Meta and Oakley announce new ‘perfomance AI’ smart glasses for athletes

Meta is expanding beyond its popular Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses with a new lineup of frames created in collaboration with Oakley. The Oakley Meta HSTN (pronounced HOW-stuhn, apparently) will be available in several variants, not unlike Meta’s other smart glasses. Meta first teased that it had a new partnership on the way earlier in June, and rumors that the company was expanding beyond its current frames were reported by Bloomberg back in January.

Despite rumors that the Oakley glasses would feature a camera embedded in the bridge of the frame, these first models keep the lens on one side and an LED privacy light on the other. The ultra-wide 12MP camera can capture footage in 3K, compared with the 1080p video that the Meta Ray-Bans are capable of recording. Along with taking POV video calls, shooting photos and livestreaming what you see, the camera can be used to answer questions about what you’re seeing with the help of Meta AI.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said on Threads that these frames, which are based on Oakley’s HSTN style, are “built for action.” So they’re perhaps designed to be more durable than Meta’s older models, though they have the same IPX4 water resistance rating. They feature Prizm and Prizm Polarized lens tech from Oakley, which are designed to protect wearers’ eyes from ultraviolet light.

The battery is rated for eight hours of typical use on a single charge (which would be double that of the Meta Ray-Bans) and up to 19 hours on standby. With the included charging case, you should be able to juice up Oakley Meta HSTN glasses from zero to 50 percent of battery capacity in 22 minutes, and to 85 percent in 45 minutes. The case, which is not water-resistant, is said to deliver up to 40 additional hours of on-the-go charging.

The new frames have open-ear Bluetooth speakers, five onboard microphones and speakers for talking to Meta AI and the ability to take calls, send messages and play music from your phone. There are touch controls on the side of the frames where you can adjust volume and so on. 

Meta has also been rolling out live translation features for its smart glasses. The company says the Oakley Meta HSTN glasses can help with accessibility too. You’ll be able to send messages and take photos hands-free. Meta notes that its AI will be able to describe what the camera is seeing. In addition, wearers will be able to connect to the Be My Eyes network and receive assistance from sighted volunteers.

Meta/Oakley

Meta and Oakley say these are “Performance AI glasses.” You’ll be able to ask Meta AI for contextual information that might help in the moment, such as the wind speed so you can try to adjust for that while you’re playing golf.

Meta working with Oakley shouldn’t come as too much of a surprise. Oakley is owned by EssilorLuxottica, the same fashion conglomerate that owns Ray-Bans. The companies extended their partnership with a new long-term agreement in September 2024 so that they could “collaborate into the next decade to develop multi-generational smart eyewear products.”

The first, limited-edition Oakley Meta HSTN have gold accents and 24K Prizm Polar lenses. They cost $499 and will be available to preorder starting on July 11 in the US, Canada, UK, Ireland, France, Italy, Spain, Austria, Belgium, Australia, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Finland and Denmark. Meta and Oakley plan to bring the lineup to Mexico, India and the United Arab Emirates later this year.

Other models will arrive later in the summer and start at $399. They’ll be available in the following frame and lens colors:

Oakley Meta HSTN Desert with Prizm Ruby Lenses

Oakley Meta HSTN Black with PrizmPolar Black Lenses

Oakley Meta HSTN Shiny Brown with Prizm Polar Deep-Water Lenses

Oakley Meta HSTN Black with Transitions Amethyst Lenses

Oakley Meta HSTN Clear with Transitions Grey Lenses

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/wearables/meta-and-oakley-announce-new-perfomance-ai-smart-glasses-for-athletes-140312796.html?src=rss 

’28 Years Later’ Ending Explained: See Our Breakdown

The Rage virus has destroyed Great Britain in ’28 Years Later,’ and someone named Jimmy is a new figure in the film. (Warning: spoilers are ahead for ’28 Years Later.’)

The Rage virus has destroyed Great Britain in ’28 Years Later,’ and someone named Jimmy is a new figure in the film. (Warning: spoilers are ahead for ’28 Years Later.’) 

Cloudflare CEO says people aren’t checking AI chatbots’ source links

Companies that develop generative AI always make it a point to say that they include links to websites in the answers that their chatbots generate for users. But Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince has revealed to Axios that search traffic referrals keep plummeting. Publishers are facing an existential threat, he said, because people aren’t clicking through those chatbot links and are relying more and more on AI summaries without digging deeper. 

Prince told Axios that 10 years ago, Google sent a publisher one visitor for every two pages it had crawled. Six months ago, the ratio was one visitor for every six pages, and now it’s one for every 18. OpenAI sent one visitor to a publisher for every 250 pages it crawled six months ago, while Anthropic sent one visitor for every 6,000 pages. These days, OpenAI sends one visitor to a publisher for every 1,500 pages, whereas Anthropic sends one visitor for every 60,000 pages. 

People have come to trust AI chatbots more over the past few months. The problem for publishers is that they don’t earn from advertisements if people don’t click through links leading to their websites, and that’s why Prince is encouraging them to take action to make sure they’re fairly compensated. Prince said Cloudflare is currently working on a tool to block bots that scrape content for large language models even if a web page already has a “no crawl” instruction. If you’ll recall, several outlets had reported in 2024 that AI companies have been ignoring websites’ Robots Exclusion Protocol, or robots.txt, files and taking their content anyway to train their technologies. 

Cloudflare has been looking for ways to block scrapers since last year. But it was only in March when Cloudflare officially introduced AI Labyrinth, which uses AI-generated content to “slow down, confuse, and waste the resources of AI Crawlers and other bots that don’t respect ‘no crawl’ directives.” It works by linking an unauthorized crawler a series of AI-generated pages that are convincing enough but don’t actually have the contents of the site the tool it’s protecting. That way, the crawler ends up wasting time and resources. 

“I go to war every single day with the Chinese government, the Russian government, the Iranians, the North Koreans, probably Americans, the Israelis, all of them who are trying to hack into our customer sites,” Prince said. “And you’re telling me, I can’t stop some nerd with a C-corporation in Palo Alto?”

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/ai/cloudflare-ceo-says-people-arent-checking-ai-chatbots-source-links-120016921.html?src=rss 

The Morning After: Can the golden Trump Phone actually be made in USA?

When the Trump family announced its debut into the glitzy world of phone carriers with Trump Mobile, it came with a phone, too: a not-gold slab called the T1. The biggest heady claim (beyond the fact that its sole $47.25 plan would be ‘true value”) is: how can any modern smartphone claim to be made in the US?

Alex Cranz takes Trump Mobile’s sales pitch to task. While we know a lot of the specs, there’s no reference to a processor — and that’s because practically all smartphone processors are not made in the US. That’s just the start.

— Mat Smith

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SpaceX’s Starship explodes again during a routine test

It was the 10th test flight in Starbase, Texas.

A SpaceX Starship vehicle has exploded yet again, and this time, the incident occurred before it even took off. NASASpaceflight captured the event in a livestream, wherein you can see the spacecraft (Ship 36) suddenly explode into a fireball after the company tested its forward flap and just before it was supposed to conduct a static fire test. The company said it was due to a “major anomaly”. Yeah, I’d agree.

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There’s a 1-800 number you can text for ChatGPT images

Is it for the boomers?

OpenAI has decided that there are not enough ways to generate sloppy AI images with ChatGPT. It announced that users can tap into the image generator by texting 1-800-ChatGPT on WhatsApp. The WhatsApp chatbot is “now available to everyone.” Anyone?

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Framework Laptop 12 review

Doing the right thing comes at a cost.

Engadget

Framework’s latest repairable laptop is a smaller 12-inch model, with the same modular features of its predecessors. With a bright plastic build, it’s aimed at students, and there’s a lot to like. According to Engadget’s Daniel Cooper, it’s a little too expensive, especially in the face of the cheap (and disposable) laptops it’s looking to supplant.

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Garmin’s newest wearable is a sleep tracker with a week of battery life

It’s meant to work with your Garmin smartwatch.

Garmin

It doesn’t look like the usual Garmin affair. The fitness tracking company is getting into bed. Literally. The Index Sleep Monitor offers week-long battery life with continuous pulse ox tracking for monitoring your blood oxygen saturation while you sleep. Garmin’s tracker is worn on the upper arm and tracks multiple metrics, including skin temperature, light, deep, and REM sleep stages as well as variations in heart rate and breathing.

Skin temperature tracking provides a clearer understanding of how your sleep environment impacts the quality of your sleep, even identifying potential illnesses based on your body temperature. It also features menstrual health tracking, with skin temperature changes useful for tracking cycles.

Continue reading.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/general/the-morning-after-engadget-newsletter-111557952.html?src=rss 

ZeniMax and Microsoft ratify union agreement

Members of the ZeniMax Workers United-CWA union have ratified the contract agreement with parent company Microsoft. This agreement with the union representing the video game studio’s quality assurance employees marks the first time Microsoft has entered into any union contract in the US. ZeniMax Studios is probably best known for its work on The Elder Scrolls Online. Stephen Totilo first reported on this news; we’ve reached out to Microsoft and the Communications Workers of America for additional comment.  

As with many organizing efforts, this step has been a long time coming. The group of employees voted to unionize in 2023, and Microsoft immediately recognized ZeniMax Workers United-CWA following the vote results. Microsoft also made its policy of neutrality toward union organizing at ZeniMax official in 2024. The QA workers from ZeniMax and Microsoft reached a tentative contract this May.

The contract includes provisions for wage increases and minimum salaries, as well as industry-specific content such as a clearer crediting policy recognizing the role of QA and protections for the employees regarding use of AI.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/gaming/zenimax-and-microsoft-ratify-union-agreement-224148192.html?src=rss 

Anne Burrell’s Health: All About the Late Chef’s Life Before Her Death

The late ‘House of Knives’ star died at the age of 55, and her death appeared to come suddenly. Learn everything we know about Burrell’s health.

The late ‘House of Knives’ star died at the age of 55, and her death appeared to come suddenly. Learn everything we know about Burrell’s health. 

Tesla’s robotaxi debut will reportedly be limited to only 10 cars in very specific areas

The long-promised launch of Tesla’s robotaxi service in Austin is scheduled for June 22, and it sounds like the company’s initial offering will be modest at best. The Financial Times writes that Tesla will only have around 10 cars available for rides and that the company plans to make them “avoid the city’s most challenging intersections.” If issues arise, remote operators will also reportedly be able to take control of the cars to make sure they reach their final destination.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk told CNBC in May that the robotaxi service might launch with less than a dozen cars, so that’s not necessarily a surprise, but the actual scope may be even smaller. Analysts The New York Times spoke to believe rides in Tesla’s robotaxi will only be available to “company employees or invited guests.” It could take months before the service is made available to the wider public.

Musk formally introduced the company’s robotaxi service and its self-driving Cybercab at an event in October 2024, but the idea has been a promised feature for Tesla owners for even longer. The pitch goes that since all Teslas are equipped with the cameras necessary for the company’s self-driving system, any of them can be converted into a cab while not in use. Musk believes autonomous transport could be so widespread that it becomes as cheap as mass transit, while being safer than relying on a human driver.

Whether the company’s Full Self Driving system can pull that off is an open question. Tesla is currently being investigated by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration for autonomous driving-related crashes. The company has also reportedly blocked the city of Austin from handing over its robotaxi records, which suggests it’s at least somewhat self-conscious about how it will perform.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/transportation/teslas-robotaxi-debut-will-reportedly-be-limited-to-only-10-cars-in-very-specific-areas-205802818.html?src=rss 

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