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Charting a Path to Viable Consumer AR Glasses, Part IV

AR Insider

Charting a Path to Viable Consumer AR Glasses, Part IV. W elcome back to our series on the path to viable consumer AR. Over four parts, we’ll explore the biggest barriers and potential solutions to making consumer-grade Augmented Reality (AR) glasses that people will actually wear. Flipping Assumptions on their Head.

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A new kind of screen could help computer glasses replace the.

AllThingsVR

It doesn’t burn me, because it’s a computer image displayed through a new kind of headset prototype built by Avegant, a Silicon Valley-based startup. Avegant calls it “light field.” Vimeo/Avegant He sees Avegant’s new display as a key part of the technology that will one day enable smart glasses to replace our phones and other screens.

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The AR Show: Designing AR for the Way Our Eyes Work

AR Insider

This article features the latest episode of The AR Show. Based on a new collaboration, episode coverage joins AR Insider’s editorial flow including narrative insights and audio. Guests’ opinions are their own. This can be said for Avegant CEO Edward Tang. Soon after that, Avegant was born.

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