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Facebook has partnered with Ray-Ban’s parent company to create smart glasses

Hoping to avoid the failure that was the consumer version of Google Glass, Facebook has teamed up with Luxottica, the parent company of brands like Ray-Ban, to help with the development of its own augmented reality glasses, sources told CNBC. But it could still be at least three years before Facebook’s smart specs actually hit the market.
According to the CNBC report, Facebook has been developing its own augmented reality glasses at its Facebook Reality Labs in Redmond, Washington, for a few years now. But the project, code-named Orion, has reportedly seen enough troubles—including miniaturizing the hardware into a device consumers would actually want to wear—that Facebook has partnered with Luxottica for assistance. Although it remains to be seen what the glasses maker can offer the social media giant aside from a manufacturing pipeline for lens and frames.

The partnership could see the glasses arrive as early as 2023, according to CNBC, and they would purportedly be positioned as an alternative to constantly checking a smartphone, giving wearers access to information like notifications and text messages through a small display in the lens. The AR glasses may also potentially work with a voice-activated smart assistant that Facebook is developing to compete with Google Assistant, Alexa, Cortana, and Siri, which would allow the glasses to do everything from place calls to transcribe messages, to perform quick searches. It’s also safe to assume that accessing Facebook and posting updates would be a key part of the AR glasses’ functionality.

With access to Oculus’ technology, whose VR headsets are arguably some of the most successful glasses-based devices, Facebook seems well-positioned to deliver an AR glasses product that consumers might actually embrace. But it will face stiff competition from Google, which continues to develop Google Glass (even if it’s currently only targeted to professionals) and Apple, which is rumored to be working on its own AR headset. Facebook might now be in a position to win the race, but it will need to deliver a better experience than the Facebook Phone did to capitalize on that victory.

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Tomorrow's top smartphone? That'll probably be a 5G phone, like the Galaxy S10 5G, and then, eventually, a foldable phone with 5G, starting with the Huawei Mate X and Samsung Galaxy Fold. But foldable phones are unproven and 5G in the US isn't in enough cities around the country to recommend. Our list will remain practical.

Our pick for best phone isn't just crowning the newest iPhone and calling it a day, though our list does have a lot of familiar names: Apple, Samsung, Google, Xiaomi, Oppo, Vivo and LG, all in the top 15. Newer companies in the US like Huawei and OnePlus make the list, too, though their limited availability is noted.

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