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Snap finally debuts its long awaited AR glasses, Specs, and, oof, they aren’t cheap

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Why This Matters

Snap's debut of its AR glasses, Specs, marks a significant step in consumer augmented reality technology, offering advanced features like spatial AI and multi-user gaming. Despite their high price, these glasses showcase Snap's commitment to integrating AR into everyday life, potentially influencing future industry standards and consumer adoption. Their release highlights the growing importance of wearable AR devices in both entertainment and productivity sectors.

Key Takeaways

At a spatial AI convention in Long Beach on Tuesday, Snap finally unveiled Specs, its long-awaited consumer smart glasses, and at $2,195, they don’t come cheap.

Specs will be available for preorder on June 16th, with a $200 refundable deposit, and are expected to ship this fall in the US, the UK, and France. The price is well above most Meta Ray-Bans (which can run as low as $350), though still far below the Apple Vision Pro’s $3,500 starting price. Either way, it’s steep enough to put Specs out of reach for most everyday consumers.

For over a decade now, Snap has been working on this device. Despite this, the last time the company released a consumer-facing version of the glasses was in 2019 — its latest iterations have been developer only. Earlier this year, Snap spun off a new company to focus exclusively on bringing the product to market.

Now the glasses are finally here. So what stands out on first impression?

Visually, Specs looks like a fairly normal pair of glasses — albeit a slightly bulkier, goggle-like pair. That extra bulk comes down to a key design choice: unlike some competitors, all of the computing takes place on the actual device, and it conveniently lacks a puck or tether.

Specs runs on two Snapdragon processors, and it comes with up to four hours of continuous battery life, plus a charging case that extends that to 20 hours total.

But what can you actually do with them? For starters, there are games, including ones that support shared multi-player sessions between two users. Snap calls this feature “EyeConnect,” and it’s activated simply by two wearers making eye contact with each other.

You can also watch videos (Snap says the display offers a 51-degree field of view and 16 million colors), record point-of-view footage and, at least in theory, get work done since the glasses allow you to surf the internet, connect to productivity apps, and check your email.

One standout feature is contextual AI. Look at an object and ask about it, and the glasses can pull up information on what you’re seeing — a glimpse of the kind of AI-assistant layer that’s becoming a competitive battleground in this category.

The glasses come in two sizes — a 47mm model, which weighs 132 grams (approximately 4.6 ounces) and a 52 mm model, which weighs 136 grams (4.7 ounces). That makes them noticeably heavier than Meta’s Ray-Bans — the first-gen Wayfarers weigh under an ounce — but far lighter than Apple’s Vision Pro, which tips the scales at 26.4 to 28.2 ounces.

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