Connect with us

Science & Technology

Google Glass is back in the AI glasses game with Android XR smart glasses l TechCrunch

Remember google Glass and the rein of the “glasshole”? Well, Google’s giving wearable tech another shot with Android XR glasses that look like actual glasses this time.

Published

on

Remember google Glass and the rein of the “glasshole”? Well, Google’s giving wearable tech another shot with Android XR glasses that look like actual glasses this time.

Continue Reading
Advertisement
4 Comments

4 Comments

  1. @m10n31T5yChanan

    June 2, 2025 at 2:10 pm

    Showed this video to my boyfriend and now he’s convinced that laughter is the best aphrodisiac💕

  2. @olympiancss

    June 2, 2025 at 5:31 pm

    I’m all about AR and AR dev. Let’s go! 😁

  3. @TheRealAfroRick

    June 2, 2025 at 7:19 pm

    The glasses that do the same thing that people called the owners of the original version glassholes for? Are people less glassholes because they look like regular glasses and are more likely to be able to do the SAME THING with people not noticing because they look closer to regular eye ware?

    Always interesting to watch the media interpretation of these things.

  4. @juggernaut-d3g

    June 2, 2025 at 8:03 pm

    -_-

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

CNET

LG G6 vs Samsung S95H: One OLED Is Better!

Comparing the two biggest OLED TVs of 2026: the Samsung S95H and the LG G6. We break down the brightness, color accuracy, and gaming features to see which flagship OLED belongs in your living room. 00:00 – Introduction 00:12 – Design and Aesthetics: LG G6 vs. Samsung S95H 00:40 – Upgraded Anti-Reflective Coatings 01:07 –…

Published

on

Comparing the two biggest OLED TVs of 2026: the Samsung S95H and the LG G6. We break down the brightness, color accuracy, and gaming features to see which flagship OLED belongs in your living room.

00:00 – Introduction
00:12 – Design and Aesthetics: LG G6 vs. Samsung S95H
00:40 – Upgraded Anti-Reflective Coatings
01:07 – Brightness Innovations and Tandem OLED Technology
01:41 – Gaming Performance and Low Light Detail
02:02 – Samsung S95H Performance and Brightness Boosting
02:37 – Samsung’s Art Mode
03:01- Final Verdict and Buying Recommendations

Add CNET as a trusted news source
Never miss a deal again! See CNET’s browser extension 👉
Check out CNET’s Amazon Storefront:
Subscribe to CNET on YouTube:
Follow us on TikTok:
Follow us on Instagram:
Follow us on Bluesky:
Like us on Facebook:
CNET’s AI Atlas:
Follow us on X:
Visit CNET.com:

Continue Reading

Science & Technology

Is There an AI Bubble? Two Top VCs on Valuations and ARR Inflation | StrictlyVC LA 2026

Is AI venture capital in a bubble, or are we just in the steepest growth curve anyone’s ever seen? At StrictlyVC Los Angeles 2026, TechCrunch’s Editor-in-Chief Connie Loizos sat down with Chung Xu, Partner at Basis Set, and Carter Reum, co-founder of M13, to cut through the noise. They cover… – Why this cycle is…

Published

on

Is AI venture capital in a bubble, or are we just in the steepest growth curve anyone’s ever seen?

At StrictlyVC Los Angeles 2026, TechCrunch’s Editor-in-Chief Connie Loizos sat down with Chung Xu, Partner at Basis Set, and Carter Reum, co-founder of M13, to cut through the noise. They cover…

– Why this cycle is different from cloud and mobile, and why it isn’t
– The ARR inflation problem VCs helped create
– How to find defensible companies when OpenAI and Anthropic are coming for every vertical
– What the SpaceX liquidity wave means for LA’s tech ecosystem

Continue Reading

Science & Technology

He Dropped Out of MIT at 19 to Build America’s Drone Arsenal. It’s Working | StrictlyVC LA 2026

Ethan Thornton started Mach Industries at 16, dropped out of MIT, and is now running six simultaneous defense programs: jet engines, cruise missiles, a surface-to-air missile system, and a new 40-foot VTOL strike aircraft just contracted by the U.S. Navy. At StrictlyVC Los Angeles 2026, TechCrunch Editor in Chief Connie Loizos sat down with the…

Published

on

Ethan Thornton started Mach Industries at 16, dropped out of MIT, and is now running six simultaneous defense programs: jet engines, cruise missiles, a surface-to-air missile system, and a new 40-foot VTOL strike aircraft just contracted by the U.S. Navy.

At StrictlyVC Los Angeles 2026, TechCrunch Editor in Chief Connie Loizos sat down with the Mach Industries founder and CEO for a rare on-stage conversation about what it actually takes to build a serious defense hardware company from scratch — and why the U.S. has no choice but to move faster.

Continue Reading

Trending