Great review of the X2. I've been waiting a long time for a non-sponsored review about them. There are so many contradictory opinions about them on Reddit, Discord, and the Indiegogo page that your optimism makes me more confident during my wait.
Great video! I invented my own categories for the different types of smart glasses as well. You did a great job breaking down the different available options and what they do.
I've come to the conclusion that there are 4 types of consumer level glasses: 1. Smart Glasses (speaker/mic/camera) Entry-level with no screen in lens, connects to smartphone by Bluetooth 2. Wearable Display Glasses (screen in lens) Bird-bath type optics. Wired connection to phone in order to run with no processor inside glasses. up to 52 FOV avg 3. HUD Glasses (screen/camera/mic/radios) Waveguide optics. Standalone wireless glasses 4. AR Glasses (screens/cameras/mic/speaker/processor/sensors) Wired & Standalone Wireless. Waveguide optics 26 FOV 640x480 & Bird-bath type optics up to 52 FOV 3840x1080 Top picks: 1 - TCL RayNeo X2 is the best standalone wireless AR/XR glasses 🤓 2 - INMO Air 2 (standalone wireless) 3 - Xreal Air 2 Ultra (wired - no internals) No need to apologize because videos like these are much needed! 👍🏾
@@crashawnbradley579 honestly, I think the vitures would be pretty awesome, but bang for buck wise. If you can snag the xreal airs for cheap, that's be the way to go. But if you have the $$ then the viture pros would be a good buy
@@Gurule solid advice I’ve been leaning into the vitures, but then came across the ai feature in the ray neos and other navigations tech and had a second guess
Great review of the X2. I've been waiting a long time for a non-sponsored review about them. There are so many contradictory opinions about them on Reddit, Discord, and the Indiegogo page that your optimism makes me more confident during my wait.
Thanks! Yea, I think they're really fun and they will only get better.
Good to hear another unsponsored opinion! Great review!
Done thanks
Great video! I invented my own categories for the different types of smart glasses as well. You did a great job breaking down the different available options and what they do.
I'd love to see how this space improves. cool tech.
I've come to the conclusion that there are 4 types of consumer level glasses:
1. Smart Glasses (speaker/mic/camera) Entry-level with no screen in lens, connects to smartphone by Bluetooth
2. Wearable Display Glasses (screen in lens) Bird-bath type optics. Wired connection to phone in order to run with no processor inside glasses. up to 52 FOV avg
3. HUD Glasses (screen/camera/mic/radios) Waveguide optics. Standalone wireless glasses
4. AR Glasses (screens/cameras/mic/speaker/processor/sensors) Wired & Standalone Wireless. Waveguide optics 26 FOV 640x480 & Bird-bath type optics up to 52 FOV 3840x1080
Top picks:
1 - TCL RayNeo X2 is the best standalone wireless AR/XR glasses 🤓
2 - INMO Air 2 (standalone wireless)
3 - Xreal Air 2 Ultra (wired - no internals)
No need to apologize because videos like these are much needed! 👍🏾
Hey can you use the rayneo x2’s to play ps5 games via remote play or something
If you sideloaded the app I bet it would work but it would be too small to be fun imo
@@Gurule can I ask for gaming purposes would you rather something like the virtue pros?
@@crashawnbradley579 honestly, I think the vitures would be pretty awesome, but bang for buck wise. If you can snag the xreal airs for cheap, that's be the way to go. But if you have the $$ then the viture pros would be a good buy
@@Gurule solid advice I’ve been leaning into the vitures, but then came across the ai feature in the ray neos and other navigations tech and had a second guess
@@crashawnbradley579 yea, awesome glasses but not for gaming for sure. Gotta have the right tool for the job