince said.

“It’s kind of a Meow Mix thing. The cats ask for it by name,” he told me. Engo is a wholly owned consumer subsidiary, designed to promote and use these screens in other ways. And they should! Micro OLED screens consume radically less power than micro LED displays, yet most of the big tech initiatives that you read about tend to use micro LED. The power consumption is the reason other advanced eyewear is bulky or has an external battery pack.

At CES 2023, several companies touted AR glasses that use waveguides, wherein a tiny LED beams light through several sets of mirrors embedded in the lens that expand it to fill your field of view. So mirrors, but really, really smart mirrors. “There are two approaches to waveguides,” Dave Goldman, VP of marketing for Israeli-based Lumus, told me. “One is called diffractive, and that’s the other guys. And I mean everybody else.” Everybody else includes the Vuzix Ultralite, Nreal Air, and Virture One. The Lumus Z-Lens prototype uses reflective waveguides, which are much more power efficient.

But they’re all power hogs compared with Micro OLED, a proven tech that exists today. Again, it’s what the military guys use. Sure, LED is brighter, but Micro OLED is bright enough, Prince says. The monochrome display in the Engo 2 glasses was perfectly visible even in bright sunlight, and the glasses don’t require any sort of external power supply. Battery life: 12 hours, Prince says. I’m sold.

  • Design score: 4.5/5

Engo 2: Features and setup

Engo 2 smart glasses

(Image credit: Jeremy Kaplan)
  • Apple Watch works beautifully
  • ActiveLook software needs work
  • Not enough support material

Today’s athletes mostly use Apple Watch or Garmin devices, although there’s no shortage of people with Suuntos, Fitbits, and so on. Depending on whether you’re Team Apple or Team Android, you’ll find Engo to be either super simple to set up or maddening as all get out. I set up my Engo 2 glasses with both, and lived to tell the tale. 

In both cases, start by downloading the ActiveLook app. ActiveLook comes from MicroOLED as well, but it’s a third, separate company from the same folks with an API and an SDK and customers of its own. ActiveLook is essentially the bridge between the smart glasses and your sensors, and Prince says the company thinks it could be a platform to itself. 

Using ActiveLook with an Apple Watch is a snap: download, pair, and you’re off to the races. Using it with a Garmin watch is like trying to drink scalding hot coffee on a roller coaster. You can see what’s going on, but dear god, why is it happening? The problem lies in how Garmin surfaces information from devices like the Forerunner 945 I rely upon. Info from the smartwatch is broken down into data fields, which the Engo 2 displays on screens.

By default, the ActiveLook app and Engo 2 come configured with three sets of data fields; one set of defaults, a set for running, and a set for cycling. A carefully concealed page on the ActiveLook.net site reveals how to configure the dashboards. Buried deep within the ActiveLook app is a configuration page that lets you adjust the datafields being passed to the screen, by looking up codes on that webpage. The codes are listed not in numerical order but by type of data (power, heart rate, speed and pace, and so on).  

Any sane human being would long since have thrown a hammer through a plate glass window. Seriously, I’ve reviewed motherboards that have clearer explanations of jumper settings. I’d have liked to see more information than that supplied by Garmin or Apple, beyond pace, time out, and distance. But navigation is only possible with Suunto.

  • Features score: 2/5

Engo 2: Performance and ease of use

Engo 2 smart glasses

(Image credit: Jeremy Kaplan)
  • Easy to start and connect
  • Gesture controls are so-so
  • Display is very legible

Press the power button right before your run and the Engo 2 glasses connect instantly, every single time. And once I started running with the Engo 2 glasses, I found the information to be super handy. There’s a dirty secret to smartwatches: Every time you raise your wrist to check your pace or heart rate, you break your stride, slowing you down, throwing off your cadence, and so on. With data directly in front of your face, you merely look to the side and can see it all. 

Even at pace, I had no issues checking the screens for information. The glasses tend to sit close to your face, which means they do steam up a bit from body heat, something I anticipate will worsen in the summer. But they’re easy to clean with microfiber cloth or simple soap and water. 

The glasses support gestures as a way of navigating between screens of information as well. A keystone-shaped sensor right between your eyes can detect when you pass your hands before your eyes and will automatically step between screens. And here’s where a manual would have come in handy, mentioning to me the existence of the gesture support, how to turn it on, and so on. Nope. There isn’t one.

I had the feature enabled through the ActiveLook app, but somehow it hadn’t been turned on in the eyeglasses themselves. I went back into the app, disabled the feature, and as I had been advised, force-quitted the app and disabled Bluetooth entirely before repairing it with my phone. Rinse and repeat to re-enable gestures, and the feature was suddenly up and working, an odd glitch I suppose.

Gestures work acceptably, though not brilliantly. I sometimes found myself passing my hand before my face twice to switch screens, and swiping only works in one direction you can’t go back a screen. 

  • Performance score: 4/5

Engo 2: Should I buy?

Buy it if...

Don't buy it if...

IDC: XR market declines 21% in 2022, Meta leads the VR segment, Nreal on top of the AR segment
6:44 pm | March 8, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: , , | Comments: Off

2022 was a tough year for the AR/VR market as global shipments dropped sharply to 8.8 million units for the full year – down 20.9% compared to 2021, according to data by IDC. The analysts say that the drop was expected as this is a fledgling market and certain global events have massive effects on it (both positive and negative). In 2021 the pandemic had a lot of people stuck at home with disposable cash, which was an opportunity for VR and AR headset makers. It also helped that increasing prices of electronics components and logistics hadn’t hit with full force yet, so the likes of the...

IDC: XR market declines 21% in 2022, Meta leads the VR segment, Nreal on top of the AR segment
6:44 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: , , | Comments: Off

2022 was a tough year for the AR/VR market as global shipments dropped sharply to 8.8 million units for the full year – down 20.9% compared to 2021, according to data by IDC. The analysts say that the drop was expected as this is a fledgling market and certain global events have massive effects on it (both positive and negative). In 2021 the pandemic had a lot of people stuck at home with disposable cash, which was an opportunity for VR and AR headset makers. It also helped that increasing prices of electronics components and logistics hadn’t hit with full force yet, so the likes of the...

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