Walk up to someone wearing a pair of Halliday’s smart glasses, and you might not notice they’re looking at smartphone notifications, live language translations, or advice from an AI assistant.
The only giveaway is the tiny green dot of light on their eyeball.
Wearables startup Halliday launched a pair of smart glasses at CES 2025 that projects a 3.5-inch round display into your line of sight. The device creating the display is called the DigiWindow, and it’s a tiny round module — smaller than your pinky nail — that sits on the inside of the Halliday’s frames just above your right eye.
By pointing the DigiWindow straight at your eye, Halliday avoids the need for those pricey AR lenses, which makes these smart glasses less expensive than other AR prototypes.
Read more on Halliday's smart glasses at the link in the bio
Article by Maxwell Zeff
Image Credits: Halliday
#TechCrunch #technews #artificialintelligence #startup #smartglasses
The only giveaway is the tiny green dot of light on their eyeball.
Wearables startup Halliday launched a pair of smart glasses at CES 2025 that projects a 3.5-inch round display into your line of sight. The device creating the display is called the DigiWindow, and it’s a tiny round module — smaller than your pinky nail — that sits on the inside of the Halliday’s frames just above your right eye.
By pointing the DigiWindow straight at your eye, Halliday avoids the need for those pricey AR lenses, which makes these smart glasses less expensive than other AR prototypes.
Read more on Halliday's smart glasses at the link in the bio
Article by Maxwell Zeff
Image Credits: Halliday
#TechCrunch #technews #artificialintelligence #startup #smartglasses
Walk up to someone wearing a pair of Halliday’s smart glasses, and you might not notice they’re looking at smartphone notifications, live language translations, or advice from an AI assistant.
The only giveaway is the tiny green dot of light on their eyeball.
Wearables startup Halliday launched a pair of smart glasses at CES 2025 that projects a 3.5-inch round display into your line of sight. The device creating the display is called the DigiWindow, and it’s a tiny round module — smaller than your pinky nail — that sits on the inside of the Halliday’s frames just above your right eye.
By pointing the DigiWindow straight at your eye, Halliday avoids the need for those pricey AR lenses, which makes these smart glasses less expensive than other AR prototypes.
Read more on Halliday's smart glasses at the link in the bio 👆
Article by Maxwell Zeff
Image Credits: Halliday
#TechCrunch #technews #artificialintelligence #startup #smartglasses
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