The Xreal One series also includes a small single camera that snaps in under the nose bridge, designed for future AI hook-ins. The company's founder and CEO, Chi Xu, sees AI as a big part of Xreal's future plans, making AR glasses more efficient in terms of interface. While the glasses are not yet wireless or able to be worn as normal eyeglasses, Xu believes that future versions could transition into AR glasses, with the company's new custom X1 chip playing a crucial role in this transition.
Key takeaways:
- Xreal's newest glasses, the Xreal One and Xreal One Pro, offer larger displays that can be pinned in space and work with any device that can output video via USB-C.
- The glasses have a custom chip, the X1, that can keep images fixed in space as you turn your head, and also feature enhanced audio by Bose, a 50- or 57-degree field of view, and optional AI-ready snap-in cameras.
- Xreal's founder and CEO Chi Xu sees the company's future in AI, more display customization, and a custom chip that could help build a better bridge with other devices.
- While the Xreal One and One Pro are not yet AR glasses, they are seen as a stepping stone towards that goal, with the potential to gradually add AR-type features and new ideas for input.