I mentioned yesterday that there was another glasses incoming. Here they are...
Those are the opposite of the pair I got at Shady Ray's yesterday: bigger in every dimension. Built-in tech. Tech? Yes, thanks for asking. These are the Ray Ban Wayfarer Meta Gen 2 glasses. Considered "smart" glasses. You can take and receive phone calls through these. Listen to music and podcasts; speakers built-in; several microphones, too. Take photos and video. All powered by Meta's (think: Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg) Artificial Intelligence.
They are a little more "structured" than a typical pair of Wayfarers, but they have the same shape and styling. I got them set up - everything is done through the Meta app. That app would like access to all your contacts and all your photos and videos. Nope. You can control most of the tech in these glasses hands-free by saying, "Hey, Meta" and telling it what you want it to do... make a phone call, send a text, take a photo or video, play music. BUT, when you do that, Meta downloads all that to their servers, as well... for "training purposes," of course. You can also do most of that by pressing/holding the button on the right bow or tapping/sliding your finger on the outside of that bow. And, Meta doesn't get that.
Photos get downloaded directly to your phone when you start the Meta app. The camera will take 3K photos - that wouldn't be bad, but they are only in "portrait" format, vertical. It can't shoot horizontal. It is nice that the video is "hands free", but you have to guess what the camera is seeing; that will get better with practice and use.
I pointed the camera down at Stella, and...
That's a pretty wide point of view, and not great resolution. The same image cropped in on Stella...
Pretty pixelated when cropped in like that. I like the premise of the video, especially the hands-free part, but anything I shoot for my YouTube channel is horizontal. We'll see how this plays out... I bought it from Amazon (well, Joan ordered it), so it can be returned.
Oh, and they are decent sunglasses, too; a bit heavier than typical. I will need to try them while driving - that is where I picture using these. Again, we'll see.
There were some considerations on my part before ordering these. The tech part looks good; entertaining even. The camera/video thing is another concern: yes, these could be used for "sketchy" purposes. Especially if people aren't aware that you are shooting. There is a light on the front upper right corner of these glasses that flashes when you take a photo and continuously flashes when shooting video (the premise being it lets people know you are shooting). There are scads of videos on the internet that show you how to disable that light. So, if someone is wearing these around a playground, in a locker room, or in a restroom, that would be downright creepy. Just the whole idea of that made me consider not getting these.
So, some concerns, some interest and curiosity. Looking at user videos online, some wearers have had random people question if they are taking photos and video. But most say that "people generally don't notice." Again, if it is a problem, I'll be sending these back.
These will not replace any of my cameras. But, they may add another perspective. Or not.











