#RayBanStories

2024-10-03

Las gafas inteligentes de Meta, las Ray-Ban Stories, se están volviendo cada vez más inteligentes. Con la última actualización, estas gafas con IA integrada ahora pueden ayudarte a encontrar tu auto en un aparcamiento, enviar mensajes de voz, configurar temporizadores e incluso llamar a un número de teléfono o escanear códigos QR. Las gafas inteligentes de Meta ofrecen múltiples funcionalidades.

Adiós a las búsquedas interminables: Encuentra tu auto con Meta AI

¿Cuántas veces has dado vueltas por el parking sin recordar dónde aparcaste? Con la nueva actualización, las Ray-Ban Stories pueden recordar por ti. Como lo demostró Mark Zuckerberg en un reel de Instagram, solo tienes que preguntar: «Oye Meta, ¿recuerdas dónde aparqué?» y la IA te guiará hasta tu coche. Usar las gafas inteligentes de Meta para encontrar tu coche es sencillo.

Esta función, junto con otras nuevas herramientas de IA, fue presentada durante el evento Connect del mes pasado y ya está disponible para usuarios en Estados Unidos y Canadá.

Mayor reconocimiento del lenguaje natural: «Oye Meta» es todo lo que necesitas

Olvídate de las frases complicadas. Gracias a las mejoras en el reconocimiento del lenguaje natural, ya no tendrás que decir «Oye Meta, mira y dime». Simplemente di «Oye Meta» seguido de tu solicitud. Las gafas inteligentes de Meta permiten comandos más simples.

Mensajes de voz, temporizadores y más: Las Ray-Ban Stories se vuelven más útiles

Además de encontrar tu coche, las gafas ahora también permiten:

  • Enviar mensajes de voz: Comunícate con tus contactos sin necesidad de sacar tu teléfono.
  • Configurar temporizadores y recordatorios: Mantén tu día organizado con la ayuda de Meta AI.
  • Realizar llamadas telefónicas: Llama a cualquier número con solo pedírselo a tus gafas.
  • Escanear códigos QR: Accede a información y enlaces de forma rápida y sencilla.

¿Qué falta? La traducción en vivo aún no está disponible

Aunque la actualización trae consigo un conjunto de nuevas funciones, la esperada función de traducción en vivo aún no está lista. Andrew Bosworth, director técnico de Meta, no ha dado una fecha estimada para su lanzamiento, pero se espera que esté disponible en futuras gafas inteligentes de Meta.

Las Ray-Ban Stories y la privacidad: Un debate abierto

Recientemente, estas gafas inteligentes han sido protagonistas de un debate sobre la privacidad. Dos estudiantes de la Universidad de Harvard utilizaron las Ray-Ban Stories para recopilar información personal de desconocidos, incluyendo direcciones, números de teléfono, datos de familiares e incluso números parciales de la Seguridad Social. Este incidente ha puesto de manifiesto las preocupaciones sobre el uso de la tecnología de reconocimiento facial y la protección de datos. Esto indica que las gafas inteligentes de Meta deben usar tecnología de manera ética.

¿Cómo funciona el reconocimiento facial en las Ray-Ban Stories?

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Mark Zuckerberg (@zuck)

Las gafas utilizan una combinación de cámaras y algoritmos de IA para identificar rostros. Cuando las gafas detectan un rostro, lo comparan con una base de datos de rostros conocidos. Si hay una coincidencia, las gafas pueden proporcionar información sobre esa persona, como su nombre o su relación contigo.

¿Qué medidas de seguridad ofrece Meta?

Meta afirma que se toma la privacidad muy en serio y que ha implementado medidas de seguridad para proteger la información de los usuarios. Sin embargo, este incidente demuestra que todavía hay margen de mejora en cuanto a la protección de datos y la transparencia en el uso de la tecnología de reconocimiento facial.

El futuro de las gafas inteligentes: Un camino con desafíos

Las gafas inteligentes como las Ray-Ban Stories tienen el potencial de revolucionar la forma en que interactuamos con el mundo digital. Sin embargo, es crucial abordar las preocupaciones sobre la privacidad y la seguridad para garantizar una adopción responsable de esta tecnología. Las gafas inteligentes de Meta son una tecnología prometedora con desafíos.

Fuente: Threads de Andrew Bosworth, director técnico de Meta.

Compartir:

https://tecnologiageek.com/olvida-las-vueltas-al-parking-las-gafas-inteligentes-de-meta-te-guian-a-tu-auto/

#F4F4F4 #gafasInteligentes #inteligenciaArtificial #meta #RayBanStories #ReconocimientoFacial

2024-09-17

corriere.it by Daniela Polizzi
«Gli occhiali? Piattaforma tecnologica del futuro»: Zuckerberg prolunga l’accordo Essilux-Meta

Dopo i Ray-Ban Stories, Essilux e Meta saranno partner tecnologici e industriali per 10 anni per realizzare gli smart glass del futuro

Translated:
Zuckerberg extends agreement with Essilux-Meta for glasses platform.

After Ray-Ban Stories, EssilorLuxottica and Meta will be technology and industrial partners for 10 years to create the smart glasses of the future.

#EssilorLuxottica #Meta #zuckerberg #EssiluxMeta #RayBanStories
corriere.it/economia/aziende/2

2023-10-03

Algunas a :

👉 Friendica
👉 Pixelfed
👉 mensajes directos (atentos a @dansup)
👉 Mastodon
👉 SimpleX
👉 Organic Maps
👉 action cam
👉 VRChat o cualquier juego multijugador online con amplia selección de avatares y entornos
👉 Matrix (Element)

Edit: -Mozilla Hubs, DEP.

dreigdreig
2023-09-28

Las nuevas , las , gafas inteligentes mejoradas de con las que grabaremos estos reels dentro de unos años (cuando sea rica ;)) Mejorar la realidad, no mudarnos al metaverso,
instagram.com/reel/CxvAs8OqEEp

2023-04-02

Es izmēģināju Ray Ban Stories viedbrilles - tiešām interesanta pieredze! Īpaši labi bija ieskatīties pasaulē caur dažādiem interaktīviem stāstiem. #RayBanStories

2022-11-17

Playing with shadows and transition lenses on my #RayBanStories

A pair of Ray Ban Stories smart glasses, with the shadow of some flowers on the lenses
:verified: :verified: Juhajuha@mastodon.nz
2022-11-09

Totally unlikely to go wrong.
---
RT @ray_ban
Capture your favorite holiday moments right from your glasses. #RayBanStories
twitter.com/ray_ban/status/158

petapixel (unofficial)petapixel@ծմակուտ.հայ
2021-11-19

This is the World’s First Magazine Cover Shot with Smart Glasses

British photographer Rankin recently shot the cover of Hunger Magazine with Facebook's new Ray-Ban Stories, making it the first magazine cover ever captured with smart glasses. It also happens to feature an actress wearing smart glasses.

Facebook and Ray-Ban's partnership into eyewear launched in early September with the Ray-Bay Stories glasses. These smart glasses launched in 20 different combinations in classic Ray-Ban styles -- Wayfarer, Wayfarer Large, Round, and Meteor -- and five colors with a range of lenses including clear, sun, transition, and prescription.

The glasses integrate a pair of five-megapixel cameras that Facebook positioned as mainly designed to let the wearer capture everyday moments as they happen from a first-person perspective. In addition to photos, the glasses can also capture up to 30-second videos. The camera can be activated either with the capture button on the glasses themselves or hands-0free via Facebook Assistant voice commands.

At no point were these glasses ever strongly marketed as high-end imaging devices, as clearly five-megapixels is well below even what lower-end smartphones currently offer. Still, that did not seem to deter Rankin.

[

View this post on Instagram

](https://www.instagram.com/p/CWVcWtZs2W0/?utm_source=ig_embed&utm_campaign=loading)

A post shared by Hunger Magazine (@hungermagazine)

Facebook tells PetaPixel that the photo is an industry first and new experience for both the photographer and social media brand.

"The November issue brings to life what Ray-Ban Stories can create in the hands, and face, of a professional photographer," a Facebook representative tells PetaPixel. "Rankin’s photography spotlights how the stylish smart frames, capable of shooting a magazine cover, can seamlessly fit into everyday life."

The magazine cover, which features British Actress Anya Chalotra who is known for her role as Yennefer of Vengerberg in the fantasy drama series The Witcher on Netflix, was shot in Rankin’s United Kingdom studio. Chalotra is also photographed wearing Ray-Ban Stories on the cover and across the four-page editorial spread available now on newsstands in the UK.

“I like trying new things and this is what I did with Ray-Ban Stories, it’s the first time a cover has been shot using smart glasses as a camera. The glasses are great, and I look forward to seeing what the next generations of Ray-Ban Stories can do," Rankin says.

The cover is one of several alternative covers that Hunger is running for its Beauty Issue. The full set of cover photos can be seen on Boutique Mags.

Image credits: Magazine cover provided courtesy of Meta.

#culture #mobile #news #anyachalotra #beautyissue #beautyphotography #coverphoto #facebook #hungermagazine #magazinecover #meta #rankin #rayban #raybanstories #socialmedia #thewitcher

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petapixel (unofficial)petapixel@ծմակուտ.հայ
2021-09-22

Regulators: Facebook’s Smart Glasses LED Indicator May Be Insufficient

Regulators in Europe have expressed concerns to Facebook that its new Ray-Ban Stories smart glasses have not been well tested in the field and that the light that indicates the glasses are recording may not be sufficient to assure privacy.

Ray-Ban Stories were launched on September 9 and have already gone on sale. The glasses come in a range of styles, which perhaps further makes it difficult to pick them out in a crowd, and feature dual integrated 5-megapixel cameras that are designed to allow the wearer to capture moments from a first-person perspective. The smart glasses can use voice-activated controls to take short videos and capture photos of the wearer's surroundings. When the glasses are actively recording, a white LED indicator light illuminates as an alert.

But as reported by TechCrunch, both Ireland's Data Protection Commission (DPC) and Italy's privacy watchdog Garante have voiced concerns that Facebook's new smart glasses will pose a privacy risk, as the LED indicator light may not be sufficient to alert those around a wearer that the glasses are actively recording.

"The Irish DPC and the Italian Data Protection Regulator, the Garante, are both concerned about the means by which those captured in the videos and photos can receive notice they are being recorded. While it is accepted that many devices including smart phones can record third party individuals, it is generally the case that the camera or the phone is visible as the device by which recording is happening, thereby putting those captured in the recordings on notice," the DPC writes in a short letter on its website.

"With the glasses, there is a very small indicator light that comes on when recording is occurring. It has not been demonstrated to the DPC and Garante that comprehensive testing in the field was done by Facebook or Ray-Ban to ensure the indicator LED light is an effective means of giving notice."

The two groups have asked Facebook to confirm and demonstrate that the LED indicator light is effective in its design and have also requested that the company run an information campaign to alert the public to the new technology and let them know that there are now less obvious ways that exist to record photos and videos.

A Facebook representative told TechCrunch that it was aware of the questions that the new technology would bring and agrees that it is important for it to be a part of the conversation surrounding them.

"We will be working together with our regulatory partners, including the Irish DPC as our lead regulator, to help people understand more about how this new technology works, and the controls they have,” Facebook says.

Facebook additionally says it alerted the DPC about the glasses ahead of launch, and while the DPC confirms it was aware of the glasses before public sales opened, the group was not consulted on the product's specific features.

“We were briefed and provided with details on compliance with data protection requirements during the summer but not consulted on the development of the product (design and feature[s] had already been done when they came to us),” Deputy Commissioner of the DPC Graham Doyle told TechCrunch.

“We shared the info with other DPAs and ourselves and the Garante in particular raised concerns with Facebook -- to do with the operation and field testing of the glasses.”

#culture #mobile #news #essilorluxottica #eu #europe #facebook #privacy #rayban #raybanstories #regulators #smartglasses #smartsunglasses #sunglasses #wearablecamera

image
UBW@VR 30th Anniversaryhakkenden@mstdn.guru
2021-09-18

My new gadget… #RayBanStories

2021-09-14

Is anyone looking into how to make the Scramble Suits from A Scanner Darkly? I think we're going to need them with #RayBanStories now...

2021-09-14

Big news everyone!!!
I've worked out a way to stop yourself being recorded by a pair of #RayBanStories glasses...

customink.com/designs/joinmast

#Facebook #Privacy #FacebookBlockingMastodonLinks

informapirata ⁂ :privacypride:informapirata@mastodon.uno
2021-09-13

#RayBanStories e #GDPR: il punto dopo le spiegazioni richieste dal @GPDP_IT
Di Andrea #Lisi su #AgendaDigitale
[il nostro dubbio invece è: e se #Facebook ti banna, che ci fai? 😂]
key4biz.it/smart-ray-ban-non-f

petapixel (unofficial)petapixel@ծմակուտ.հայ
2021-09-11

Why Not Wear a Camera on Your Face?

Think about it for a minute: if you’re willing to hold a camera to your eye, why not have a camera attached to it that can snap away, by voice instruction, instead of finger on the shutter?

That’s the premise of Facebook’s new $299 camera glasses that also play music and podcasts. And if you just got an icky feeling hearing that the Social Network wants access to your eyes and ears while you are out and about, know that Facebook has gone out of its way to have a partner do the marketing.

The glasses are officially called Ray-Ban Stories, and they’re being sold by the sunglass maker “in partnership” with Facebook on their website and other stores.

But that doesn’t change the bottom line. The glasses are made by Ray-Ban, but the software comes from the most notorious tracker of our personal and professional lives, Facebook.

Do you want to give Facebook more clues about where you shop and visit, who you hang out with and such? Sure, they say they don’t do that with these glasses, but this is Facebook. How much do you trust it?

So let’s take Facebook out of the equation and just talk about the concept of glasses that can double as a camera. Imagine that these smart glasses were made by Canon, Nikon or Sony, companies with solid reputations when it comes to our privacy.

I’m in. The idea makes sense to me.

If I can hold a camera to my eye and capture, the composition process would be more efficient with smart glasses. I love the idea of snapping something I would see right then and there, without having to pull the camera to my eye, or grabbing the smartphone from my pocket, opening the camera app and lining it up to shoot.

With camera glasses I could do all this by just positioning my head to frame the shot. I haven’t tried the Ray-Ban shades, but I’m assuming my head in place and glasses on my nose would be steadier than hand any day of the week. So potentially sharper photos.

And you could do some pretty cool POV videos by just turning the other cheek.

If I got pulled over by a cop and wanted to record the conversation, it would be less obtrusive to just let it roll from my glasses instead of shoving a smartphone at the officer.

Street photography? Wow.

You could take all sorts of photos of people without them noticing and getting mad at you. (Facebook does note that “the Capture LED light lets people know when you’re taking a photo or video so you won’t catch anyone near you off guard.”) How’s that gonna work on a bright sunny day? I’m guessing the light won’t be very visible.

As my mind reeled with all awful things one could do with these devices (a school soccer coach was arrested recently for installing a tiny camera in the girl’s bathroom), Facebook beat me to the punch by identifying them.

" Stop recording if anyone expresses that they would rather not be in a photo or video." Duh.

Don’t have the glasses on in private spaces like a doctor’s office, locker room, public bathroom, or place of worship. Obviously. But who wears sunglasses to church?

Let people see the LED light. If you chose to cover it up, as Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg is said to do, by applying tape over his computer webcam, you are breaking the rules. “Tampering with this light is against our terms of service.”

Be good. “Don’t use your glasses to engage in harmful activities like harassment, infringing on privacy rights, or capturing sensitive information like pin codes.” Oh boy.

Now while it’s hard to believe that smart glasses technology in my lifetime will ever rival that of my Sony cameras, with manual controls for shutter speed and exposure, who knows? Apple and Android smartphones have gotten very close.

For now, the Facebook camera shoots low-resolution 5 megapixel photos and videos, about half the size of what I get on my iPhone 12 Pro (4032 x 2268 vs. Ray-Ban’s 2592 x 1944) and even lower 1184×1184 square videos.

And there’s a clunky method, explained by Facebook, that transfers the photos to a companion app. They then can be shared on Facebook, Instagram, What’s App and other places.

Google Glass and Snapchat Spectacles both tried to do the same thing, and were costly flops. Amazon’s Alexa audio glasses haven’t gone mainstream, and while I can’t tell you how popular the $250 Bose shades are, I can tell you this: AirPods sound a whole lot better than the tinny speakers in the sunglass frame.

The idea of a camera attached to your eye sounds smart, but let’s face it: most of us are rather dumb to the idea. I don’t see that changing soon.

But for me, I’m ready. Not for the creepy stuff, but the ease of capturing moments instantly when I’m out and about without having to grab the camera. Put a 12 megapixel, super sharp camera in my sunglasses that doesn’t have software from Facebook, and sign me up.

About the author: Jefferson Graham is a Los Angeles area writer/photographer and the host of the travel photography streaming TV series Photowalks. The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author. You can subscribe to Jeff’s newsletter here. This article was also published here.

#culture #editorial #equipment #cameraglasses #commentary #facebookglasses #glasses #jeffersongraham #rayban #raybanstories

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petapixel (unofficial)petapixel@ծմակուտ.հայ
2021-09-09

Facebook and Ray-Ban Launch Camera-Equipped Smart Glasses

Facebook and Ray-Ban have partnered to release a pair of smart glasses with integrated cameras. Called Ray-Ban Stories, they appear to be Facebook's answer to Snapchat Spectacles.

The sunglasses are built in partnership with Facebook and Ray-Ban's parent company EssilorLuxottica and are the first product to be produced as a result of a multi-year partnership between the two companies. Ray-Ban Stories will be available in 20 different combinations in classic Ray-Ban styles -- Wayfarer, Wayfarer Large, Round, and Meteor -- and five colors with a range of lenses including clear, sun, transition, and prescription.

The glasses are available online and in select retails stores in the United States, Australia, Canada, Ireland, Italy, and the United Kingdom.

Ray-Ban Stories feature dual integrated 5-megapixel cameras that are designed to let the wearer capture everyday moments as they happen from a first-person perspective.

"You can easily record the world as you see it, taking photos and up to 30-second videos using the capture button or hands-free with Facebook Assistant voice commands," Facebook says.

Hard-wired LED lights on the front of the glasses illuminate when the glasses are actively recording so that those around the wearer know that they are on camera. The glasses also feature open-ear speakers and a three-microphone array to deliver what Facebook calls "richer voice and sound transmission" for use in video recording or phone calls. The glasses use beamforming technology and background noise suppression as well to give calls an experience that Facebook says is akin to dedicated headphones or earbuds.

The Ray-Ban Stories will pair with the new Facebook View app to allow users to share content with friends and social media followers. The app is available on both iOS and Android and is designed to make it simple to import, edit, and share content captured on the smart glasses with a variety of apps including Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Messenger, Twitter, TikTok, and Snapchat. Any content created with the glasses can be exported to a phone's camera roll and shared from that point as well.

"From the start, we designed Ray-Ban Stories with privacy in mind, adding numerous built-in features to provide control and peace of mind to both device owners and bystanders," Facebook says. "More information on these features, as well as our new guidelines for responsible use, can be found on the Ray-Ban Stories privacy microsite."

Ray-Ban Stories start at $299.

#mobile #news #products #essilorluxottica #facebook #rayban #raybanstories #smartglasses #smartsunglasses #sunglasses #wearablecamera

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informapirata ⁂ :privacypride:informapirata@mastodon.uno
2021-09-09

[Soluzione:]
Facebook e #RayBan lanciano oggi i #RayBanStories (e non sembra che il marchio di Facebook appaia da nessuna parte sul prodotto).
Di Sam #Byford su #TheVerge
theverge.com/platform/amp/2021

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