Ray-Ban smart glasses could solve Facebook's design issues

(Image credit: Ray-Ban)

Would you buy Facebook smart glasses? The social media giant seems to be banking on it, with a new report by CNBC (opens in new tab) pointing to ambitious plans around AR wearables in the coming years.

Codenamed "Orion", the smart glasses are reportedly being poised as a replacement for smartphones. With functionality that includes taking and making calls, live-streaming footage to the internet, as well as using AR overlays to show information in the wearer's view, there's certainly a lot to keep a user occupied.

These claims come from "people familiar" with the device in question, who also stated that Facebook had brokered a deal with Ray-Ban (opens in new tab) parent company Luxottica, in order to provide a form factor for the smart glasses that people would actually want to wear.

Given Ray-Ban's reputation for stylish sunglasses with a classic design, the collaboration could well be what saves the product from sinking at launch.

Looking smart

It's unsurprising that Facebook would need the help, given the usual complaints around design for commercial smart glasses – whether Google Glass, Microsoft Hololens 2, or even the rounded Snapchat Spectacles 2. Obviously glasses are mainly for looking, but unless they look somewhat appealing too, AR glasses are unlikely to catch on in a mainstream market – which is why much of the chatter around the Magic Leap One AR headset has centered around its looks.

We reported earlier this year on speculation around Facebook's AR hardware plans, though there's been no official word on the capabilities, pricing, or likely release date for anything Facebook is working on in this area.

However, as with any in-development product, even reliable information could become redundant as Facebook's own internal plans change.

Henry St Leger

Henry is a freelance technology journalist. Before going freelance, he spent more than three years at TechRadar reporting on TVs, projectors and smart speakers as the website's Home Cinema Editor – and has been interviewed live on both BBC World News and Channel News Asia, discussing the future of transport and 4K resolution televisions respectively. As a graduate of English Literature and persistent theatre enthusiast, he'll usually be found forcing Shakespeare puns into his technology articles, which he thinks is what the Bard would have wanted. Bylines also include Edge, T3, and Little White Lies.