Huawei's smart glasses actually look good


It wasn't the most event, however throughout this week's launch of Huawei's P30 and P30 professional, that conjointly featured the disclosing of latest Watch GT models and a try of wireless earbuds, the mobile large trotted out a for the most part unnoted try of good glasses. And glory hallelujah, they actually look kinda snazzy.


The glasses square measure the results of a partnership between Huawei and Korean eyewear whole mild Monster. Specs are sparse and no price was given, but here's what we know:
The glasses are built around audio interaction. They feature dual mics and speakers in the temples and are designed with voice assistance in mind. Tapping the temple will enable a user to answer a call.
                                        

Behind games and diversion, coaching and education and branded expertise were commonest use cases for increased reality (AR), virtual reality (VR), and mixed reality.

Gentle Monster is all regarding style, as its high-concept campaigns demonstrate. That allegiance to aesthetics is on full show in these specs. Because they don't have cameras, which make most smartglasses look like something a dentist might wear during an exam, the tech package virtually disappears into a stylish frames with big lenses that gesture at classic aviators.


Gentle Monster corporate executive Hankook Kim gestured at the fashion-forward approach to wearables and, as according by The Verge, managed to poke a competitor when he clowned Snapchat Spectacles: "How many people wish to we have a tendency toar this as we meet our friends or lovers?"


It's a fair question. Following the race in smartphones, many wearables manufacturers have been ham-fisted in trying to balance technology with form factors that don't look garish. Smart glasses from brands like ODG square measure technological marvels enabling  absolutely immersive increased reality experiences. Despite obtaining smaller and sleeker in progressive models, they conjointly scream: "I'm carrying a laptop on my face."
It's apples and oranges comparison ODG's crisp AR visuals to audio-only glasses from Huawei, of course, but the trend of starting with style and then seeing how much tech the design and therefore the market will bear could be a positive one for the wearables market. The recent shuttering of Intel's Vaunt smartglasses project is revealing. In that case, nice style garnered high marks from reviewers and customers however the frames were just too expenses and filled with an excessive amount of school to be broadly speaking appealing.

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