- Ray-Ban and Meta have created a new smart glasses design with Coperni
- It has a translucent black frame and mirror lentils
- It is limited to 3,600 units and costs $ 549 / £ 519 / AU $ 859
After last week’s teaser, the new meta-glasses with limited edition just fell just fallen-and I am more than a little disappointed with the result. Although at least it means you shouldn’t be too upset if you miss out on neighboring one of the only 3,600 pairs sold.
We had predicted that the new form may have drawn inspiration from A $ AP Rocky-Ray-Ban’s new creative director-but instead Ray-Ban and Meta have collaborated with Coperni to create a resin of his Wayfarers, who debuted last night (Sunday 9 March) at the Copernis Paris Fashion Week Show.
Like Meta and Ray-Ban’s earlier smart specifications for limited edition, these glasses can boast of a translucent frame-beautiful they choose a translucent variety rather than the clear frame we saw earlier. They also come with the gray mirror lenses and have the Copernia logo at the end of each arm.
In terms of hardware, they are identical to Meta and Ray-Bans other smart specifications, so you can trust them as open ear speakers for music, a first-person camera for photos and videos and a portable AI assistant that can help with tasks such as Live Translation.
I don’t want to pretend that smart glasses with limited edition are anything but stylish, but they are much more bland than expected. There are no new frame form or interesting unique design details that live up to my expectations from Meta and Ray-Ban’s first ever smart glasses along with a third brand.
And this disappointment is worsened by $ 549 / £ 519 / AU $ 859 Costs not only much more expensive than Standard Ray-Ban Wayfarer Smart Glasses (for $ 299 / £ 299 / AU $ 449), but also much more expensive than $ 429 / £ 429 price for its previous limited expenses.
Aggravate things, I would argue that the previously cheaper specifications with limited edition were a better deal because they boasted transitional lenses-which are ideal for smart glasses as you are not limited to wearing them in a weather ratio as opposed to the reflective lenses that the new couple is only practical in the sun.
If you totally disagree with me and love the new Coperni collapse you will probably act quickly. With only 3,600 available throughout the US, Canada, UK, Ireland, Austria, Belgium, France, Italy, Spain, Germany, Finland, Norway, Denmark, Sweden and Australia, they will probably sell out soon.