Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Emerging Tech
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Meta’s next smart glasses sound like a treat for humans stuck with prescription lenses

Codenamed Scriber and Blazer and already through FCC filings, Meta's prescription-focused AI glasses are shaping up to be the company's most inclusive wearable launch yet.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Close-up view of Oakley Meta HSTN Smart glasses.
Meta

For the billions of people who rely on corrective glasses every day (including me), smart glasses have always been a slightly awkward conversation. Sure, you can already pick up Ray-Ban Meta frames with your prescription built in, but it looks like Meta has something better in store for us. 

According to a Bloomberg report, Meta is working on two new AI glasses designed specifically for prescription wearers rather than treating them as an add-on afterthought. The models could arrive in rectangular and rounded frame styles. Unlike current offerings, they will be sold through conventional prescription eyewear retailers. 

Will the new prescription-friendly glasses look any different?

This could be the first time the Meta and Ray-Ban collaboration has directly aimed its vision-corrected crown at the primary audience. However, that is the extent of the information the outlet provides. There’s no word on how the frames might differ physically from the current models. 

Recommended Videos

However, if I were to speculate, it could have something to do with the lens housing, thickness, and the weight of the glasses. 

Beyond the hardware, I feel, what would truly make the purported AI glasses prescription-friendly is the ability to talk to any neighbourhood optician and have them work on it. That kind of accessibility could really make the glasses prescription-friendly. 

What else do we know about Meta’s upcoming smart glasses?

The Verge separately flagged FCC listings for the purported glasses internally codenamed “Scriber” and “Blazer.” Both are listed as production units, which typically signals a launch isn’t quite far off. A detail that stands out is that Blazer might come in a larger size than Scriber. 

Both models should also support Wi-Fi 6 UNII-4 band, something that the current Ray-Ban smart glasses lack. It would open the door to faster data transfer, and perhaps to livestreaming. Anyways, no display is expected on either model. 

What’s clear, however, is that Meta is eyeing prescription wearers as the biggest untapped market for its smart glasses.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
Everything is not okay with DuckDuckGo and its AI
A coordinated Reddit campaign appears to have tricked multiple AI search assistants into spreading false information.
The DuckDuckGo logo.

DuckDuckGo has built its reputation on privacy-first search, but this week, its AI assistant landed in hot water for an entirely different reason. Apparently, Duck.ai confidently claimed that U.S. President Donald Trump had died of rabies earlier this month, complete with fabricated details about Vice President JD Vance, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., and fake supporting news reports. None of it was true.

A fake Reddit campaign managed to fool Duck's AI

Read more
Stanford scientists built an AI that can design healthier, greener burgers
The new system balances nutrition, taste, cost, and environmental impact to create better recipes.
Burger, Food, Food Presentation - Man picking a burger

Artificial intelligence has already helped write code, discover drugs, and generate videos. Now, it's trying to make a better burger. Researchers at Stanford University have unveiled BurgerAI, a new AI system that designs burger recipes by balancing taste, nutrition, sustainability, and cost. The surprising part? In blind taste tests, diners liked some of the AI-created burgers just as much as, and in some cases more than, a popular fast-food burger.

BurgerAI is designed to invent recipes, not copy them

Read more
OpenAI reveals its most advanced GPT-5.6 model, but you can’t access it yet
GPT-5.6 brings new reasoning, autonomy, and cybersecurity capabilities, but its rollout is currently limited to government-approved customers.
OpenAI ChatGPT 5.6 Sol Terra Luna Announced

OpenAI has officially taken the wraps off GPT-5.6, its most advanced family of AI models to date. There's just one catch: unless you're one of a handful of approved customers, you won't be able to try it anytime soon. Instead of a broad launch, the company is beginning with a tightly controlled preview while it works through a new U.S. government review process.

GPT-5.6 is here, but only a few people can use it

Read more