Meta, EssilorLuxottica unveil Oakley smart glasses

Meta, EssilorLuxottica unveil Oakley smart glasses


Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg presents Orion AR Glasses as he makes a keynote speech during the Meta Connect annual event at the company’s headquarters in Menlo Park, California, on Sept. 25, 2024.

Manuel Orbegozo | Reuters

Meta and EssilorLuxottica on Friday unveiled a new line of Oakley smart glasses that include the social media company’s artificial intelligence assistant. 

The Oakley Meta HSTN, as the glasses are known, is the latest product borne from a multiyear partnership between the two companies. 

The HSTN smart glasses – which are pronounced how-stun – are pitched toward athletes and have a starting price of $399. The glasses represent Meta and Luxottica’s first expansion of their smart glasses beyond the Ray-Ban brand.

The companies released their first set of smart glasses in 2021, and they found a surprise success in the second generation of the device, which debuted in 2023. 

CNBC reported Tuesday that Meta was planning to release versions of its smart glasses under the Oakley and Prada brands. It’s unclear when Meta’s Prada deal and ensuing product line will be announced.

Meta said its latest smart glasses contain Oakley’s so-called PRIZM Lens technology, which are designed to help athletes see better “across changing light and weather conditions.” The Oakley Meta HSTN has a longer battery life and improved camera compared with the second-generation Ray-Ban Meta, which has a starting price of $299.

Like the Ray-Ban Meta glasses, the HSTN glasses use the Meta AI digital assistant and a corresponding smartphone app so users can ask questions about the weather or tell the device to record videos of their activities.

Some of the Oakley Meta HSTN’s various frame-and-lens color combinations include a gray variant with red lenses and a black model with black lenses. The gadget is also water resistant, the companies said. 

A limited-edition version of the HSTN glasses with gold lenses and accents will cost $499 and be available to preorder on July 11. The standard Oakley Meta HSTN will go on sale later this summer.

Other tech companies like Alphabet and Snap are also developing smart glasses. In May, Alphabet announced a $150 million partnership with Warby Parker to develop smart glasses that rely on Google’s Gemini AI assistant, while Snap this month said it would unveil its sixth-generation augmented reality smart glasses next year.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

Zuckerberg, Altman feud for top AI talent



Source

SK Hynix files confidentially for U.S. listing as it rides ‘unprecedented growth’ in memory market
Technology

SK Hynix files confidentially for U.S. listing as it rides ‘unprecedented growth’ in memory market

A SK Hynix flag (R) and a South Korean national flag (L) flutter outside the company’s Bundang office in Seongnam on Jan. 26, 2024. Jung Yeon-je | Afp | Getty Images SK Hynix revealed Wednesday that it made a confidential filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for a potential listing on Wall Street […]

Read More
Arm stock pops 6% as CEO Haas issues  billion revenue expectation for new chip
Technology

Arm stock pops 6% as CEO Haas issues $15 billion revenue expectation for new chip

Arm Holdings stock popped 6% in after-hours trading on Tuesday as CEO Rene Haas announced 2031 annual revenue expectations that were more than six times what it was in 2025. Haas unveiled Arm’s first in-house chip on Tuesday at an event in San Francisco, with Meta as the initial customer. CNBC got an exclusive first […]

Read More
Amazon acquires ‘approachable’ humanoid maker Fauna Robotics
Technology

Amazon acquires ‘approachable’ humanoid maker Fauna Robotics

Fauna CEO Rob Cochran with a Sprout robot. Courtesy: Fauna Robotics Amazon has acquired Fauna Robotics, a startup that builds “approachable” humanoid robots for consumers and businesses, the company confirmed Tuesday. Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed. “We are excited about Fauna’s vision to build capable, safe, and fun robots for everyone,” an Amazon spokesperson told CNBC […]

Read More