These 39-gram AR glasses have me excited for the future

You can get AI help with Brilliant Labs low-cost, multimodal smart glasses that accept input from voice or camera and display results on a display.

These 39-gram AR glasses have me excited for the future

Alan Truly

By February 8, 2024 6:00AM

Brilliant Labs CEO models the company's new Frame smart glasses.Brilliant Labs CEO models the company’s new Frame smart glasses. Brilliant Labs

Smart glasses keep getting better and adding more features. The latest from Brilliant Labs is called Frame, a pair of smart glasses with two primary points of interest: an astounding weight of just 39 grams and some nifty AI features.

According to the online retailer Glasses.com, “the majority of eyeglasses weight 25 to 50 grams.” The fact that Frame sits right in the middle of this range is seriously impressive, especially since the glasses have a built-in camera and display. It’s even more impressive when you consider the price of $349. For reference, the Ray-Ban Meta Smart Glasses are only $50 cheaper despite weighing 49 grams and not including a display.

The display on Frame is monocular, meaning the text and graphics are displayed over the right eye only. It’s fairly bright (3,000 nits), though, so readability should be good even outdoors in sunlit areas.

A close-up of Brilliant Labs Frame smart glasses with a simulated image on the display.Brilliant Labs

The optics consist of a small prism occupying 20 degrees within your field of view. Brilliant Labs says this 640-by-400-pixel color display is roughly equivalent in size to an iPad held at arm’s length. The lenses are thick compared to sunglasses, but a quarter of an inch (6mm) is slim compared to popular smart glasses that feature 1080p displays.

Frame isn’t competing with Xreal’s Air 2 or any of the latest display smart glasses, which can serve as portable TVs or connect to your Steam Deck for gaming. Instead, it’s meant to be an AI assistant that helps you get through your day, along with taking photos, which can be done with the camera located in the bridge of the glasses. Brilliant Labs claims that the all-day battery life is based on using Frame 10 to 20 minutes each hour.

Naturally, many questions follow that intriguing introduction: What is Brilliant Labs? What can you do with Frame? How can the price be so low?

Brilliant Labs is an augmented reality startup founded in 2019. The company got some viral buzz last year with its first product Monocle, an open-source, clip-on lens that adds AI capabilities and a screen to regular glasses. AI researcher Bryan Chiang tweeted a video showing Monocle helping answer questions during a staged job interview.

say goodbye to awkward dates and job interviews ☹️

we made rizzGPT — real-time Charisma as a Service (CaaS)

it listens to your conversation and tells you exactly what to say next 😱

built using GPT-4, Whisper and the Monocle AR glasses

with @C51Alix @varunshenoy_ pic.twitter.com/HycQGGXT6N

— bryan chiang (@bryanhpchiang) March 26, 2023

Frame is the next product from Brilliant Labs, and from the looks of it, is a more attractive and compelling product. Frame AI glasses use Perplexity AI for fast response time and recent web information. Frame can also accept multimodal input, responding to your voice and what it can see in your environment.

According to Brilliant Labs, Frame can answer questions related to what you’re looking at. You can ask Frame to price-check products in a retail clothing store, and it will check Amazon and show you the results while your phone remains in your pocket or bag. Look at a home to search for its listing on Redfin or Zillow.

Beyond shopping, Frame can assist with DIY home repairs, provide directions, count steps, show restaurant reviews, and more. With real-time information accessed by the AI, the glasses become a universal assistant for nearly any task.

Frame might require a subscription to use some AI features, and prices haven’t been determined yet. Since Frame uses Perplexity AI, that could help give you an idea of the cost. Perplexity AI’s website has a free tier, but for more daily queries and multimodal use, you need a subscription that’s $20 per month or $200 per year.

Frame is now available for preorder via the Brilliant Labs website. Prescription lenses are bonded to Frame, so make sure to find that option before ordering. Brilliant Labs says Frame will begin shipping in April.

Editors' Recommendations

Google Glass is back? In spirit, yes I tried the next generation of smart glasses, and my nose loves them Meta’s AI smart glasses collection can live stream video — but they’re missing a big feature These AR glasses showed me the future of spatial computing — and I’m excited Apple’s secret AR glasses may have this genius feature for glasses users

Alan Truly

Alan is a Computing Writer living in Nova Scotia, Canada. A tech-enthusiast since his youth, Alan stays current on what is…

Here’s when Apple’s AR glasses could finally go on sale

Apple iGlasses

Right now, almost all the chatter around Apple’s secret projects is focused on the company’s Reality Pro mixed-reality headset. But now one well-known analyst has issued a new report shining a light on Apple’s upcoming augmented reality (AR) glasses -- and set out a projected release date for the hush-hush device.

The news comes from Apple guru Ming-Chi Kuo, who has a solid track record when it comes to leaks and predictions surrounding the Cupertino giant. According to Kuo, Apple’s AR glasses could launch in 2026 or 2027 at the earliest.

Read more

Lumus demonstrates futuristic 3,000-nit AR glasses at CES 2023

Lumus Z-Lens waveguide allows slim, stylish AR glasses

Lumus recently announced its next-gen waveguide technology for AR glasses that will have a wider field of view and a brighter display, while being much more efficient than other solutions. We spoke with the Vice President of Marketing David Andrew Goldman about Lumus' new Z-Lens design and technology to get the full scoop.

Building upon the already impressive, reflective waveguides used in the 2D Maximus design, the second generation Z-Lens can deliver a 3,000-nit display at 2K-by-2K resolution in an optical engine that's 50% smaller, resulting in a pair of AR glasses that could weigh as little as 50 grams (in a monocular design). This makes it possible to manufacture stylish, lightweight AR glasses without any tradeoffs, such as tinting the lens or frequent charging.

Read more

CES 2023: These 38-gram smart glasses aim to make AR practical

Vuzix AR wearables are remarkably thin, like regular glasses.

We spoke with Vuzix founder and CEO Paul Travers about the recently announced Vuzix Ultralite smart glasses manufacturer reference design. The Vuzix hardware will be the basis for some of the most practical, tech-enhanced eyewear arriving in 2023.

Smart glasses built on the Vuzix Ultralite design can provide hands-free access to notifications, directions, fitness tracking, and more. The need to continually haul a smartphone out of your pocket, interrupting conversations to check messages, might soon come to an end. That information will be unobtrusive, yet visible in a sharp, bright display that features microLED and waveguide technology.

Read more